Search results for: "law" (5606 results)
Rulemaking § 101 | Yale Law Journal Rulemaking § 101 abstract. The doctrine of subject-matter eligibility, as developed from 35 U.S.C. § 101, ensures
Stephanos Bibas | Yale Law Journal Stephanos Bibas Access to justice in American civil courts won’t come through free or pro bono lawyers. To drive
Bounded Institutions | Yale Law Journal Bounded Institutions abstract. This Essay examines two alternative designs for hierarchical institutions
Jackson Neagli | Yale Law Journal Jackson Neagli Applying Hayek’s theory of law and liberty to contemporary American family law, this Essay concludes
Jagged Edges | Yale Law Journal Jagged Edges Modern adverse possession doctrine appears to be in regular need of re-justification. There are now
Adrian Vermeule | Yale Law Journal Adrian Vermeule 122 Yale L.J. 384 (2012). Regularly invoked by the Supreme Court in diverse contexts, the maxim
Ian Ayres | Yale Law Journal Ian Ayres States should respond to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 303 Creative decision by enacting implied warranties of
Aditi Bagchi | Yale Law Journal Aditi Bagchi 112 Yale L.J. 1881 (2003) Some American scholars of law and economics have expressed dismay at the
Kenneth Ayotte | Yale Law Journal Kenneth Ayotte The law-and-economics literature assumes that omnisciently rational “sophisticated parties” write
Boris Bershteyn | Yale Law Journal Boris Bershteyn 114 Yale L.J. 359 (2004) By applying game-theoretic analysis to the bicameralism and presentment