University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 2001
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Preventing dilution of the Federal Trademark Dilution Act of 1995: why the FTDA requires actual economic harm.
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Establishing a buffer zone: the proper balance between the First Amendment religion clauses in the context of neutral zoning regulations.
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Challenging law review dominance.
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Norms & corporate law.
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A constitutional analysis of Kendra's Law: New York's solution for treatment of the chronically mentally ill.
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Trust, trustworthiness, and the behavioral foundations of corporate law.
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Disclosure norms.
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Resurrection from a death sentence: why capital sentences should be commuted upon the occasion of an authentic ethical transformation.
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Technologies of protest: insurgent social movements and the First Amendment in the era of the Internet.
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The limited significance of norms for corporate governance.
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Street crime, corporate crime, and the contingency of criminal liability.
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Do norms matter? A cross-country evaluation.
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Should corporation law inform aspirations for good corporate governance practices - or vice versa?
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Social movements, law and society: the institutionalization of the environmental movement.
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Tribute to the Honorable Edward R. Becker.
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Beyond powers and branches in separation of powers law.
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Party autonomy and two-party electoral competition.
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Creative norm destruction: the evolution of nonlegal rules in Japanese corporate governance.
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Do the parties or the people own the electoral process?
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Islands of conscious power: law, norms, and the self-governing corporation.
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Genotype discrimination: the complex case for some legislative protection.
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Norms and the theory of the firm.
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Poverty law and community activism: notes from a law school clinic.
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Passing through the door: social movement literature and legal scholarship.
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On being a religious professional: the religious turn in professional ethics.
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The puzzling divergence of corporate law: evidence and explanations from Japan and the United States.
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Protest, repression, and race: legal violence and the Chicano movement.
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Inverting the First Amendment.
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An analysis of the EEOC'S issuance of early right-to-sue letters: does it promote judicial efficiency or encourage administrative incompetence?
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Tax constraints on indexed options.
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The shareholder wealth maximization norm and industrial organization.
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Dialogic federalism: constitutional possibilities for incorporation of human rights law in the United States.
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Inclusive boundaries and other (im)possible paths towards community development in a global world.
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Keeping the reformist spirit alive in evidence law.
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Of swords and shields: the role of clinical practice guidelines in medical malpractice litigation.
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What's the appeal? Trying to control managed care medical necessity decisionmaking through a system of external appeals.
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Getting past democracy.
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Shaming in corporate law.
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Genophobia: what is wrong with genetic discrimination?
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Puzzling stock options and compensation norms.
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When the law doesn't count: the 2000 election and the failure of the rule of law.
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The agenda-setter for complex litigation.
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Does corporate governance matter? A crude test using Russian data.
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Competing norms and social evolution: is the fittest norm efficient?
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Text in contest: gender and the Constitution from a social movement perspective.
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Chief Judge Edward R. Becker: a truly remarkable judge.
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And then god created Kansas? The evolution/creationism debate in America's public schools.
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The Rooker-Feldman doctrine: toward a workable role.
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Channeling: identity-based social movements and public law.
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Criminal law in cyberspace.
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Making progress the old-fashioned way.
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Fairness, character, and efficiency in firms.