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Centro de Estudios Municipales y de Cooperación Internacional (CEMCI)

TOWARD REASONABLE EQUALITY: ACCOMMODATING LEARNING DISABILITIES UNDER THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT

Harvard Law Review, n.º 6/1998, pág. 1560

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. Learning disabilities and accommodations under the ADA. a) Constitutional and statutory framework. b) On the nature of learning disabilities. 3. Defining "disability" and "essence" under the ADA. a) Defining "disability". b) Defininf "Essence". 4. Developing an interpretive methodology for LD Claims under the ADA. a) Wheat from Chaff: "Learning Disabled" or "Garden Variety" Slow reader?. b) Essential natures: avoiding the affirmative action trap. c) Fair and Square: Promoting the meritorious Alone. 5. Conclusion.

TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AS ORDINARY JUSTICE.

POSNER, ERIC A.; VERMEULE, ADRIAN

Harvard Law Review, n.º 3/2003, pág. 761 a 825

Sumario
1. OVERVIEW 2. ANALYSIS 3. CONCLUSION

TRIAL AS ERROR, JURISDICTION AS INJURY: TRANSFORMING THE MEANING OF ARTICLE III

RESNIK, JUDITH

Harvard Law Review, n.º 4/2000, pág. 924

Sumario
1. A "failure of the system". 2. Judicialtransformations of the daily practices of judging. 3. Aninstitutional voice. 4. Reading a century's changes. 5.Rereading article III. 6. Cacophony, for a peculiar branchof government. 7. The iconic courthouse.

UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT OF THE 1996 DEPORTATION LAWS AND THE LIMITED SCOPE OF PROPOSED REFORMS

MORAWETZ, NANCY

Harvard Law Review, n.º 8/2000, pág. 1936

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. The 1996 DeportationProvisions. 3. How Context Magnifies the Consequences ofthe New Deportation Categories. 4. The Impact of the NewLaws on Families. 5. The Misguided Quest for a New System ofDeportation-by-Label. 6. Conclusion.

UNDERSTANDING THE RIGHT TO AN UNDILUTED VOTE

GERKEN, HEATHER D.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 6/2001, pág. 1663

Sumario
Introduction. 1. Dilution as an Aggregate Harm. 2.The problem of strict scrutiny in Shaw cases. 3. Strictscrutiny in Shaw II: a case study of the differences betweenan aggregate right and a conventional individual right. 4.The relationship between aggregate rights and an individualrights framework.

UNDERSTANDING VENTURE CAPITAL STRUCTURE, A TAX EXPLANATION FOR CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK

GILSON, RONALD J.; SCHIZER DAVID M.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 3/2003, pág. 874 a 916

Sumario
1. TWO ELEMENTS OF THE VENTURE CAPITAL LANDSCAPE 2. CURRENT EXPLANATIONS FOR THE USE OF CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK 3. THE IMPACT OF CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK ON THE TAXATION OF INCENTIVE COMPENSATION 4. ALTERNATIVE TAX ESTRATEGIES 5. VALUATION RULES AS A SUBSIDY 6. CONCLUSION

UNIFORM FEDERAL RULES OF ATTORNEY CONDUCT: A FLAWED PROPOSAL.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 7/1998, pág. 2063

Sumario
1. Introduction. 2. The history and the problem. 3. The proposal. 4. Analysis. 5. Conclusion.

USING CAPITAL CASH FLOWS TO VALUE DISSENTERS' SHARES IN APPRAISAL PROCEEDINGS.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 7/1998, pág. 2099

Sumario
1. The delaware block method. 2. Discounted cash flow valuation. 3. Capital cash flow valuation. 4. Conclusion.

VOTING WITH VOTES

LOWENSTEIN, DANIEL H.

Harvard Law Review, n.º 7/2003, pág. 1971

Sumario
I. INTRODUCTION. II. BLEMISHES. III. FOUNDATIONS. IV. POLICY. V. CONCLUSION.

WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT PERSONS: THE LANGUAGE OF A LEGAL FICTION

Harvard Law Review, n.º 6/2001, pág. 1745

Sumario
1. The law of persons: theory and practice. 2. TheLaw of persons: implications. 3. Conclusion.

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