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Centro de Estudios Municipales y de Cooperación Internacional (CEMCI)

THE SECRET AMBITION OF DETERRENCE

KAHAN, DAN M.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 2/1999, pág. 413

Sumario
1. Theories of punishment and political conflict.a) Expressive condemnation. b) Deterrence. 2. The secretambition revealed. a) Capital punishment. b) Gun control. c)Hate crimes. 3. The secret ambition appraised. a) Liberalthesis. b) Antiliberal antithesis. c) Pragmatic synthesis?.4. Conclusión.

THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION AND CORPORATE SOCIAL TRANSPARENCY

WILLIAMS, CYNTHIA A.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 6/1999, pág. 1197

Sumario
1. Mandatory disclosure under the federalsecurities laws. 2. Disclosure as a regulation mechanism. 3. Section 14(a) of the securities exchange act of 1934. 4. Prior SEC proceedings concerning expanded socialDisclosure. 5. Expanded social disclosure. 6. Models forexpanded social disclosure.

THE SUPREME COURT. 1999 TERM

Harvard Law Review, n.º 1/2000, pág. 23

Sumario
1. Constitutional Law. 2. Federal Jurisdiction andprocedure. 3. Federal statutes and regulations. Thestatistics. The Supreme Court in the nineties: a statisticalretrospective.

THE THEORISTS' CONSTITUCION- AND OURS

FELDMAN, NOAH

Harvard Law Review, n.º 4/2004, pág. 1163 a 1194

THE VALUE OF MORAL PHILOSOPHY.

KRONMNAN, ANTHONY T.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 7/1998, pág. 1751

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. Reason and moral life. 3. Professional philosophy.

THE WORLD TRADE CONSTITUTION

SMCGINNIS JOHN O.;MOVSESIAN, MARK L.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 2/2000, pág. 511

Sumario
Introduction. 1. Free trade, democracy and theircommon discontents. 2. The World Trade Constitution. 3. Theemerging antidiscrimination and regulatory models of theWTO. 4. A jurisprudence of covert protectionism. 5. TheWTO's early record. 6. Conclusion.

THEOLOGY SCHOLARSHIPS, THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE, AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTY: AVOIDING THE EXTREMES BUT MISSING THE LIBERTY

LAYCOCK, DOUGLAS

Harvard Law Review, n.º 1/2004, pág. 155

Sumario
I. DAVEY AND THE FUNDING CASES. A) THE DOCTRINAL CONTEXT: FUNDING OF RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS. B. WHAT THE STATE MAY FUND. C. WHAT THE STATE MUST FUND. II. DAVEY AND THE REGULATION CASES. A. THE DOCTRINAL CONTEXT: REGULATION OF RELIGIOUS PRACTICE. B. THE IMPACT OF DAVEY. III. NEWDOW AND THE RELIGIOUS SPEECH CASES. A. THE DOCTRINAL CONTEXT: RELIGIOUS SPEECH WITH AND WITHOUT GOVERNMENT SPONSORSHIP. B. THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE. C. THE COURT'S RESPONSE. IV. CONCLUSION.

THREE CHEERS (AND TWO QUIBBLES) FOR PROFESSOR KENNEDY.

REED AMAR, AKHIL

Harvard Law Review, n.º 5/1998, pág. 1256

Sumario
1. Three cheers. 2. Two quibbles.

TO BAR OR NOT TO BAR: PROSECUTION HISTORY ESTOPPEL AFTER WARNER-JENKINSON

Harvard Law Review, n.º 8/1998, pág. 2330

Sumario
1. Two doctrines of prosecution history estoppel. 2. Warner-Jenkinson and related cases. 3. A proposed interpretation.

TOWARD A NEW HISTORY OF AMERICAN ACCIDENT LAW: CLASSICAL TORT LAW AND THE COOPERATIVE FIRST-PARTY INSURANCE MOVEMENT

FABIAN WITT, JOHN

Harvard Law Review, n.º 3/2001, pág. 690

Sumario
1. Rethinking the origins of American accident law.2. Amputee workingmen, destitute windows, and the crisis offree labor. 3. The dilemmas of classical tort law. 4. Thefirst first-party insurance system. 5. Cooperativeself-insurance and the cooperative critique of industrialaccidents. 6. Conclusion: a path not taken.

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