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be a significant problem in the United States. This Note builds an economic model of bribery to better understand the incentives behind this pernicious phenomenon. It then ...
The Yale Law Journal - Claire Priest Claire Priest Article 110 Yale L.J. 1303 (2001) This Article presents a new interpretation of the relation of
resources and our liberal commitments to autonomy and exit? No. Well-tailored law can mediate between community and liberty, between commons and private property. Our theory of ...
The Yale Law Journal - Evan Criddle Evan Criddle Comment 112 Yale L.J. 1927 (2003) One need not accept Hobbess vision of international relations as a
The Yale Law Journal - Michael SantAmbrogio Michael SantAmbrogio Article Federal agencies in the United States hear almost twice as many cases each
”—adoption of the same price by every firm in a market—should be considered a violation of antitrust law. But there has been a comparative neglect of the importance of “parallel ...
domestic and international law that we call “outcasting.” Unlike the distinctive method that modern states use to enforce their law, outcasting is nonviolent: it does not rely on ...
The Yale Law Journal - Marie Gottschalk Marie Gottschalk Forum The United States is exceptional not only because it incarcerates so many people, but
The Yale Law Journal - Woodrow Hartzog Woodrow Hartzog Review Obfuscation: A User’s Guide for Privacy and Protest By Finn Brunton and Helen
The Yale Law Journal - Megan Wachspress Megan Wachspress Comment Eight years after the start of America’s housing crisis, state courts are