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Displaying 521 - 530 of 1304

Agency Lumping and Splitting

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/agency-lumping-and-splitting
Regulations, like other legal instruments, often arrive in lumps. An agency, for example, can issue a rule addressing many different subjects, each of which could be split off and issued as a separate regulation.

From Slices to Lumps and Back Again: Aggregation and Division in US Federal Income Tax Law

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/slices-lumps-and-back-again-aggregation-and-division-us-federal-income-tax-law
Law engages aggregation and division in at least one additional, closely related way: law must sometimes decide the proper unit of analysis not just in deciding whether the law has been violated, but also to decide what body of law applies.

Co-Location Covenants

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/co-location-covenants
One of the many virtues of Lee Fennell’s terrific new book, Slices & Lumps: Division and Aggregation in Law and Life, is her insistence that property scholars vigilantly seek out gaps in existing arrangements. Where there’s a gap, there’s an opportunity to unlock suppressed value.

Lumping, Fairness, and Single People

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/lumping-fairness-and-single-people
A popular tweet (popular to a certain segment of folks roughly 250,000 strong, at least) chants, “Who are we? Single young professionals. What do we want? For perishable groceries to be sold in smaller portion sizes.”

Slicing (and Transferring) Development

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/slicing-and-transferring-development
Spend too long within the pages of Lee Fennell’s Slices and Lumps and you begin to see slices and lumps everywhere.

Interpreting the Law through Corpus Linguistics

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/uclr-online/briefly-podcast/interpreting-law-through-corpus-linguistics
This is Briefly, a production of the University of Chicago Law Review. Today we’re discussing Corpus Linguistics, which is a sub-field of linguistics that employs database searches to study language usage.

The Effective Competition Standard: A New Standard for Antitrust

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/effective-competition-standard-new-standard-antitrust

What’s in Your Wallet (and What Should the Law Do About It?)

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/whats-your-wallet-and-what-should-law-do-about-it

The Arc of Monopoly: A Case Study in Computing

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/arc-monopoly-case-study-computing

Chicago and Its Discontents

https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/print-archive/chicago-and-its-discontents

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