American Corporate Governance Indices as Seen from a European Perspective
In American Corporate Governance Indices as Seen from a European Perspective, Professor Klaus Hopt provides his insights from a continental… Continue reading →
In American Corporate Governance Indices as Seen from a European Perspective, Professor Klaus Hopt provides his insights from a continental… Continue reading →
Professor Vikramaditya Khanna offers his thoughts on Bebchuk and Hamdani’s article in Corporate Governance Ratings: One Score, Two Scores, or… Continue reading →
In PTO’s Future: Reform or Abolition?, Professor Masur responds to the panelists from Intellectual Property Meets Administrative Law: Institutional Reform… Continue reading →
Professor Petherbridge offers his insights in response to the panelists from Addressing Patent Quality: The Theory, Practice, and Implications of… Continue reading →
In Making Sense of Immigration Law, Professor Cox continues his argument from Immigration Law's Organizing Principles that the distinction between… Continue reading →
In The Unusual Man in the Usual Place, Professor Bowers supports his argument from Punishing the Innocent by individually addressing… Continue reading →
In Excluding Religion: A Reply, Professor Tebbe defends his argument that as a matter of constitutional law, "governments ought to… Continue reading →
Professor Lawless, in his Response, The Limits of Contract as Product, challenges Bar-Gill and Warren’s initial assumption that consumer credit… Continue reading →
Professor Mann, in his Response, Unsafe at any Price?, questions Bar-Gill and Warren’s “link between the imperfection of consumer credit… Continue reading →
Professor Berg argues that Professor Tebbe’s justifications for his argument fail because religious choice is a central purpose of the… Continue reading →