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war. Jonathan H. Adler is a Professor of Law and the Director of the Center for Business Law and Regulation at Case Western Reserve University School
conflicts that we will all inevitably feel at times—as lawyers, as judges, or as individuals—in integrating our personal sense of morality with the norms
and there are ways to improve Congress’s political checking without substantial legal reform. At the Founding, commanders in chief (CINCs) enjoyed
powerful technology companies are aimed primarily at deriving population-level, relational insights, not individual insights specific to a data subject. To
Justice Strine looks at the corporate governance world through the lens of what he calls the “human investors,” i.e., the ordinary individuals who are
at the intersection of family law and zoning law. Family law has increasingly embraced “functional families,” those whose bonds can be traced to
war governs the conduct of hostilities: It dictates when nations may go to war and what they may do while at war. More than that, it is also the law
approach to HIV was developed in the 1980s, at the height of the epidemic. Today, however, medical advances have transformed HIV from a deadly disease
formal rules that would promote predictability at the expense of accurately reflecting the world in which the rules must operate. What are we to make
justice at work. This Feature argues that this choice, what I call the law of apolitical economy, continues to shape how we understand unions—and much