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Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date |
51 |
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Flynn, John J. | Federalism and viable state government: the history of Utah's Constitution | The decade of the 1960's has witnessed, thus far, a sharp upswing of interest in the state of the states. Financial crisis, political paralysis, reapportionment, and the continued trend of federal intervention in heretofore "local" affairs have forced believers in the federal idea to reexamine the s... | Constitution, Law; History | 1966 |
52 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Federalism in the Middle East and Europe | Federalism is well know in its first, well-established dimension thanks to the extraordinary tradition this country has known. It is less known and is currently a big battle in process in Europe. It is completely unkown and is, I think, the intellectual battle to come in the Middle East. So, these w... | | 2003 |
53 |
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Chodosh, Hiram E. | Fighting Corruption: Identifying Foundational Obstacles and New Directions | Exploring the conceptual and practical weaknesses of efforts to combat corruption is not enough. The identification of obstacles alone, however useful in itself, would be insufficiently responsive to the considerable challenge of anti-corruption reform. This article takes stock of foundational ob... | | 2009-11-09 |
54 |
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Chodosh, Hiram E.; Holbrook, James R. | Filling the Justice Capacity Gap | The worlds justice systems are under stress. Political commitments to democratization and human rights protection, private economic transactions, counterterrorism, and globalization impose new burdens on justice institutions for more impartial and transparent conflict resolution. The intrinsic ... | | 2008 |
55 |
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Flynn, John J. | Flaws in higher education governance are putting the U of U at risk | The governance of colleges and universities has been an enduring source of controversy. At one time or another in the long history of higher education, paramount powers of governance have been claimed by students, faculty, clergy, administrators, boards of regents or trustees, and one or another b... | Institution; University; System | 1997 |
56 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | Free exercise of religion in nineteenth century America: the Mormon cases | The Mormon cases present a fascinating study of diversity and conformity in the United States in the nineteenth century. From their beginning the Mormons were a gathered people. Almost immedi- ately, from their origins in New York, the Mormons challenged the legal systems in the nation and the state... | Law; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints; Nineteenth century; Polygamy; Theocracy | 1989 |
57 |
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Mallat, Chibli | From Islamic to Middle Eastern Law A Restatement of the Field (Part I) | Any approach to law in the region known as Near or Middle East is doubly selective, as the historical depth of the tradition enhances the diversity of cultures active in the contemporary world. Law is a particular example where the contrasted set-up which characterizes twenty-five or so modern Natio... | | 2004 |
58 |
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Chodosh, Hiram | From zero-sum conflicts to federalism: Iraqis offer an international community a road forward | The future of federalism in Iraq is not only important to the peoples of that country who have struggled over so many decades for human rights and peace. It is an experiment of consequential interest to all of us, from North America to Europe, from Asia to the Middle East, to see if a society ridd... | | 2009-07-09 |
59 |
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Flynn, John J. | Function and dysfunction of per se rules in vertical market restraints | In 1963, the Supreme Court held it did not know enough about the "economic and business stuff" out of which nonprice vertical market restraints "emerge" to determine whether they should be measured by a "rule of reason" test or one of "per se illegality.'" Seventeen years later, after one flip2 and ... | | 1980 |
60 |
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Guiora, Amos N. | The Gate Keepers: Geopolitics and the Limits of Power | The Gate Keepers: Geopolitics and the Limits of Power | | 2013-03 |
61 |
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Flynn, John J. | General practitioner's introduction to antitrust law and practice | Antitrust practice is considered by many general practitioners to be arcane, complex and mysterious. It is a jargon-ridden world, with rapid developments expanding an evermore complex vocabulary to describe new business practices brought within the ebb and flow of antitrust litigation. Most general ... | Litigation.; Competition; Client | 1975 |
62 |
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Flynn, John J. | In memorium: Lionel H. Frankel | We have gathered together to celebrate the life and mourn the death of Lionel Frankel-husband, father, brother, teacher, colleague, and friend. We celebrate his life because he brought us uncommon gifts of decency, sensitivity, humanity, and compassion. We mourn his death because we will miss his pr... | Memorial essay; Memorial Service | 2002 |
