Institutions and Indirectness in Intellectual Property [article]. Cited by 48 Articles Accessed 8 Times. The Semicommons of Fluid Property Rights [article].


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Community and Custom in Property [article]. Cited by 31 Articles Accessed 30 Times. On the Economy of Concepts in Property [article]. Cited by 28 Articles Accessed 14 Times. Intermediate Filing in Household Taxation [article]. Cited by 27 Articles Accessed 2 Times. Cited by 23 Articles Accessed 75 Times. Self-Help and the Nature of Property [article]. Cited by 23 Articles Accessed 14 Times. Harm in Blackmail [article].

Cited by 20 Articles Accessed 8 Times. Governing the Tele-Semicommons [article]. Cited by 15 Articles Accessed 7 Times. The Equitable Dimension of Contract [article]. Custom in American Property Law: A Vanishing Act [article]. Cited by 10 Articles Accessed 4 Times. Rose's Human Nature of Property [article]. Cited by 8 Articles Accessed 6 Times. Why Restate the Bundle: The Disintegration of the Restatement of Property [article].

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Cited by 8 Articles Accessed 12 Times. Structured Settlements as Structures of Rights [comments]. Cited by 7 Articles Accessed 3 Times. Intellectual Property and the New Private Law [article]. Cited by 6 Articles Accessed 13 Times. Cited by 6 Articles Accessed 47 Times. Realism or Democracy [article]. Cited by 5 Articles Accessed 12 Times.

Harvard Law Review: Volume , Number 1 - November - Harvard Law Review - Google Книги

The Persistence of System in Property Law [article]. Cited by 5 Articles Accessed 21 Times. The Thing about Exclusion [article].

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Cited by 4 Articles Accessed 15 Times. Ellickson's Extraordinary Look at the Ordinary [article]. Cited by 2 Articles Accessed 6 Times.

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Making Coasean Property More Coasean [article]. Cited by 1 Articles Accessed 10 Times. Semicommons in Fluid Resources [comments]. Does Equity Pass the Laugh Test: A Response to Oliar and Sprigman [comments]. Chen, and Marco Basile. In addition, the issue features student commentary on Recent Cases, including such subjects as the Establishment Clause and prayer led by County Commissioners; due process for student disciplinary hearings on sexual misconduct in universities under Title IX; armed career criminals and intent for burglary; genocide victims and suit against their own countries under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act; expert witnesses and causation in asbestos cases; and immigration law's local enforcement involving ICE detainees.


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Also included is commentary on President Trump's signing statement objecting to the Act imposing sanctions against Russia and its requirement of Congressional review over Presidential waivers. Finally, the issue includes several summaries of Recent Publications. This current issue of the Review is December , the second issue of academic year Volume Account Options Sign in.

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It syncs automatically with your account and allows you to read online or offline wherever you are. Please follow the detailed Help center instructions to transfer the files to supported eReaders. Volume , Number 8 - June The contents of Issue 8 include: Volume , Number 7 - May Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court. Acclaimed journalist Jeffrey Toobin takes us into the chambers of the most important—and secret—legal body in our country, the Supreme Court, revealing the complex dynamic among the nine people who decide the law of the land.

An institution at a moment of transition, the Court now stands at a crucial point, with major changes in store on such issues as abortion, civil rights, and church-state relations. Volume , Number 6 - April The contents of Number 6 Apr. The issue also includes an article by Jill C. Anderson, "Misreading Like a Lawyer: In addition, student case notes explore Recent Cases on such diverse subjects as false advertising by disseminating scientific literature, free speech rights of professors in public universities, voter identification laws, sentencing by imposing the condition of penile plethysmography, aiding and abetting violations in international law, and whether intercepting unencrypted wi-fi violates the Wiretap Act.

A further student work explores the recent administrative policy of the Social Security Administration's eliminating a surgical requirement for changing trans individuals' gender designation, and another explores a recent administration white paper on national security and whether bulk metadata collection violates the USA PATRIOT Act. Finally, the issue features several summaries of Recent Publications.

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