Search for: "NYU Law Review" Results 1261 - 1280 of 1,337
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21 Jan 2022, 8:35 am by Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
Céline Gounder at NYU’s Grossman School of Medicine bluntly noted that “neither Merck nor Pfizer is incentivized to run a combination therapy trial. [read post]
15 Nov 2013, 1:28 pm by Jeff Gamso
  He's the founding head of the Division of Bioethics at NYU's Langone Medical Center. [read post]
22 Apr 2023, 12:45 pm by Unknown
Based on the conviction that they have great reformatory potential, this group engages in regular discussions about the relevance of feminist approaches to legal displacement research, extending beyond refugee law to consider the legal protection of other forcibly displaced persons. [read post]
16 Apr 2025, 6:05 am by Nancy Morawetz
As Natasha Fernandez-Silber and I described in our law review article on registration, no one saw the statute as imposing a universal registration requirement in policy or practice. [read post]
1 Dec 2010, 7:04 am by The People's Therapist
He holds degrees from Harvard, NYU Law, and The Hunter College School of Social Work, and he blogs at The People’s Therapist. [read post]
9 Mar 2012, 1:13 pm by Randy Barnett
” In Raich, we never denied the proposition that the “essential to a broader regulatory scheme” doctrine was grounded in the Necessary and Proper Clause, but argued instead throughout the litigation that whether a law was “essential” and therefore “necessary” had to be survive greater scrutiny than mere rational basis review. [read post]
28 Nov 2011, 9:04 am by David Lat
In reviewing last year’s partnership class, we noted that “STB seems to see its future on the transactional side. [read post]
11 Aug 2021, 9:51 am by Deborah J. Merritt
We have learned that it does not take a 1st-year lawyer paid $200,000 a year to review documents in a dusty warehouse. [read post]
1 Nov 2016, 3:49 am by Edith Roberts
”  NYU Law News notes that three of the law school’s intellectual-property professors “filed amicus briefs in the case, each taking a different perspective on the question. [read post]
23 Feb 2011, 2:06 pm by Jeff Gamso
  But the testimony (and remember, that's the only source he bothers with) is very heavily abolitionist.Even his most passionate and forceful (and frequently quoted) advocate for death, Professor Rober Blecker of NYU Law School, seems to think we sentence far too many people to death on far too little evidence and who are far too undeserving of the death [read post]
18 Jun 2023, 12:35 pm by Guest Author
Natasha Brunstein is a Legal Fellow at the Institute for Policy Integrity at NYU School of Law. [read post]
1 Feb 2024, 3:27 pm by Alex J. Brackett and Stephen Tagert
Axelrod Drives Home the Enforcement Agenda In his January 16, 2024 speech at NYU School of Law’s Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement, Matt Axelrod made clear that export enforcement is expected to be an increasingly important priority given the growing national security threat posed by sensitive technologies making their way from the United States to the hands of strategic adversaries overseas. [read post]
23 Aug 2012, 2:07 pm by Victor
  References: I talk about management fees on page 23-24 of Two and Twenty (NYU Law Review 2008). [read post]
27 Mar 2023, 9:50 am by centerforartlaw
By Cynthia Li Little Red Book (“LRB” in the rest of the blog), the leading Chinese lifestyle social media and E-commerce platform indulges its over 200 million monthly active users with a metaverse experience. [read post]
3 May 2019, 8:32 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Jacob Gersen & Joel Steckel, Harvard Law & NYU Stern, Conference IntroductionSteckel gave a talk on dilution years ago and RT tore him apart (sorry!) [read post]
22 Jun 2009, 6:54 am
And for those complaining about doing doc review for $35-$40/hr: when I worked for Lexis as a law school trainer, I was making $17/hr, and during school vacations that year I temped as a secretary. [read post]
26 Jun 2022, 10:40 pm by Josh Blackman
I explored this theme in my article, The Burden of Judging in the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty: "Instead of chiseling out the so-called tiers of scrutiny, accounting for these burdens serves as a more accurate descriptor of the manner in which governments and individuals have their constitutional rights either vindicated or vitiated. [read post]