Posts tagged with: "scholarship" Results 8121 - 8140 of 20,161
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6 Sep 2012, 3:56 am by Brian Leiter
A philosopher at a liberal arts college writes: I am a tenured philosopher at a small, nationally-ranked, private liberal arts college. In the context of a recent overhaul of the tenure review process, our provost asked all departments to submit... [read post]
25 Mar 2007, 1:10 am
From SSRN:David E. Guinn, Erecting the Barrier: Creating the New Liberal Compact on Religion, Chap. 3, and The Terrors of Christendom, Chap. 2. in Constantine's Standard: Religion,Violence, Politics, Law & Faith to Die For.Mostly from SmartCILP:Richard M. Esenberg, You Cannot Lose If You Choose Not To Play: Toward a More Modest Establishment Clause, 12 Roger Williams University Law Review 1-69 (2006).Larry O. Natt Gantt, II, Charles H. Oates & Samuel Pyeatt Menefee, Professional… [read post]
1 Nov 2011, 7:05 am by Simon Fodden
Aaron Swartz is that rare individual who is prepared to risk imprisonment in order to promote the cause of open access. And we’re not talking about liberating “tunes” or movies or, indeed, anything of much “entertainment value”; Swartz goes for the serious, you might say earnest, stuff. At the moment the young man stands accused of various crimes associated with his downloading of 4.8 million articles from JSTOR. (Many, but by no means all, readers of Slaw will know… [read post]
30 Jun 2007, 10:43 am
Judges and practicing lawyers rarely read or use law-review articles. When they do cite them, they use them as a drunk uses a lamppost: "more for support than for illumination." That quip, credited to Second Circuit Judge Robert Sack, is probably true for most practitioners (it's certainly true for me). In a recent article for the Connecticut Law Review,1 Prof. Stephen Vladeck observes this phenomenon, suggests one possible contributing factor (decline of judicial discretion), and… [read post]
12 Aug 2013, 10:50 am by Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
There are far more interesting IP papers posted than I have time to read carefully and blog about, so I thought I'd just highlight some recently posted papers that caught my eye (which I have also tweeted):Chris Buccafusco & Jonathan Masur, Innovation and Incarceration: An Economic Analysis of Criminal Intellectual Property Law. Great (and timely) analysis of the use of criminal liability in copyright and patent law.Thomas F. Cotter, Make No Little Plans: Response to Ted Sichelman, Purging… [read post]
18 Jun 2013, 4:28 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Jesse H. Alderman has posted his paper, “Winters and Water Conservation: A Proposal to Halt ‘Water Laundering’ in Tribal Negotiated Settlements in Favor of Monetary Compensation,” on SSRN. The final version of the paper appears in the Virginia Environmental Law Journal. Here is the abstract: In the century since the U.S. Supreme Court, in Winters v. United States, granted Indian tribes reserved water rights, few tribes have received the promised delivery of water, while at… [read post]
14 Jun 2013, 5:36 am by Kprofs2013
I just finished reading contracts prof Amy J. Schmitz's article, Sex Matters: Considering Gender in Consumer Contracting, 19 CARDOZO J. LAW & GENDER 437 (2013) which I thought was particularly timely given all the interest in consumer contracts. As Schmitz... [read post]
24 Mar 2013, 9:24 am by White Collar Crime Prof Blogger
Daniel Sokol (UF & Minn) has a new piece titled, Policing the Firm. SSRN states: Criminal price fixing cartels are a serious problem for consumers. Cartels are hard to both find and punish. Research into other kinds of corporate wrongdoing... [read post]
6 Mar 2013, 12:29 pm by laborprof lpb
Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law volume 33:2 Charlotte S. Alexander, Explaining Peripheral Labor: A Poultry Industry Case Study, 33 Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 353 (2012). Ming H. Chen, Where You Stand Depends on Where You Sit:... [read post]
3 Jan 2013, 5:46 pm by White Collar Crime Prof Blogger
James B. Baldinger & Charles P. Short of CarltonFields have a new article titled Uncertainty in the Cloud: Changing Requirements for Disclosing Customer Data. (esp) [read post]
30 Dec 2012, 6:07 am by JA Hodnicki
Posted by D. Daniel Sokol Best Antitrust Articles of 2012 - From Our Group of Experts (see here for the 2011 list) Alberto Heimler (Italian School of Public Administration) - Antidumping and Market Competition: Implications for Emerging Economies, Chad P.... [read post]
26 Aug 2015, 4:04 pm by Kent Scheidegger
William Sousa has an article in the City Journal with the above title, subtitled, A response to Broken Windows critic Bernard Harcourt.  Sousa is the co-author, with George Kelling, of an NYPD research report on the efficacy of Broken Windows policing.For the better part of two decades, Columbia University law professor Bernard Harcourt has been on a personal crusade against Broken Windows policing, criticizing both its theoretical underpinnings and its policy applications. A close look at… [read post]
15 Jul 2015, 8:00 am by joanheminway
I read with interest the recently released opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Trinity Wall Street v. Walmart Stores, Inc. The Wall Street Journal covered the publication of the opinion earlier in the month,... [read post]
11 May 2015, 11:27 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Arizona Law Review announces its publication of Galanda and Dreveskracht’s piece entitled Curing the Tribal Disenrollment Epidemic: In Search of a Remedy, which has been described as “a must read for all of Indian country” by Indian law scholar Robert A. Williams, Jr. Please see the press release for additional information. The article can be viewed at http://www.arizonalawreview.org/?p=2386. [read post]
23 Jan 2015, 10:43 am by Jeffrey harrison
We know that mechantability means passing without objection in the trade. If law review articles were goods, what would that trade be? For law professors, it seems like it is second and third year law students. At some level it... [read post]
22 Jan 2015, 8:32 am by Jeremy Telman
Texas A & M School of Law Contracts Prof Mark Burge (pictured) has posted a new article on SSRN: Too Clever by Half: Reflections on Perception, Legitimacy, and Choice of Law Under Revised Article 1 of the Uniform Commercial Code... [read post]
24 Mar 2014, 8:54 am by Workplace Prof
I just posted on SSRN an article I've co-authored with a slew of other folks. My purpose in blogging it, however, is not so much the content of the article, but the process of creating it. The article grew out... [read post]
13 Dec 2013, 7:14 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Elizabeth Kronk Warner has posted “Tribal Renewable Energy Development Under the Hearth Act: An Independently Rational, But Collectively Deficient Option,” forthcoming in the Arizona Law Review, on SSRN. The abstract: Increased domestic energy production is of enhanced importance to the United States. Given the growing focus on domestic energy development, many, including tribal governments, have increasingly looked to Indian country for potential energy development opportunities. Such… [read post]
27 Jan 2008, 9:27 pm
A while back, I blogged about the perils of my over-committed spring semester a year ago, including the various symposia to which I had promised contributions. As it turns out, two of those symposia (both from April 2007) have been published in the past few days -- Lewis and Clark's  symposium on "Crimes, War Crimes, and the War on Terror," (with the articles available here), and Cardozo's symposium on the "Domestic Commander-in-Chief" (with the… [read post]