Stanford Law Review

COPYRIGHT TV Trade Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from November 1998
Last Number: June 2023

Stanford Law School
ISSN 0038-9765


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 1000

May 01, 2000

  • Foreword.

  • Privacy, publication, and the First Amendment: the dangers of First Amendment exceptionalism.

  • Freedom of speech and information privacy: the troubling implications of a right to stop people from speaking about you.

  • Privacy as intellectual property?

  • Uneasy Access for Women in a Free Society.

  • What the publisher can teach the patient: intellectual property and privacy in an era of trusted privication.

  • Hardware-based ID, rights management, and trusted systems.

  • Information privacy/information property.

  • Resolving conflicting international data privacy rules in cyberspace.

  • Examined lives: informational privacy and the subject as object.

  • What Larry doesn't get: code, law, and liberty in cyberspace.

  • The death of privacy?

  • Private property.

  • Free speech vs. information privacy: Eugene Volokh's First Amendment jurisprudence.

  • Save the robots: cyber profiling and your so-called life.

  • Trusted systems and medical records: lowering expectations.

  • Privicating privacy: reflections on Henry Greely's commentary.

  • July 01, 2000

  • Conceptualizing corporations and kinship: comparative law and development theory in a Chinese perspective.

  • Russian privatization and corporate governance: what went wrong?

  • Punitive damages and deterrence of efficiency-promoting analysis: a problem without a solution?

  • The costs and benefits of letting juries punish corporations: comment on Viscusi.

  • Let them eat cake: diabetes and the Americans with Disabilities Act after Sutton.

  • The American Language of Rights.

  • October 01, 2007

  • The untimely death of Bush v. Gore.

  • Rethinking patent law's presumption of validity.

  • Discrimination at will: job security protections and equal employment opportunity in conflict.

  • The cognitively illiberal state.

  • If people would be outraged by their rulings, should judges care?

  • Well, should they? A response to If People Would Be Outraged by Their Rulings, Should Judges Care?

  • On avoiding foundational questions: a reply to Andrew Coan.

  • The American Choice-of-Law Revolution in the Courts: Past, Present and Future.

  • Patentee overcompensation and the entire market value rule.

  • November 01, 2007

  • Refugee Roulette: disparities in asylum adjudication.

  • Learning to live with unequal justice: asylum and the limits to consistency.

  • Refugee Roulette in an administrative law context: the deja vu of decisional disparities in agency adjudication.

  • Four models of Fourth Amendment protection.

  • Wiretapping before the wires: the post office and the birth of communications privacy.

  • The empire's new clothes: political economy and the fragmentation of international law.

  • Controlling family shareholders in developing countries: anchoring relational exchange.

  • Doubtful duty: physicians' legal obligation to treat during an epidemic.

  • December 01, 2007

  • Statutory speed bumps: the roles third parties play in tax compliance.

  • Beyond the pro-consumption tax consensus.

  • Consumption taxation is still superior to income taxation.

  • The uneasy case for patent races over auctions.

  • Tradable patent rights.

  • October 01, 2000

  • The judicial perspective in the administrative state: reconciling modern doctrines of deference with the judiciary's structural role.

  • Voting with intensity.

  • The mass tort defendants strike back: are settlement class actions a collusive threat or just a phantom menace?

  • November 01, 2000

  • Accommodation mandates.

  • A buy-side model of M & A lockups: theory and evidence.