SPEAKING SOFTLY WITHOUT BIG STICKS: META-REGULATION AND PUBLIC SECTOR AUDIT.
SCOTT, COLIN.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/2003, pág. 203 a 220
1. INTRODUCTION. 2. LOCATING TRADITIONS OF PUBLIC SECTOR AUDIT. 3. AUDIT AS THE SOLUTION TO FISCAL CRISIS: VALUE FOR MONEY AND PERFORMANCE. 4. AUDIT AND THE REGULATORY STATE. 5. CONCLUSIONS.
STRUCTURED SENTENCING IN FLORIDA: IS THE EXPERIMENT OVER?
HOGENMULLER, JOHN
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/1998, pág. 281
1. Introduction. 2. The formative years (1977-1983). 3. The original guidelines (1983-1993). 4. The "New" guidelines (1994-1998). 5. "Repeal" of guidelines and the enactment of the criminal punishment code. 6. The future.
SUBSISTENCE EMISSIONS AND LUXURY EMISSIONS
SHUE, HENRY
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 1/1993, pág. 39
1. Introduction. 2. A framework for internationalìjustice. a) Four kinds of questions. b) Two more kinds ofìquestions. c) Two kinds of answers. 3. Comprehensivenessìversus justice.
TAKING BACK DRUID HILLS: AN EVALUATION OF A COMMUNITY POLICING EFFORT IN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA
KESSLER, DAVID A.;BORELLA, DIANE
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 1/1997, pág. 95
1. Introduction. 2. Methodology. 3. Findings. 4.Conclusions.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND CRIME: REGULATORY DILEMMAS
GRABOSKY, P.N.;SMITH, RUSSELL G.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/1997, pág. 317
1. Introduction. 2. The regulatory setting. 3. The telecommunications environment. 4. The contemporary clinate of telecommunications regulation. 5. Varieties of telecommunications-related crime. 6. The regulatory challenge. 7. The range of countermeasures. 8. Unintended consequences of regulatory intervention. 9. Conclusion.
THE CHILD'S RIGHT TO FAMILY UNITY IN INTERNATIONAL IMMIGRATION LAW
ABRAM, ELIAHU FRANK
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/1995, pág. 397
1. Introduction. 2. Family reunification in national laws. 3. National sovereignty and the right to family life in international law. 4. Family reunification under articles 9, 10, and 22 of the convention on the rigts of the child. 5. Using the convention on the rights of the child as a tool for advocacy of family reunification.
SPURR, STEPHEN J.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/1997, pág. 285
1. Introduction. 2. The data. 3. The program to reduce court delay in wayne county. 4. The court congestion hypothesis. 5. Analysis of the Michigan data. 6. A duration model including case events. 7. Analysis of the New York state data. 8. The hazard of settlement.
HITE, PEGGY A.;STOCK, TOBY
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/1995, pág. 161
1. Introduction. 2. Literature analysis and hypothesis development. 3. Research method. a) Research design. b) Task. c) Subjects. 4. Empirical results. a) Supplemental analysis of taxpayer tolerance for uncertainty. 5. Conclusions and limitations.
THE EFFECTS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ON WOMEN'S EMPLOYMENT
LLOYD, SUSAN
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/1997, pág. 139
1. Introduction. 2. Method. 3. The survey results. 4. The interviews. 5. Concluding remarks.
THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY LAW: A DECADE OF CHANGE FOR JAPANESE WOMEN?
GELB, JOYCE
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/2000, pág. 385
1. Introduction. 2. The equal employmentopportunity law. 3. The impact of the EEOL. 4. Recentdevelopments. 5. Conclusion.
THE EVOLUTION OF THE DERMINATE IDEAL OF SENTENCING: AN ILLINOIS CASE STUDY
GRISET, PAMALA L.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/1997, pág. 265
1. Introduction. 2. The evolution of the determinate ideal. 3. The evolution of determinate sentencing in Ilinois. 4. Discussion and conclusion
THE INCIDENCE AND STRUCTURE OF CONFLICT ON THE U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT
UNAH, ISAAC
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 1/2001, pág. 69
1. Introduction and overview. 2. Characteristics ofthe court of appeals for the federal circuit. 3. Theoreticalunderpinnings. 4. Data. 5. Findings. 6. Concluding Remarks.
THE ISRAELI MODEL FOR MANAGING THE NATIONAL LIST OF HEALTH SERVICES IN AN ERA OF LIMITED
SHANI, SEGEV;YAHALOM, ZOHAR
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/2002, pág. 133
I. Introduction. II. The national list of health services. III. Keeping medicine in Israel up-to-date. IV. Rationing health care services. V. Conclusions.
THE LEGAL AND PSYCHOSOCIAL CONTEXT OF FAMILY VIOLENCE: TOWARD A SOCIAL ECOLOGICAL ANALYSIS
FONDACARO, MARK;JACKSON, SHELLY
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/1999, pág. 91
1. Introduction. 2. Social ecological framework. 3.Summary of articles. 4. Toward a social ecological analysisof family violence.
THE LEGAL REGULATION OF MEDICAL SCIENCE
ROACH ANLEU, SHARYN L.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/2001, pág. 417
1. Introduction. 2. Law and regulation. 3. Controversial science, boundary maintenance, and legal formalism. 4. The infertility (medical procedures) act. 5. Embryo experimentation and legal change. 6. Conclusion.
