Tilting at Insider Trading Windmills
In Insider Trading via the Corporation, Professor Jesse M. Fried expresses his frustration that “when insiders are subject to strict… Continue reading →
In Insider Trading via the Corporation, Professor Jesse M. Fried expresses his frustration that “when insiders are subject to strict… Continue reading →
In Constitutional Colorblindness and the Family, Katie Eyer brings to our attention an intriguing contradiction in the Supreme Court’s equal… Continue reading →
I was pleased when I saw that the University of Pennsylvania Law Review had published a new article on terrorism… Continue reading →
Professor Orin Kerr has proposed an elegant new thought experiment in his piece, The Next Generation Communications Privacy Act. The… Continue reading →
Professor Abraham’s new Article, Four Conceptions of Insurance, offers an invaluable overview and critique of four modern conceptions of insurance.… Continue reading →
The issue of the geography of “the battlefield”—that is, where an armed conflict can and does take place—has provoked extensive… Continue reading →
In his Response to Professor Schwartz, Professor Ohm contends that Big Data’s touted benefits are often less significant than claimed… Continue reading →
Judges are local officials too, Ethan Leib helpfully reminds us in his thought‐provoking Article, Localist Statutory Interpretation. Like state court… Continue reading →
After more than eighty years of sustained attention, the master problem of U.S. corporate law—the separation of ownership and control—has… Continue reading →
In response to Barry E. Adler & Marcel Kahan, The Technology of Creditor Protection, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1773… Continue reading →