University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 2003
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Rational choice and categorical reason.
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Tribute to Judge Norma Levy Shapiro.
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Lending light to countries lamps: a tribute to Judge Norma Levy Shapiro.
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Norma Levy Shapiro.
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Corporate policy and the coherence of Delaware takeover law.
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Race as identity caricature: a local legal history lesson in the salience of intraracial conflict.
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From Japan to Afghanistan: the U.S.-Japan joint security relationship, the war on terror, and the ignominious end of the pacifist state?
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The effects of collegiality on judicial decision making.
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Appraising the nonexistent: the Delaware courts' struggle with control premiums.
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Being fair to hierarchists.
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The situation: an introduction to the situational character, critical realism, power economics, and deep capture.
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Institutional shareholders, private equity, and antitakeover protection at the IPO stage.
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Before and after: temporal anomalies in legal doctrine.
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Trust, guilt, and securities regulation.
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Caught in the crossfire: a defense of the cultural theory of gun-risk perceptions.
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Defying one-person, one-vote: prisoners and the "usual residence" principle.
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Paradoxes of the safe society: a rational actor approach to the reconceptualization of risk and the reformation of risk regulation.
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The jurisprudence of greed.
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More statistics, less persuasion: a cultural theory of gun-risk perceptions.
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"We live's in a free house such as it is": class and the creation of modern civil rights.
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What follows putting reason in its place? "Now vee may perhaps to begin. Yes?"(response to article by Dan M. Kahan and Donald Braman in this issue, p. 1291)
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Unregulable defenses and the perils of shareholder choice.
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Old promises: the judiciary and the future of Native American federal acknowledgment litigation.
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Controlling controlling shareholders.
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Takeover defense when financial markets are (only) relatively efficient.
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Reconceptualizing criminal law defenses.
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The domain of preference.
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The puzzle of "ex ante efficiency": does rational approvability have moral weight?
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Tribute to Judge Norma L. Shapiro.
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Prudence and constitutional rights.
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Will as international bargaining: implications for rationality.
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A sense of purpose: the role of law enforcement in foreign intelligence surveillance.
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Can utilitarianism justify legal rights with moral force?
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Value analysis of political behavior - self-interested, moralistic, altruistic, moral.
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Creditors' ball: the "new" new corporate governance in Chapter 11.
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Regulation for conservatives: behavioral economics and the case for "asymmetric paternalism".
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Why firms adopt antitakeover arrangements.
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Culture affects our beliefs about firearms, but data are also important.
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Fact-free gun policy?
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Recharging the jury: the criminal jury's constitutional role in an era of mandatory sentencing.
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The forest and the trees: sustainable development and human rights in the context of Cambodia.
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Corporate constitutionalism: antitakeover charter provisions as precommitment.
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Musings on the dynamics of corporate governance issues, director liability concerns, corporate control transactions, ethics, and federalism.
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Explaining Grutter v. Bollinger.
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Is risk a harm?
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Corporate control transactions.
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Tender justice: Judge Norma Levy Shapiro's hard-headed humanity.
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"In danger of becoming morally depraved": single black women, working-class black families, and New York state's wayward minor laws, 1917-1928.
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Preferences and rational choice: new perspectives and legal implications.
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Corporations without labor: the politics of progressive corporate law.
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The surprising finding that "cultural worldviews" don't explain people's views on gun control.
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Norma Levy Shapiro.
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The new federalism of the American corporate governance system: preliminary reflections of two residents of one small state.
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Keeping charity in charitable trust law: the Barnes Foundation and the case for consideration of public interest in administration of charitable trusts.
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Beyond the precautionary principle.
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The positive political theory of legislative history: new perspectives on the 1964 Civil Rights Act and its interpretation.
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The future of medical marijuana: should the states grow their own?
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"Who they are - or were": middle-class welfare in the early New Deal.
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The shareholder as Ulysses: some empirical evidence on why investors in public corporations tolerate board governance.
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Premiums in stock-for-stock mergers and some consequences in the law of director fiduciary duties.