Search for: "Cass Sunstein" Results 401 - 420 of 1,672
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
In this revealing book, Cass Sunstein, the New York Times bestselling author of Nudge and The World According to Star Wars, shows how today's Internet is driving political fragmentation, polarization, and even extremism—and what can be done about it. [read post]
19 Apr 2017, 3:30 am by Aditi Bagchi
Aditi Bagchi Cass Sunstein’s thoughts about the ethics of regulation are of more than theoretical interest. [read post]
18 Apr 2017, 6:15 pm by Morgan Weiland
Sunstein, Cass R., Democracy and the Problem of Free Speech (1993). ______________, Republic.com 2.0 (2001). ______________, #Republic: Divided Democracy in the Age of Social Media (2017). [read post]
17 Apr 2017, 5:04 am by Dan Ernst
The paper ends its reconsideration of the speech by examining the politics of its neoliberal reclamation by Cass Sunstein, who shared neither the egalitarian nor the institutionalist aspirations of the New Deal, but could rally to a "second bill" because it anticipated a politics of minimalist judicial enforcement he was then separately championing. [read post]
16 Apr 2017, 5:50 pm
Sunstein recently had this essay online at Bloomberg View. [read post]
13 Apr 2017, 9:00 am by Kenneth Anderson
Bloomberg economics commentator Justin Fox is tired of being told that his chances of getting killed in a terrorist attack are (much) lower than his chances of slipping, falling, and dying in a bathtub. [read post]
9 Apr 2017, 1:14 pm by Eric Goldman
Cass Sunstein, legal scholar and professor at Harvard Law School, also warns that judges’ use of Wikipedia “might introduce opportunistic editing. [read post]
30 Mar 2017, 5:00 am by Griffin Davis
In an op-ed for Bloomberg View, Cass Sunstein, a professor at Harvard Law School and a former Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs during President Obama’s first term, said the order is “likely to prove profoundly important. [read post]
30 Mar 2017, 5:00 am by Griffin Davis
In an op-ed for Bloomberg View, Cass Sunstein, a professor at Harvard Law School and a former Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs during President Obama’s first term, said the order is “likely to prove profoundly important. [read post]
28 Mar 2017, 9:05 pm by Walter Olson
“SEAT Act: Top Senators Sponsoring Bill to Outlaw Low Cost Carriers, Raise Airfares” [Gary Leff, View from the Wing] “Trump’s Safe and Sane ‘Regulatory Reform’ Idea” [Cass Sunstein/Bloomberg, earlier Sunstein on Trump regulatory initiatives] Changing law and economics shape street protest [Tyler Cowen] Arizona’s bad idea on protestors involves racketeering charges, forfeiture, and more [Coyote] “Rights And Reality:… [read post]
27 Mar 2017, 12:03 pm
Sunstein has this essay online today at Bloomberg View. [read post]
20 Mar 2017, 1:03 pm by Geoffrey R. Stone
I’m pleased to report that the early reviews have been quite glowing, including from such folks as Laurence Tribe, Linda Greenhouse, Cass Sunstein, Erwin Chemerinsky, David Cole and George Chauncey. [read post]
19 Mar 2017, 9:30 pm by Jerry Ellig
And even when some information is missing, Harvard Law School Professor Cass Sunstein argues, agencies feasibly can still make an effort to quantify benefits and costs, identify ranges of outcomes, acknowledge uncertainties, and employ “breakeven analysis”—a method of comparing benefits and costs in the face of information gaps that might otherwise make conducting cost-benefit analysis impossible for financial regulators. [read post]
19 Mar 2017, 9:30 pm by Jerry Ellig
And even when some information is missing, Harvard Law School Professor Cass Sunstein argues, agencies feasibly can still make an effort to quantify benefits and costs, identify ranges of outcomes, acknowledge uncertainties, and employ “breakeven analysis”—a method of comparing benefits and costs in the face of information gaps that might otherwise make conducting cost-benefit analysis impossible for financial regulators. [read post]
17 Mar 2017, 2:44 pm by Eugene Volokh
Cass Sunstein, legal scholar and professor at Harvard Law School, also warns that judges’ use of Wikipedia “might introduce opportunistic editing. [read post]
13 Mar 2017, 7:41 pm by Mark Tushnet
Cass Sunstein's quip that the nondelegation doctrine had one good year -- 1935, the year of Panama Refining and Schechter -- is not quite right. [read post]
4 Mar 2017, 2:09 pm
Trump's approach to regulatory reform is really quite reasonable and good, according to Cass Sunstein. [read post]
20 Feb 2017, 9:31 pm by Amit Narang
In 2012, Cass Sunstein, former administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), wrote a piece titled, “The Stunning Triumph of Cost-Benefit Analysis. [read post]