Georgetown Law Faculty Publications And Other Works
Hester’s Dubious Roots and Legacy: Open Fields Doctrine Under Scrutiny, Laura K. Donohue Accountability for Lawyers and Lawyer-Bashers: Reflections on Wendel's Canceling Lawyers, David Luban Religious Freedom, Jesuit Mission, and DEI, William M. Treanor and Amelia J. Uelmen
Does the Original Meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment Protect Economic Liberty?, Randy E. Barnett Learning about Stability of Risk Preferences, Levon Barseghyan, Francesca Molinari, and Joshua C. Teitelbaum Georgetown Law is home to leading scholars in fields ranging from constitutional law to international law tax law to clinical legal education. Our faculty have also made their mark in administrative law, antitrust, law and economics, civil rights, corporate law and securities regulation, commercial law, criminal law, environmental law, health law, intellectual property, jurisprudence, legal history,...
Exploring the frontiers of the law, often from an interdisciplinary perspective, the faculty regularly engage in innovative scholarship and create enriched classroom experiences for students. This Research Paper Series highlights recent publications on a wide range of legal topics from the Georgetown Law faculty. All content on this site: Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc., its licensors, and contributors. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies. For all open access content, the relevant licensing terms apply. We use cookies to help provide and enhance our service and tailor content.
To learn more, visit Cookie Settings. This page was processed by aws-apollo-l200 in 0.016 seconds Mandatory Anti-Bias CLE: A Serious Problem Deserves More Meaningful Response, Rima Sirota Political Affirmative Action, Girardeau A. Spann Towards FDA–USPTO Cooperation, John R.
Thomas Converse-Osborn: State Sovereign Immunity, Standing, and the Dog-Wagging Effect of Article III, Carlos Manuel Vázquez Non-Extraterritoriality, Carlos Manuel Vázquez Risk Tradeoffs and Equitable Decision-Making in the COVID-19 Pandemic, Lawrence O. Gostin and Sarah A. Wetter
“If Rules They Can Be Called”, Amy J. Griffin China’s Entry into the WTO—A Mistake by the United States?, Jennifer A. Hillman Tailoring ex Machina: Perspectives on Personalized Law, Gregory Klass The Common Law as Statutory Backdrop, Anita S.
Krishnakumar Could Private Legislation Be the First Key to Unlocking the Nation’s Information Resources in the Battle Against Misinformation?, Michelle M. Wu Restoring the Balance of Copyright: Antitrust, Misuse, and Other Possible Paths to Challenge Inequitable Licensing Practices, Michelle M. Wu The Corruption of Copyright and Returning It to Its Original Purposes, Michelle M.
Wu Transportation in a Changing Climate: Innovating to Create Resilient, Low-Carbon Systems, Vicki Arroyo and Annie Bennett Issuance of the Keystone XL Permit: Presidential Prerogative or Presidential “Chutzpah”, Hope M. Babcock Georgetown Law hosts working paper series at the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) and the Scholarly Commons. These series archive scholarly works and reports by Georgetown Law faculty and institutes.
If you have any questions about the working papers series at Georgetown Law, please contact lawpapers@georgetown.edu(This link opens in a new tab). To promote awareness of Georgetown Law scholarship, we invite faculty and institutes to post their work to SSRN and the Scholarly Commons. There are two ways to post your work: You can keep abreast of scholarship produced at Georgetown Law by subscribing to subject-specific e-mail newsletters from SSRN and the Scholarly Commons. These periodic newsletters provide the abstracts of papers submitted to the respective services. Subscribe to Scholarly Commons email alerts.
The 2010 HMGs Ten Years Later: Where Do We Go From Here?, Steven C. Salop and Fiona Scott Morton Drug Policy Reform in the Americas: A Welcome Challenge to International Law, Alvaro Santos The Trouble with Identity and Progressive Origins in Defending Labour Law, Alvaro Santos Is It Lawful and Ethical to Prioritize Racial Minorities for COVID-19 Vaccines?, Harald Schmidt, Lawrence O. Gostin, and Michelle A.
