Search results for: "IF" (3032 results)
Raso14 (if on little else, and albeit less emphatically) that courts should get out of the business of second-guessing CBA/FR, and that current
that they have chosen the approach that maximizes net benefits.7 If these requirements are not met, agencies are not permitted to go forward unless
integrity have set the benchmark that— much to my chagrin—I have often failed to meet. If I have made a contribution to jurisprudence, it is because I
the world. Economists normally assume that any reasonable notion of social welfare would conform to the Pareto principle, which holds that if each
711 D. If Short-Term Pricing Can Deter Long-Term Investments, Then Use Magnitude of Predator Costs for the Sorts of Costs
extent those injustices took place outside specific times (slavery and the Jim Crow era) and specific places (the South).45 If we celebrate the Court’s
show that the benefits justify the costs and also that they have chosen the approach that maximizes net benefits. If these requirements are not met
“annihilates the contract,” after which the court “puts the parties in the same position as if [the contract] had never existed.”1 To put the parties in
action,7 especially for those that, if not assigned, would not survive the death of their original owners.8 Courts have generally shown more
normative, but in a different way: Does the sign affect how people ought to behave? If it does, how and why? What are the normative upshots of the