Search results for: "IF" (3763 results)
advantages over potential rivals to charge high prices with little fear of competitor entry. The high price may not attract entry at all if potential
food). If the goal is, as the authors say, to strengthen rather than bury customary international law, the authors have come up with the wrong recipe
offense.” This is true even if the offenses contain identical elements and even if the underlying statutes contain identical language. The result is that
insider violates the rule only if she uses material inside information in her decision to trade, and I consider how this “use” standard changes the
prices with little fear of compet- itor entry. The high price may not attract entry at all if potential rivals under- 3. See Pac. Bell Tel. Co. v
fundamental human rights3 to 1. See HENRY J. STEINER & PHILIP ALSTON, INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS IN CONTEXT 445 (2d ed. 2000) (“If notions of state
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 fact that the
commission of an offense. I suggest considering instead his stance toward the perpetrator’s intention to act: a helper is an accomplice, on this view, if
two offenses are defined by different jurisdictions,3 they cannot constitute the “same offense.” This is true even if the offenses contain identical
other rules to guide the agent’s decision. If agents are biased but otherwise share preferences with the principal—and the principal knows the