Panel Effects, Whistleblowing Theory, and the Role of Legal Doctrine
In Panel Effects, Whistleblowing Theory, and the Role of Legal Doctrine, Derek Linkous and Professor Emerson Tiller argue that Kim… Continue reading →
In Panel Effects, Whistleblowing Theory, and the Role of Legal Doctrine, Derek Linkous and Professor Emerson Tiller argue that Kim… 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 →
Professor Petherbridge offers his insights in response to the panelists from Addressing Patent Quality: The Theory, Practice, and Implications of… 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 →
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 →