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3 Sep 2013, 4:00 am by Devlin Hartline
”13 Or as the Supreme Court of New York, Appellate Division, put it over a century ago, property “is intended to embrace every species of valuable right and interest and whatever tends in any degree, no matter how small, to deprive one of that right, or interest, deprives him of his property. [read post]
28 Aug 2013, 11:54 pm by Andrew Langille
There's a skew towards requiring unpaid labour from young workers in traditionally female dominated professions and at broader public sector employers such as hospitals, post-secondary institutions, and school boards (consider the amount obtain via student teachers and new graduates volunteering to gain experience). [read post]
12 Aug 2013, 2:39 pm by Stephen Bilkis
However, in New York, since the Constitutional Convention of 1777, the Attorney General was the chief law enforcement officer responsible for the nineteenth century; the office of the District Attorney was created by statute. [read post]
2 Aug 2013, 9:50 pm
You’d think that corporate culture and safety practices would change over almost a half century, right? [read post]
1 Aug 2013, 4:00 am by Administrator
These new financial technologies, originally heralded as a breakthrough in risk management technology, have introduced complex new financial system risks and new legal and regulatory challenges. [read post]
30 Jul 2013, 10:40 am by Schachtman
  Research that suggests an industry’s product causes harm may hurt the industry’s financial interests directly by inhibiting sales, or indirectly by undermining the industry’s position in litigation, or by leading to greater regulatory scrutiny and control. [read post]
29 Jul 2013, 1:07 pm by Larry Catá Backer
Reforms and the External SectorChair: Carlos Seiglie, Rutgers University--Richard Feinberg, “FDI in Cuba: Old Obstacles and New Opportunities”--Jordan Valdés, Small Business Administration--Gabriel Di Bella, Rafael Romeu & Andy Wolfe, “Cuba’s External Trade: What do the data say? [read post]
25 Jul 2013, 3:16 am by Brian Tamanaha
It can’t be, since the rise of Big Law was a new historical development. [read post]
25 Jul 2013, 3:00 am by LindaMBeale
 Install a financial transactions tax--it could raise billions while protecting the financial system and acting as a brake on speculative trading. [read post]
24 Jul 2013, 9:01 pm by Neil H. Buchanan
The Sixties, the New Deal, the Post-Lochner Era, and More: What Are Republicans Really Against? [read post]
20 Jul 2013, 10:39 am by Larry Catá Backer
That is how today’s “constitutional question” ought to be formulated, by contrast with the 18th and 19th century question of the constitution of nation-states. [read post]
10 Jul 2013, 4:00 am by Robert McKay
If they were to do this, the outcome may be financially detrimental to the business. [read post]
28 Jun 2013, 6:01 pm by admin
Independent Tube Corp., 467 U.S. 752 (1984)) ____________________ “On the other hand, every step taken in the past to enlarge the bounds of human freedom of thought and action has stimulated discovery and invention, and as a product thereof, increased competition, which may have left by the way here and there financial wrecks as the result thereof. [read post]
26 Jun 2013, 7:32 pm by Larry Catá Backer
We argue that the birth of these trends dates to the early 1990s, when central Party authorities adopted new governance models that differed dramatically from those that of the 1980s. [read post]
9 Jun 2013, 11:47 pm
Corporations have interposed Procurement Officers between General Counsels and even long time outside counsel. [read post]
30 May 2013, 6:03 am by Jon Gelman
Rather than expressing outrage over these circumstances, U.S. media, including the New York Times, characterized these incidents not as human tragedies, inexcusably occurring in the 21st century industrial world, but as “blows to the Bangladeshi garment industry. [read post]
22 May 2013, 5:01 am by James Edward Maule
In the case of social security, the bad that happens is that a person lives past the point of working age without having amassed sufficient financial resources, perhaps because of bad health, perhaps because of being laid off, or perhaps because a corporate employer breached its promise to pay a pension, which is not unlike what happened when in the 1920s. [read post]