University of Pennsylvania Law Review - 2010
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Uniformity, federalism, and tort reform: the Erie implications of medical malpractice certificate of merit statutes.
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Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.: director exemplar of the American Law Institute.
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Procedure as palimpsest.
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Freedom from religion: RLUIPA, religious freedom and representative democracy on trial.
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The irrelevance of writtenness in constitutional interpretation.
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Remembering Ed Baker.
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Cashing in on capitol hill: insider trading and the use of political intelligence for profit.
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Equal access and the right to marry.
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Hazard.
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Contracting over liability: medical malpractice and the cost of choice.
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The plain meaning of section 365(c): the tension between bankruptcy and patent law in patent licensing.
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Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.: a curious American.
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Paying for long-term performance.
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When should discovery come with a bill? Assessing cost shifting for electronic discovery.
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Culture, cognition, and consent: who perceives what, and why, in acquaintance-rape cases.
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Taming Twombly, even after Iqbal.
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Rescuing trafficking from ideological capture: prostitution reform and anti-trafficking law and policy.
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A wise man of the law.
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Credit default swap spreads as viable substitutes for credit ratings.
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Rethinking the regulation of securities intermediaries.
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Classifying constructive amendment as trial or structural error.
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Comparative convergences in pleading standards.
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From the greenhouse to the poorhouse: carbon-emissions control and the rules of legislative joinder.
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A time-honored model for the profession and the academy.
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Not since Thomas Jefferson dined alone: for Geoff Hazard at eighty.
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Want less ideology on the federal bench? Pay judges more.
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Redeeming the missed opportunities of Shady Grove.
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Rationality analysis in antitrust.
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Tensions and trade-offs: protecting trafficking victims in the era of immigration enforcement.
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Temporal imperialism.
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Judge Henry Friendly and the craft of judging.
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The right to abandon.
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Reading Stoneridge carefully: a duty-based approach to reliance and third-party liability under rule 10B-5.
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Preserving facts, form, and function when a deaf witness with minimal language skills testifies in court.
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Run.
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The case against shareholder empowerment.
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Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., and the lessons of history.
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The shadow of state secrets.
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Racing to settlement: the applicability of Federal Rule of Evidence 408 to nonparty settlement communications.
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Lessons from Bosnia's Arizona market: harm to women in a neoliberalized postconflict reconstruction process.
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Key issues in the resettlement of formerly trafficked persons in the United States.
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Lying and getting caught: an empirical study of the effect of securities class action settlements on targeted firms.
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A response to sex trafficking Chicago style: follow the sisters, speak out.
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The changing shape of federal civil pretrial practice: the disparate impact on civil rights and employment discrimination cases.
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Sex trafficking and criminalization: in defense of feminist abolitionism.
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A free labor approach to human trafficking.
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Do class action lawyers make too little?
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Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.: scholar, law reformer, teacher, and mentor.
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The multienforcer approach to securities fraud deterrence: a critical analysis.
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Denied and disparaged: applying the 'federalist' Ninth Amendment.
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Interest groups and the problem with incrementalism.