The Journal of Corporation Law - 2011
- BP's compensation fund: a buoy for both claimants and BP.
- Liability for fairness opinions under Delaware Law.
- Law and tunneling.
- Patent law as an incentive to innovate not donate: the role of the U.S. patent system in regulating ownership of human tissue.
- Can you really keep your health plan? The limits of grandfathering under the Affordable Care Act.
- On subsidies and mandates: a regulatory critique of ACA.
- Defending against shareholder proxy access: Delaware's future reviewing company defenses in the era of Dodd-Frank.
- Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: safe harbor for the innocent or modern day Port of Tortuga for the buccaneers of Wall Street?
- Securities law in the Roberts court: agenda or indifference?
- Permanently reviving the temporary insider.
- Controlling health care costs through public, transparent processes: the conflict between the morally right and the socially feasible.
- Using the law to reduce systemic risk.
- Confidential witnesses in securities litigation.
- Inside-out corporate governance.
- Insider trading inside the beltway.
- Anonymity protection versus subpoena compliance: what media companies should consider when defending user comments online.
- The past, present, and future of shareholder activism by hedge funds.
- Do accounting rules matter? The dangerous allure of mark to market.
- FCC authority post-Comcast: finding a happy medium in the net neutrality debate.
- The Dodd-Frank Act's expansion of state authority to protect consumers of financial services.
- Excess-pay clawbacks.
- Morrison v. National Australia Bank Ltd.: a clear statement rule or a confusing standard.
- Tethering the administrative state: the case against Chevron deference for FCC jurisdictional claims.
- Facing the music: webcasting, interactivity, and a sensible statutory royalty scheme for sound recording transmissions.
- Gender identity protection: the inadequacy of shareholder action to amend corporate employment discrimination policies.
- Deregulation vs. reregulation of telecommunications: a clash of regulatory paradigms.
- How Dodd-Frank's orderly liquidation authority for financial companies violates article III of the United States Constitution.
- Corporate governance reform in a time of crisis.
- Exclusive gadget: Apple & AT&T antitrust litigation and the iPhone aftermarkets.