The Yale Law Journal

Results for 'us law equity production recognition'

Forum: Dismantling the “Black Opticon”: Privacy, Race, Equity, and Online Data-Protection Reform

The Yale Law Journal - Forum: Dismantling the “Black Opticon”: Privacy, Race, Equity, and Online Data-Protection Reform Dismantling the “Black

Forum: The Origins of U.S. Territorial Taxation and the Insular Cases

The Yale Law Journal - Forum: The Origins of U.S. Territorial Taxation and the Insular Cases The Origins of U.S. Territorial Taxation and the Insular

Forum: Hedge Fund Activism, Short-Termism, and a New Paradigm of Corporate Governance

The Yale Law Journal - Forum: Hedge Fund Activism, Short-Termism, and a New Paradigm of Corporate Governance Hedge Fund Activism, Short-Termism, and

The First Patent Litigation Explosion

new explanation for patent law’s crucial shift from common law to equity decision making in the middle of the nineteenth century. And at its height

Forum: AI and Captured Capital

finished product, not to parts or factors of the production process. The product/process distinction is important because intellectual-property law is

Corporate Control and Idiosyncratic Vision

idiosyncratic vision. Finally, corporate law should preserve the link between controllers’ freedom to pursue their vision and their significant equity investment

Reinterpreting Corporate Inversions: Non-Tax Competitions and Frictions

Dutch government. This example illustrates that international tax implicates the internation equity concern: although nothing about the production of

Article III Judicial Power, the Adverse-Party Requirement, and Non-Contentious Jurisdiction

parte proceedings that made their way onto federal court dockets in the early Republic.Justice Scalia’s common-law traditionalismthus brought us little

Forum: Gig-Economy Myths and Missteps

antitrust law in recognition of their unique pro-employee function, Paul argues firms like Uber that set prices for independent contractors should be subject

Forum

laws, and modified common law doctrine to move beyond a once-unilateral focus on maximizing production and address environmental and social concerns