THE LIMITS OF THE ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF REGULATION: AN EMPIRICAL CASE AND A CASE FOR EMPIRICISM
MAKKAI, TONI;BRAITHWAITE, JOHN
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/1993, pág. 271
1. Introduction. 2. Australian nursing homeìregulation. 3. Costs and compliance. a) Measuring the costsìof compliance. b) Can actual and expected costs beìinterchanged? c) Does expected cost affect subsequentìcompliance? 4. Conclusion.
BEARDWOOD, BARBARA
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/1999, pág. 315
1. Introduction. 2. A restructuring of powerrelations. 3. Provincial regulation. 4. Autonomy. 5. Thedevelopment of medical dominance. 6. Nursing. 7. Theregulated health professions act. 8. Reduced organizationalautonomy. 9. Reduced policy autonomy. 10. Reduced clinicalautonomy. 11. Economic autonomy. 12. The control ofprofessional work. 13....
1. Introduction. 2. A restructuring of powerrelations. 3. Provincial regulation. 4. Autonomy. 5. Thedevelopment of medical dominance. 6. Nursing. 7. Theregulated health professions act. 8. Reduced organizationalautonomy. 9. Reduced policy autonomy. 10. Reduced clinicalautonomy. 11. Economic autonomy. 12. The control ofprofessional work. 13. Conclusion.
THE MARKET FOR FINANCIAL REPORT AUDITS: REGULATION OF AND COMPETITION FOR AUDITOR INDEPENDENCE.
HOUGHTON, KEITH A. JUBB, CHRISTINE.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/2003, pág. 299 a 321
1. INTRODUCTION. 2. THE AUDIT FUNCTION. 3. AUDITOR INDEPENDENCE. 4. REGULATING INDEPENDENCE OF AUDITING. 5. JOINTLY SUPPLYING AUDIT AND NONAUDIT SERVICES. 6. THE ROTATION OF AUDIT FIRMS. 7. COMMUNICATING THROUGH THE AUDIT OPINION. 8. COMPETING FOR AUDITOR INDEPENDENCE. 9. CONCLUSION.
CROSBY-CURRIE,CATHERINE;REPPUCCI, N. DICKON
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/1999, pág. 129
1. Introduction. 2. The legal context of childprotection. a) Early historical context. b) The creation ofthe current legal context. a) Fundamental parental right:Meyer and Pierce. b) The state's interests in the protectionof children: Prince v Massachusetts. c) Conclusion. 3.Deshaney as exemplar. a) Introduction. b) Deshaney vWinnebago...
1. Introduction. 2. The legal context of childprotection. a) Early historical context. b) The creation ofthe current legal context. a) Fundamental parental right:Meyer and Pierce. b) The state's interests in the protectionof children: Prince v Massachusetts. c) Conclusion. 3.Deshaney as exemplar. a) Introduction. b) Deshaney vWinnebago county department of social services. a) Theopinion of the court. b) Criticisms of the majority opinion.c) Razor's edge between parental right and the state'saffirmative duty. 4. Returning the child to the childprotection equation. a) Introduction. b) Entitlements andprocedural due process. 5. Conclusion.
THE POLITICS OF ADOPTION: CHILD RIGHTS IN THE BRAZILIAN SETTING
FONSECA, CLAUDIA
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 3/2002, pág. 199
I. Introduction. II. Child circulation: a social dynamic aimed at promoting child welfare. III. Brazilian legislation: the linear evolution toward plenary adoption. IV. From the poor man's boarding school to pre-adoption internment. V. The efficacy of safeguards in contemporary legislation. VI. Historical context and interest groups....
I. Introduction. II. Child circulation: a social dynamic aimed at promoting child welfare. III. Brazilian legislation: the linear evolution toward plenary adoption. IV. From the poor man's boarding school to pre-adoption internment. V. The efficacy of safeguards in contemporary legislation. VI. Historical context and interest groups. VII. Conclusions: a need to repoliticize questions of child welfare.
THE PROFESSIONALIZATION OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTING: A SOCIAL DILEMMA PERSPECTIVE
BRICKER, ROBERT;BAILEY, ANDREW;GRANT, JULIA;TURNER, JOANNE
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/1993, pág. 95
1. Introduction. 2. Financial reporting andìauditing. 3. Public accounting as a social dilemma. 4. Theìprofessionalization of public accounting. 5. Concludingìremarks.
THE RIGHT A FAMILY ENVIRONMENT FOR CHILDREN LIVING IN EXCEPTIONALLY DIFFICULT CONDITIONS
MELTON, GARY B.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/1995, pág. 345
THE RIGHT TO PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE ON DEMAND
GROSSWALD, BLANCHE
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 2/2002, pág. 175
I. Introduction. II. Definitions. III. Right-to-die legislation. IV. Rights and responsibilities vis-à-vis physician-assisted suicide. V. Conclusion.
THE SHADOWS OF THE LAW: CONTEMPORARY APPROCHES TO REGULATION AND THE PROBLEM OF REGULATORY CONFLICT.
HAINES, FIONA; GURNEY, DAVID
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/2003, pág. 353 a 380
1. INTRODUCTION 2. REGULATORY THEORY AND PRACTICE 3. INTERFACES BETWEEN BODIES OF REGULATION 4. REGULATORY INTERFACE, METAREGULATION, AND JURIDIFICATION 5. CONCLUSION
THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS OF THE CHILD
LEARY, VIRGINIA A.
LAW AND POLICY, n.º 4/1995, pág. 353
1. Introduction. 2. Facing facts. 3. Implementing the social and economic rights of the child. 4. Conclusion.