Williams Rationing Safe and Effective COVID-19 Vaccines: Allocating to States Proportionate to Population May Undermine Commitments to Mitigating Health Disparities, Harald Schmidt, Parag A. Pathak, Michelle A. Williams, Tayfun Sönmez, M. Utku Ünver, and Lawrence O. Gostin
Growing up on Saipan, a Pacific island home to a small but diverse population, Associate Professor Eun Hee Han, L’07, observed cross-cultural communication firsthand. The American Lawyer magazine honored Professor William M. Treanor, Dean Emeritus of Georgetown Law, with its Lifetime Achievement Award at a ceremony in New York City. Georgetown Law is pleased to introduce the newest faculty additions to the Legal Practice program, which introduces first-year students to the foundations of legal writing and analysis. As this sample of recent publications indicates, Law Center faculty have engaged in significant scholarly work on ethics issues related to the legal profession and a variety of other fields. Mary DeRosa, Lawyering and the Use of Force in Libya and Syria Operations, in Research Handbook on Law and Diplomacy 61-82 (Margaret E.
McGuinness & David P. Stewart eds., Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar 2022). Mary B. DeRosa, Congressional Oversight of US Intelligence Activities, in National Security Intelligence and Ethics 216-231 (Seumas Miller, Mitt Regan & Patrick Walsh eds., New York: Routledge 2022). Mary B. DeRosa & Mitt Regan, Accountability for Targeted Killing, in Counter-Terrorism: The Ethical Issues 61-76 (Seumas Miller, Adam Henschke & Jonas Feltes ed., Northampton, Mass.: Edward Elgar 2021).
David Luban, Julie Rose O’Sullivan, David P. Stewart & Neha Jain, International and Transnational Criminal Law (New York: Aspen Publishers 4th ed. 2024)
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Hester’s Dubious Roots And Legacy: Open Fields Doctrine Under Scrutiny,
Hester’s Dubious Roots and Legacy: Open Fields Doctrine Under Scrutiny, Laura K. Donohue Accountability for Lawyers and Lawyer-Bashers: Reflections on Wendel's Canceling Lawyers, David Luban Religious Freedom, Jesuit Mission, and DEI, William M. Treanor and Amelia J. Uelmen
Does The Original Meaning Of The Fourteenth Amendment Protect Economic
Does the Original Meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment Protect Economic Liberty?, Randy E. Barnett Learning about Stability of Risk Preferences, Levon Barseghyan, Francesca Molinari, and Joshua C. Teitelbaum Georgetown Law is home to leading scholars in fields ranging from constitutional law to international law tax law to clinical legal education. Our faculty have also made their mark in administr...
Exploring The Frontiers Of The Law, Often From An Interdisciplinary
Exploring the frontiers of the law, often from an interdisciplinary perspective, the faculty regularly engage in innovative scholarship and create enriched classroom experiences for students. This Research Paper Series highlights recent publications on a wide range of legal topics from the Georgetown Law faculty. All content on this site: Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc., its licensors, and contribu...
To Learn More, Visit Cookie Settings. This Page Was Processed
To learn more, visit Cookie Settings. This page was processed by aws-apollo-l200 in 0.016 seconds Mandatory Anti-Bias CLE: A Serious Problem Deserves More Meaningful Response, Rima Sirota Political Affirmative Action, Girardeau A. Spann Towards FDA–USPTO Cooperation, John R.
Thomas Converse-Osborn: State Sovereign Immunity, Standing, And The Dog-Wagging Effect
Thomas Converse-Osborn: State Sovereign Immunity, Standing, and the Dog-Wagging Effect of Article III, Carlos Manuel Vázquez Non-Extraterritoriality, Carlos Manuel Vázquez Risk Tradeoffs and Equitable Decision-Making in the COVID-19 Pandemic, Lawrence O. Gostin and Sarah A. Wetter