Search for: "Frank Pasquale" Results 261 - 280 of 448
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
27 Nov 2010, 11:08 am by buslawblogger
Frank Pasquale offers an explanation for why that may well be the case here. [read post]
25 Nov 2010, 8:41 am by Ezra Rosser
A few blogs have already noted that Adam Levitin’s testimony on the mortgage crisis is worth checking out (PropertyProf Blog includes it in a post on Resources on the Mortgage Crisis and on Concurring Opinions Blog Frank Pasquale similarly applauded Levitin’s testimony). [read post]
14 Nov 2010, 8:02 am by Scott Peppet
., that have been raised by Frank Pasquale, James Grimmelmann, and others. [read post]
9 Nov 2010, 6:19 am by Howard Wasserman
Participants include Gerard Magliocca (Indiana-Indianapolis), David Rivkin, Ilya Shapiro (Cato Institute), Kevin Sack (The New York Times), David Freddoso (Washington Examiner), David Orentlicher (Indiana-Indianapolis), Frank Pasquale (Seton Hall and former GuestPrawf), Elizabeth Pendo (Saint Louis University), and Dr. [read post]
9 Nov 2010, 6:19 am by Howard Wasserman
Participants include Gerard Magliocca (Indiana-Indianapolis), David Rivkin, Ilya Shapiro (Cato Institute), Kevin Sack (The New York Times), David Freddoso (Washington Examiner), David Orentlicher (Indiana-Indianapolis), Frank Pasquale (Seton Hall and former GuestPrawf), Elizabeth Pendo (Saint Louis University), and Dr. [read post]
26 Oct 2010, 9:55 am by Lawrence Cunningham
As Frank Pasquale noted last month, Tulane Law professor Alan Childress is successfully launching a valuable publishing program featuring modern dissemination methods for classic legal texts. [read post]
24 Oct 2010, 11:00 am by Northwestern University Law Review
Rhee Beyond Innovation and Competition: The Need for Qualified Transparency in Internet Intermediaries [citation] Frank Pasquale Federal Courts Not Federal Tribunals [citation] Lumen N. [read post]
14 Oct 2010, 2:09 pm by Elizabeth Weeks
Anup Malani’s and Frank Pasquale’s after-the-jump colloquy on the role of markets versus regulation provides a nice introduction to Tim Greaney’s chapter on “Competition Policy and Organizational Fragmentation in Health Care. [read post]
13 Oct 2010, 1:11 pm by Ani Satz
I am grateful to Frank Pasquale and Glenn Cohen for the opportunity to comment on The Fragmentation of U.S. [read post]
13 Oct 2010, 12:45 pm by Richard Saver
Also, Frank Pasquale (Chapter 11) thoughtfully discusses the hospital-physician battles over physician-led specialty hospitals. [read post]
12 Oct 2010, 10:30 am by Richard Saver
Thanks first to Frank Pasquale and Glenn Cohen for extending the invitation to comment on this terrific, provocative book and the important issue of fragmentation in the health care system. [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 11:55 am by Glenn Cohen
I am pleased to announce that in a collaboration between the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics, and Concurring Opinions, Frank Pasquale and I are organizing an online symposium on this blog (beginning on Monday) on the new book The Fragmentation of U.S. [read post]
2 Oct 2010, 3:43 am by SHG
  As Frank Pasquale notes at Concurring Opinions, there's no due process component to all this. [read post]
24 Sep 2010, 2:00 pm by Eugene Volokh
Derek Bambauer, Stuart Benjamin, Eric Berger, Michael Carroll, James Forman, Eric Goldman, Dan Hunter, Andrew Koppelman, Brian Landsberg, Sanford Levinson, Frank Pasquale, David Post, Scot Powe, Martin Redish for filing an amicus brief, and David Post for drafting the brief. [read post]
15 Sep 2010, 9:29 am by Ezra Rosser
 And on Concurring Opinions, Frank Pasquale posted a related post on “Fractal Inequality and the Great Divergence. [read post]
7 Sep 2010, 2:13 pm by Ezra Rosser
On the Concurring Opinions Blog, Frank Pasquale highlights and reviews what sounds like a good/interesting book: Kim Bobo, Wage Theft in America (2008). [read post]
7 Sep 2010, 2:12 pm by Adam Thierer
  Regular contributors to the Concurring Opinions blog, such as Frank Pasquale, are also taking part. [read post]
17 Aug 2010, 6:45 am by William Carleton
While fatalistically conceding that forces of corporate darkness will likely triumph, here now is analysis by Frank Pasquale that assumes carriers will bypass market forces altogether and write their own rules: "We’ve seen a cognate regulatory arbitrage story before in the financial sector: think of the opaque dealmaking that sunk big banks, and the rating agencies’ First Amendment immunity from liability for utterly conflicted assessments of mortgage-backed… [read post]
10 Aug 2010, 10:41 am by William McGeveran
And as Frank Pasquale predicts, it’s far more likely that this so-called public internet “will gradually decline in quality, so that it’s vestigial (like public broadcasting) or a poor program for poor people (a la Medicaid). [read post]