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At this event, four distinguished lawyers who have significant experience both in government and constitutional law will discuss the key constitutional issues that are essential to understand in this controversy, the precedents from similar disputes in the past, and the implications for the future if either the president’s position or the opponents' position is ultimately upheld by the courts.
This article is the first part of a two-part examination of the contentious issue of how state governments' provision of goods and services to the public should be taxed under a VAT.
Two Harvard law professors make the case for improving tort law to better protect individuals and discipline businesses.
In
Making Tort Law, Charles Fried and David Rosenberg, professors at Harvard Law School, address the intellectual roots of the "tort explosion" and identify the functions that tort law can and cannot serve. Their rigorous and powerful analysis contends that the justification of tort liability as...Contemporary school reform, from the No Child Left Behind Act to proposals for higher education accountability, places enormous weight on the value of educational testing. Accountability proponents on the left and the right have devoted little time to addressing the shortcomings of testing. Meanwhile, critics have tended to denounce testing...
Campaign fundraising is entering into a new era with the recent passage of the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2002. While McCain-Feingold is expected to cause significant changes in campaign funding, more can be done to broaden the base of political contributions. For example, one proposed reform...






