Results for 'S'
Michael Sant'Ambrogio
The Yale Law Journal - Michael SantAmbrogio Michael SantAmbrogio Article Federal agencies in the United States hear almost twice as many cases each
Pamela Samuelson
practice. What it means, broadly speaking, is the process of extracting know-how or knowledge from a human-made artifact. Lawyers and economists have endorsed reverse engineering ...
Sally Pei
The Yale Law Journal - Sally Pei
Saira Mohamed
perpetrators of the Holocaust were crazy. But mass atrocity is never so simple. We may search in Germany, Bosnia, the Congo, or Rwanda for the madman or the devi…
Sandeep Vaheesan
modest in scope. Antitrust law is and will be political, and consumer welfare should not be privileged; it is inconsistent with congressional intent and embodies an incomplete ...
Jonathan Sallet
The Yale Law Journal - Jonathan Sallet Jonathan Sallet Feature Jonathan B. Baker, Jonathan Sallet & Fiona Scott Morton Feature Multisided platforms
Salil Dudani
The Yale Law Journal - Salil Dudani Salil Dudani Note Because bodily liberty is a fundamental right, the government may confine someone only to the
Forum: Sam Alito: The Court’s Most Consistent Conservative
Michigan, 133 S. Ct. 1069 (2013); see also Alberto R. Gonzales, In Search of Justice: An Examination of the Appointments of John G. Roberts and Samuel
Forum: Political Checks on a Politicized Presidency: A Response to Neal Katyals Internal Separation of Powers
suggests that we look to divisions within one branch of government—rather than divisions across multiple branches of government—to restore some semblance
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Making of Quack Corporate Governance
Yale Law Journal - The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Making of Quack Corporate Governance The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Making of Quack Corporate Governance