63 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | Inner-outer speaks out | During 1965 and 1966, I worked as an assistant to Vice President Hubert Humphrey and, in addition, participated in a program that permitted 15 young men to enjoy informal suppers and extended off-the-record chats with the President in the White House, attend frequent sessions with the Vice Preside... | White House Fellows; Hubert Humphrey; Vietnam | 1967 |
64 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Insightful, Moving Study of the Iraqi Chalabi Dynasty | Tamara Chalabi's Late for Tea at the Deer Palace: The Lost Dreams of my Iraqi Family, has just been published by Harper's Press. Late for Tea at the Deer Palace, is her literary-historical chronicle of the Chalabi family over the last century. Like Wild Swans, which recounts three generations of wom... | | 2010-08-19 |
65 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | International law and the response of the United States to "Internal War | With the spectre of nuclear weapons acting as a restraint upon the nations in terms of the levels and types of violence they will employ to achieve national goals, warfare since 1945 has undergone radical change. There has been no massive, overt aggression by one major power against another, altho... | Warfare; International relations; Politics | 1967 |
66 |
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Guiora, Amos N. | International Law: Where Have We Been; Where Are We Going? | International law, much like the law of nation-states, is in a state of flux. There is great unceraintly regarding its applicability in what I (and others) refer to as the post-9/11 world. Needless to say, not all agree with me that the world significantly changed that Tuesday morning. They suggest ... | | 2009-07-13 |
67 |
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Flynn, John J. | Introduction (symposium on health care) | Health care markets and related sectors of the economy like insurance provide essential services in our society. They have heen undergoing rapid change for at least the past decade, yet some thirty-seven to thirty-nine million citizens lack health care insurance at one time or another each year; rap... | Health care; Health insurance; Health care, providers | 1995 |
68 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Introduction a la pensee de Robert Fossaert | Cette introduction est surtout un appel, pour paraphraser Althusser sur Marx (<< II faut lire Le Capital, et se mettre au travail) a un bon usage de Fossaert : II faut lire La Societe, et se mettre au travail . Le lecteur trouvera une lucarne de l'universalisme de Fossaert dans la section du b... | | 2009 |
69 |
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Flynn, John J. | Introduction: symposium- Antitrust Policy and Health Care Reform | Health care markets and related sectors of the economy like insurance provide essential services in our society. They have been undergoing rapid change for at least the past decade, yet some thirty-seven to thirty-nine million citizens lack health care insurance at one time or another each year; ra... | Antitrust law; Insurance, Health; Medical care | 1995 |
70 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Iraq at a Crossroads: Constitutional Review Committee Fills in Crucial Gaps | Iraq is at a historical crossroads on the bumpy road to democracy. The Constitutional Review Committee (CRC) has all but completed the task assigned to it by the 2005 Constitution under the chairmanship of Sheikh Humam Hamoudi, the delegate of the largest parliamentary bloc, together with Dr.... | | 2009-11-19 |
71 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Iraqi Refugees: Mobilizing for Lana and the Rights of Abused Women | IRAP helps escapees navigate maze of interviews, document reviews, security and medical procedures | | 2010-10-21 |
72 |
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Flynn, John J. | Is and "ought" of vertical restraints after Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp. | Great hopes and great fears accompanied the Supreme Court's decision to review the Seventh Circuit's decision in Spray-Rite Service Corp. v. Monsanto Co. (2) Proponents of a neoclassical economic model of antitrust analysis, including the Reagan administration, saw Monsanto as a vehicle for bringing... | | 1986 |
73 |
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Mallat, chibli | Is Israel a Democracy? It's conditional | This is a serious discussion to be undertaken on a world level on the type of system that Israel is, as serious indeed as the legal investigation carried out in the mid-1960s on the legal nature of the apartheid regime in South Africa. In the early 1960s, Yale Law Journal published a long, two-pa... | | 2009-12-10 |
74 |
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Firmage, Edwin B. | J. Reuben Clark, Jr., law and international order | President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., spent his professional career, spanning some twenty-seven years, as an international lawyer.1 From the time of his graduation from the Columbia Law School in 1906 and his appointment as assistant Solicitor (an assistant legal adviser in the Department of State) in the... | Arbitration; Settlement; Resolution | 1973 |
75 |
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Mallat, Chibli | Jaafar al-Sadr : A Confluence Prime Minister for Iraq | In Iraq and the wider Middle East, Jaafar needs no introduction. His father, Mohammad Baqer al-Sadr, was the most remarkable Islamic thinker of the 20th century. He was executed without trial by Saddam Hussein, together with Jaafar?s aunt Bint al-Huda, on 8 April 1980. His cousin and brother-in-law ... | | 2010-08-19 |