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Academic Journals
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From:Law and Contemporary Problems (Vol. 80, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedI INTRODUCTION Sex classifications that sort males from females remain pervasive even as anti-discrimination law designed to achieve equality for females has chipped away at their subordinating aspects. Thus,...
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From:Washington University Law Review (Vol. 87, Issue 3)Property law confronts circumstances where owners' excessive perceptions of their ownership rights impose social costs, frustrate policy goals, and hamper the very institutions meant to support private property....
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From:Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (Vol. 27, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedV. DOES PIRACY HELP OR HINDER CHINA'S FILM AND MUSIC INDUSTRIES? Part IV introduced six themes that have emerged from recent literature arguing that the harms of widespread copying are exaggerated and that piracy has...
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From:Stanford Law Review (Vol. 71, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPart 2 of 2 III. Accounting for Prison Crime A. A Flaw in the Economic Framework Scholars and policymakers account for myriad costs and benefits when conducting analyses involving the economics of...
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From:Natural Resources Journal (Vol. 59, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION Almost six decades ago, Ronald Coase suggested the potential for property rights and markets to address environmental problems in The Problem of Social Cost (1) Today, there are many examples of...
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From:Melbourne University Law Review (Vol. 39, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIn 1996, Brian Simpson criticised the legal competence of the discussion of the 19th century land law case of Sturges v Bridgman in Ronald Coase's 'The Problem of Social Cost', and Coase responded to these criticisms....
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 14, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedBackground Substance use is more prevalent among unemployed subjects compared to employed ones. However, quantifying the risk subsequent of job loss at short-term according to substance use remains underexplored as...
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From:Law and Contemporary Problems (Vol. 83, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI INTRODUCTION This Article explores data as a source and, in their processed variant, as a means of governance that will likely replace both markets and the law. Discussing data not as an object of transactions or an...
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From:Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (Vol. 27, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI. INTRODUCTION Does copyright piracy actually benefit creators and the creative industries in China? Recent scholarship and commentaries suggest that rampant piracy might result in no net social loss in China or...
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From:Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum (Vol. 25, Issue 1)1. Formality vs. Informality Over time, the A-4 methodologies have come to be regarded as the "gold standard" of applied regulatory analysis. (97) This Section describes some of the controversial--and flat-out...
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From:William and Mary Law Review (Vol. 62, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedFor nearly two hundred years, U.S. copyright law has assumed that owners may voluntarily abandon their rights in a work. But scholars have largely ignored copyright abandonment, and case law on the subject is fragmented...
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From:Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems (Vol. 25, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT In 2012 and 2013, Nicaragua passed two laws that granted the Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Company a fifty-year concession to construct a transoceanic canal across Nicaragua. The...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 13, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedObjective To appraise the currency, completeness and quality of evidence from systematic reviews (SRs) of acute management of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods We conducted comprehensive...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 13, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedBackground In primary and secondary care medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) or functional somatic syndromes (FSS) constitute a major burden for patients and society with high healthcare costs and societal costs....
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From:Duke Law Journal (Vol. 67, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT The U.S. criminal justice system "piles on." It punishes too many for too long. Much criminal law scholarship focuses on the problem of excessive punishment. Yet for the low-level offenses that dominate...
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From:Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Vol. 34, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION During the Passover Seder, it is customary in the Jewish faith for the youngest child at the table to ask a series of four questions that begins with, "Why is this night different from all other nights?"...
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From:Harvard Journal of Law & Technology (Vol. 26, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIV. DOES AUTOMATIC FACE RECOGNITION VIOLATE CURRENT PRIVACY LAWS? The discussion in Part III sought to illustrate the theoretical foundation for regulating face recognition technology in social networks to protect...
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From:Yale Law Journal (Vol. 123, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedPresident Obama's 2011 Executive Order 13,563 on cost-benefit analysis (CBA) authorizes agencies to consider "human dignity" in identifying the costs and benefits of proposed regulation. The notion of incorporating...
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From:William and Mary Law Review (Vol. 59, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedTABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION "Destined for something big? Do it in the navy. Get a career. An education. And a chance to serve a greater cause. For a FREE Navy video call 1-800-510-2074." (1) This text message,...
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From:Independent Review (Vol. 17, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedFor the greater part of the twentieth century, mainstream economists viewed negative (technological) externalities as a prima facie justification for government intervention in the market. Absent such government action,...