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Results for 'us interest rate chart'

Forum: The American Rescue Plan and the Future of the Safety Net

try to align state incentives with the national interest by adopting a more rational financing system. A recent report from a coalition of antipoverty

Forum: Intersectional Imperial Legacies in the U.S. Territories

closely examine likely consequences. In doing so, it begins to chart a theoretical and pragmatic path for assessing territorial residents’ challenges to

Measuring the Fortress: Explaining Trends in Supreme Court and Circuit Court Dictionary Use

dictionary citation rate is actually partially attributable to Justice Souter’s relatively low dictionary citation rate. Second, the graph charts a very

A Theory of the REIT

appear arbitrary. Clarity allows us to evaluate reforms to the real estate sector. Our theory also links the REIT back to mainstream corporate

Forum: Dictionaries 2.0: Exploring the Gap Between the Supreme Court and Courts of Appeals

been a subject of considerable scholarly and media interest. We published an article in November 2013 that explored the Court’s new dictionary culture in

An Offense-Severity Model for Stop-and-Frisks

offenders to justice.” Offense-severity seems to us a far more relevant barometer of the state’s interest in preventing and prosecuting crime than does the

Forum: Brandeisian Banking

which limit the interest rate that a bank can charge on a loan, the regulation seeks to protect consumers. Regulation Q, which limited the interest rate

Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox

This Note maps out facets of Amazon’s dominance. Doing so enables us to make sense of its business strategy, illuminates anticompetitive aspects of

Aurelius’s Article III Revisionism: Reimagining Judicial Engagement with the Insular Cases and “The Law of the Territories”

an end in itself toward more informed and productive judicial engagement that secures legal recognition of territories’ agency in charting their own

Forum: J. Crew, Nine West, and the Complexities of Financial Distress

higher interest rate reflecting the post-leveraged-buyout risk. See Declaration of Ralph Schipani, supra note 1, at 22-23. See Sycamore’s Memorandum