University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 2007
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Between home and school.
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Desperately seeking numbers: global warming, species loss, and the use and abuse of quantification in climate change policy analysis.
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Timing and form of federal regulation: the case of climate change.
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The puzzle of complete preemption.
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The short and puzzling life of the "implicit minority discount" in Delaware appraisal law.
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Hedge funds in corporate governance and corporate control.
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Structuring judicial review of electoral mechanics: explanations and opportunities.
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Property outlaws.
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Legal liability as climate change policy.
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The constitutionality of federal restrictions on the indemnification of attorneys' fees.
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Insurability of damage caused by climate change: a commentary.
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Antitrust and nonprofit hospital mergers: a return to basics.
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After Bridgeman: copyright, museums, and public domain works of art.
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Corrective justice and liability for global warming.
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The NCAA as state actor: Tarkanian, Brentwood, and due process.
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Harmonizing regulatory and litigation approaches to climate change mitigation: incorporating tradable emissions offsets into common law remedies.
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IPO liability and entrepreneurial response.
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Waivers of ERISA plan benefits: preventing judicial interpretations of a complex statute from frustrating the statute's simple purpose.
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Climate change, insurability of large-scale disasters, and the emerging liability challenge.
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Freedom by design: objective analysis and the constitutional status of public broadcasting.
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Climate change and international human rights litigation: a critical appraisal.
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Unraveling the global warming regime complex: competitive entrophy in the regulation of the global public good.
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Reasonable emissions of greenhouse gases: efficient abatement for a stock pollutant.
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Negligence in the air: the duty of care in climate change litigation.
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Climate change and animals.
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International consensus as persuasive authority in the Eighth Amendment.
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Paying for performance in bankruptcy: why CEOS should be compensated with debt.
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Third-party ratings as modern reputational information: how rules of professional conduct could better serve lower-income legal consumers.
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Labor unions: a corporatist institution in a competitive world.
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Law and the market: the impact of enforcement.
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Think globally, act globally: the limits of local climate policies.
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Basic compensation for victims of climate change.
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Information markets as games of chance.
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Global climate change control: is there a better strategy than reducing greenhouse gas emissions?
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Appended post-passage Senate Judiciary Committee report: unlikely "legislative history" for interpreting section 5 of the Reauthorized Voting Rights Act.
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Causing, aiding, and the superfluity of accomplice liability.
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Expanding the scope of the Hatch-Waxman Act's patent carve-out exception to the identical drug labeling requirement: closing the patent litigation loophole.
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Allocating responsibility for the failure of global warming policies.
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Copyright and public good economics: a misunderstood relation.
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Scientific challenges in the attribution of harm to human influence on climate.
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Biting without teeth: the citizen submission process and environmental protection.
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The case for a sustainable climate policy: why costs and benefits must be temporally balanced.
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Liability for climate change: the benefits, the costs, and the transaction costs.
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Copyright as trade regulation.
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VoIP and pay-to-play: broadband's attempt to push away direct competition.