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Current Issue
Jan. 2013, Vol. 65, No. 1
Articles
David Haddock, Tonja Jacobi, & Matthew Sag, League Structure &Stadium Rent Seeking— the Role of Antitrust Revisited
Steven J. Cleveland, Resurrecting Deference to the Securities and Exchange Commission: Mark Cuban Trading on Inside information
Janai S. Nelson, The First Amendment, Equal Protection and Felon Disenfranchisement: A New Viewpoint
Sergio J. Campos, Erie as a Choice of Enforcement Defaults
Hanah Metchis Volokh, Constitutional Authority Statements in Congress
Sapna Kumar, The Accidental Agency?
Christian Turner, State Action Problems
Tag Archives: incrementalist
Jim Gash, The End Of An Era: The Supreme Court (Finally) Butts Out of Punitive Damages For Good
63 Fla. L. Rev. 525 (2011)| | | | INTRODUCTION :: It is finally over. The Supreme Court’s incursion into punitive damages jurisprudence has unceremoniously ended, but not before the Court, under the guise of substantive due process, erected a … Continue reading →
Posted in Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Governments and Legislation, Judicial Systems, Jurisprudence, Tort Law, Uncategorized
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Tagged Barack Obama, conduct, court, Due Process, End of an Era, Gash, George Bush, incrementalist, Innovation, jury verdict, karlan, malicious, Phillip Morris, plaintiff, Punitive Damages, Rehnquist, results oriented, Roberts Court, simply, Substantive Due Process, Supreme Court, unstable
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