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only between the nature of Feldman’s cosmopolitan law and Bentham’s international law, but also their purpose. They share the realization that
is the endowment effect. The endowment effect suggests that people often demand more to give something up than they would pay to acquire it. The
consumer did not agree. The critique argues that when workers and consumers do bring these claims, they are less likely to prevail and more likely to
political action. And yet, classic liberals will reject the core thesis of Equal Justice. American liberalism is suspicious of zero-sum assumptions, where
Lottery and the Balanced Bench. Whether policymakers adopt these precise proposals or not, our framework can guide their much-needed search for reform
Yale Law Journal - Targeting the Twenty-First-Century Outlaw Targeting the Twenty-First-Century Outlaw
Yale Law Journal - Bridging the Book-Tax Accounting Gap Bridging the Book-Tax Accounting Gap
Yale Law Journal - Rethinking the Federal Eminent Domain Power Rethinking the Federal Eminent Domain Power
Yale Law Journal - The Politics of Corporate Governance Regulation The Politics of Corporate Governance Regulation