Alabama
Cristina Rodriguez (NYU Law)
Cincinnati
Frederick Gedicks (BYU Law), Pluralism, Oppression, and the Ambiguous “Revival” of Religion
Florida State
Ani Satz (Emory Law), Equal Protection of Animals
Georgetown Law and Economics
Lily Batchelder (NYU Law)
NYU Legal History
James Oldham (Georgetown Law), Under the Radar: Informal Law-Making by the Twelve Judges in the Late 18th and Early 19th Centuries
Pennsylvania Tax Law & Policy
Mark Gergen (Texas Law), Why Strong Third Party Penalties are an Essential Tool for Discouraging Taxpayers from Taking Aggressive Positions in Reporting on Matters of Factual or Legal Uncertainty
Roger Williams University
Glenn C. Loury (Brown Economics), Incarceration Policy and the Effects on Black Men
USC
Chris Stone (USC), The the Climate Have Standing?
Virginia Law
Thomas Merrill (Yale Law)
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 30th, 2008
| Civil Rights Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Criminal Law, EVENTS, Law and Politics, Law and Race, Legal History, Tax Law |
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Brooklyn
Michael Madison (Pittsburgh Law), Notes on a Geography of Knowledge
Emory
Daryl Levinson (Harvard Law)
Harvard Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, Bioethics Workshop
Mark A. Hall (Wake Forest Law), Government-Sponsored Reinsurance: Purpose and Performance
Harvard
Philip Alston (NYU Law)
Iowa
Thomas Gallanis (Minnesota Law)
Kentucky
Cynthia Lee (George Washington Law), Allowing the “Gay Panic” Defense: The Importance of Making Sexual Orientation Salient
Michigan Law and Economics
Dan Klerman (USC), Legal Origin and Economic Growth
Minnesota Works in Progress
Charles Silver (Texas Law), Managing Lead Attorneys’ Compensation in Multi-District Litigation
Northwestern Law and Economics
Yaniv Geinstein (Cornell Finance), The Market for CEO Talent: Implications for CEO Compensation
Pennsylvania Law and Philosophy
Dan Markovits (Yale Law), Solidarity at Arm’s Length
Santa Clara Social Justice
Judy Nadler (Santa Clara), Campaigning Ethics and Financing
St. Thomas
Brian Bix (Minnesota Law)
Wisconsin
Yuanyuan Shen (Harvard Law), From Plan to Market: The Development of China’s Food Safety Law
Yale Law Economics & Organization
Ilyana Kuziemko (Princeton Economics), “Dodging Up” to College or “Dodging Down” to Jail
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 30th, 2008
| Business Law, Civil Procedure, Courts, Criminal Law, Law and Economics, Law and Politics, Law and Sexuality |
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