Search for: "Matter of Novel" Results 6941 - 6960 of 7,159
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10 Oct 2017, 11:06 am by Matthew Kahn
There was a time when taking an oath was a matter of life and death. [read post]
17 Apr 2020, 1:06 pm by Michael Morley
As we approach the presidential election this November, election officials are developing plans to deal with the unique risks posed by the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. [read post]
3 Aug 2016, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
[We grateful to Victoria Saker Woeste of the American Bar Foundation (vswoeste@abfn.org) for this full report of an excellent conference. [read post]
18 Jan 2013, 2:06 pm by Bexis
  And if there’s another thing that’s not right, it’s imposing liability on a product manufacturer that didn’t make a cent (and probably was driven out of the market by) from the product that actually caused the injury in question.Nor is it very likely that this novel theory of “fraud/misrepresentation” liability can be limited to prescription drugs, whatever its intended scope. [read post]
1 Oct 2020, 7:40 am by Paul Rosenzweig, Claire Vishik
Thus, risk assessment can often be a matter of perception, rather than evidence. [read post]
10 Jul 2017, 12:31 pm by Matthew Kahn
  We are routinely presented with exciting and novel legal issues at the intersection of technology and law. [read post]
12 May 2022, 7:21 am by Philip Zelikow
In a recent Foreign Affairs essay co-authored with MIT economist Simon Johnson, I argued that it was essential for the G-7 and allied states to deploy a far-reaching strategy of Ukrainian reconstruction, tied to the ongoing process of EU accession for Ukraine, and funded in part by frozen Russian state and state-related assets. [read post]
27 Mar 2013, 10:15 am by VALL Blog Master
Considerable research and knowledge have resulted since Darwin's monumental pronouncements, yet many matters remain unresolved. [read post]
9 Sep 2021, 9:44 am by Daniel Byman, Benjamin Wittes
But here it’s not just the end point that matters but the nature of the curve that led to that endpoint. [read post]
1 May 2020, 7:33 am by Adina Ponta
Editor’s Note: This article does not reflect the views of the American Society of International Law or its members. [read post]
21 May 2024, 10:12 am by Jillian C. York
You want to create spaces for people to say what they want to say and speak their truths no matter how uncomfortable they are. [read post]
The story of Jan. 6’s aftermath—and all of Lawfare’s coverage of it—in one place. *** The slate of hearings convened by the Jan. 6 Committee was the television event of summer 2022: a dramatic series that vividly reminded viewers of the chaos and violence of the attack on the Capitol. [read post]
6 Jul 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Balkinization symposium on Martin Loughlin,  Against Constitutionalism (Harvard University Press, 2022).Martin Loughlin Since one purpose in publishing Against Constitutionalism (AC) with Harvard was to maximise the chance of it being read by American constitutional scholars, I cannot be other than delighted with the reviews. [read post]
14 May 2015, 7:28 am
”  Since Bexis’ 1998 law review article popularized the now-overwhelmingly adopted position that informed consent includes medical risks, not regulatory matters such as off-label use, we are particularly interested in patrolling that boundary. [read post]
12 Sep 2019, 1:02 pm
(Pix Credit Here: Carnival Cruises Faces More Lawsuits over Cuba Trips)It has been only several months since the Trump Administration announced that it would no longer suspend the U.S. law provisions that allow lawsuits in U.S. courts against foreign companies in Cuba that use properties confiscated from Cuban Americans and other U.S. citizens after 1959 (discussed here: The Pivot Toward the Caribbean: Announcement of Permission to Sue Anyone Using American Property Confiscated by Cuba and the… [read post]
24 Jul 2020, 8:36 am by Andrew Kent
Earlier this year, Goldsmith and Bauer wrote that the constitutionality of self-pardons is “legally unsettled,” and recommended that Congress ban them by statute because “Congress’s constitutional judgment can matter a lot, both in informing subsequent judicial review of a self-pardon and in giving a president pause about issuing one in the first place. [read post]
13 Dec 2022, 5:16 am by Martijn Rasser, Kevin Wolf
The Japanese company Tokyo Electron and Dutch company ASM International (ASMI) are capable, however, of producing substitute tools in a matter of months, which makes the need for the Japanese and Dutch governments to impose similar controls soon all the more significant. [read post]
24 Jul 2024, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
What was novel about interbellum Americans is that they were the first cohort to do this on their own. [read post]