Search for: "Jed Rubenfeld" Results 61 - 80 of 143
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
17 Sep 2015, 8:48 am by Jack Chin
Jed Rubenfeld and Jeannie Suk (for) and Michelle Anderson and Stephen Schulhofer (against) participated in an interesting and extensive debate on this question on September 16; video here. [read post]
29 Jun 2015, 5:24 am by Jeremy Telman
Jed Rubenfeld declared the end of privacy in an article that appeared in Stanford Law Review in 2008. [read post]
26 May 2015, 4:00 am by Adam Dodek
Biggest surprise: Yale Law Professor Jed Rubenfeld’s The Interpretation of Murder. [read post]
27 Feb 2015, 8:44 am by Renwei Chung
Thoughts from columnist Renwei Chung on Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld's controversial, bestselling book. [read post]
18 Nov 2014, 6:32 am by Tracy Thomas
Jed Rubenfeld, NYT, Mishandling Rape Our strategy for dealing with rape on college campuses has failed abysmally. [read post]
17 Nov 2014, 2:15 pm
Kudos to Yale law professor Jed Rubenfeld for a thoughtful piece in the New York Times explaining why the Obama Administration’s decision to force campus kangaroo court disciplinary tribunals to go full marsupial with regard to sexual assault allegations is a bad approach to reducing sexual assault. [read post]
16 Nov 2014, 5:42 am by SHG
In one corner, Jed Rubenfeld, a professor of criminal law at Yale Law School, formerly of the United States Attorney’s office in the Southern District of New York. [read post]
3 Apr 2014, 6:13 am by Staci Zaretsky
[The Tennessean] * Take a look at this new paper by Professors Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld on race and culture in law school admissions. [read post]
2 Apr 2014, 9:17 am
This year Larry posted a fake paper on “Judicial Ignorance” by Ilya Somin, a fake paper on “Antimodalities” by Suzanna Sherry, one by himself on living constitutionalism, and most hilariously, one by Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld on race and culture in law school admissions: In “The Triple Package,” Chua and Rubenfeld laid out a provocative argument about the traits that enable Americans to succeed. [read post]
13 Feb 2014, 2:04 pm by Joe Patrice
[Big Law Rebel] * Daria Roithmayr of USC Law thinks The Triple Package (affiliate link), the new book by Yale’s Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld, doesn’t hold water. [read post]
12 Feb 2014, 3:06 pm by Daria Roithmayr
So I have just published a review of Triple Package (by Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld) for Slate here. [read post]
7 Feb 2014, 4:00 am by Cordell Parvin
Her email made me think about the latest book: The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America  by Amy Chua (aka Tiger Mom) and her husband, Jed Rubenfeld. [read post]
3 Feb 2014, 12:27 pm by David Lat
What does the New York Times Book Review have to say about Amy Chua and Jed Rubenfeld's new book? [read post]
7 Jan 2014, 6:11 am
  “That certain groups do much better in America than others -- as measured by income, occupational status, test scores and so on -- is difficult to talk about,” write Chua and [Jed] Rubenfeld. [read post]
6 Jan 2014, 6:28 am by Staci Zaretsky
[International Business Times] * Amy “Tiger Mom” Chua is back with a vengeance, co-authoring a controversial new book (affiliate link) with her husband, Jed Rubenfeld. [read post]
1 Dec 2013, 3:21 pm
Falk argues that Professor Jed Rubenfeld’s solution to the “riddle of rape-by-deception” goes too far in eviscerating the body of rape law that courts and legislatures have developed over the past decades. [read post]
1 Dec 2013, 3:21 pm
Falk argues that Professor Jed Rubenfeld’s solution to the “riddle of rape-by-deception” goes too far in eviscerating the body of rape law that courts and legislatures have developed over the past decades. [read post]
1 Dec 2013, 3:19 pm
In The Riddle of Rape-by-Deception and the Myth of Sexual Autonomy, Jed Rubenfeld contends that the most obvious candidate—sexual autonomy—is inadequate. [read post]
1 Dec 2013, 3:19 pm
In The Riddle of Rape-by-Deception and the Myth of Sexual Autonomy, Jed Rubenfeld contends that the most obvious candidate—sexual autonomy—is inadequate. [read post]