Results for 'market of legal services'

987 found
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  1. The Variable Value of US Legal Education in the Global Legal Services Market.Carole Silver - 2011 - Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 24 (1):35-36.
  2.  29
    Lawyers and other legal service providers.Richard Moorhead - 2010 - In Peter Cane & Herbert M. Kritzer (eds.), The Oxford handbook of empirical legal research. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This article revolves around the issue of whether or not legal professions deserve their status as professions. It looks at how empirical literature addresses this issue, concentrating on lawyers working within law firms in common law systems. A discussion of the way the profession is structured, and the creation of elites within elites, has intersected with arguments about the demography of the profession. In addition, this article considers the literature that looks at the quality of lawyering. It compares, through (...)
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  3.  15
    Outsourcing of Public-Services - Forms and Limitations.Michael Muench - 2011 - Creative and Knowledge Society 1 (2):83-95.
    Outsourcing of Public-Services - Forms and Limitations Purpose of the article is to show how public services can be outsourced from communities and what legal, organizational or other limitations may have to be taken into account.Methodology used for this article is literature research, analysis and comparison. An in-depth look into the present status of research and literature will be interconnected to the basic research in this matter that has been done from the 1970's to the 1990's.Scientific aim (...)
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  4.  34
    The Role of the Distributor Network in the Persistence of Legal and Ethical Problems of Multi-level Marketing Companies.Claudia Groß & Dirk Vriens - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 156 (2):333-355.
    Multi-level marketing companies such as Amway, Herbalife, or Tupperware differ from most other companies. They market their products and services by means of self-employed distributors who typically work from home, sell products to end consumers, and recruit, motivate, and educate new distributors to do the same. Although the industry’s growth seems to illustrate the attractiveness of MLMs, the industry has been facing several legal and ethical problems. In this paper, we focus on these problems and argue that (...)
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  5. Формування репутаційного рейтингу регіональних юридичних компаній.Olesia Khokhuliak - 2013 - Схід 6 (126):174-180.
    In the article the review of modern methodological approaches is carried out to forming of the reputation rating of legal companies and their features are considered. Except practice of western rating legal directories that successfully work at the market of legal services, methodology of the Russian and home rating directories is considered. Semantic interpretation is conducted and the matrix of criteria of the reputation rating of legal firms of basic rating directories is formed: Chambers, (...)
     
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  6.  37
    ‘Fit and proper’ coders? How might legal service delivery by non-lawyers be regulated?Felicity Bell & Justine Rogers - 2022 - Legal Ethics 24 (2):111-140.
    With an upsurge of interest and investment in new legal technologies comes consideration of who is making them and whether these individuals or entities should be subject to regulation. This article looks at how such regulation might function in light of the existing regulatory regimes governing lawyers and the capacities of legal regulators. It considers the ramifications both of maintaining the existing system, or in extending some form of regulation to these new entrants to the legal (...) market. (shrink)
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  7.  29
    Lawyers and other legal service providers.Richard Moorhead - 2010 - In Peter Cane & Herbert M. Kritzer (eds.), The Oxford handbook of empirical legal research. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This article revolves around the issue of whether or not legal professions deserve their status as professions. It looks at how empirical literature addresses this issue, concentrating on lawyers working within law firms in common law systems. A discussion of the way the profession is structured, and the creation of elites within elites, has intersected with arguments about the demography of the profession. In addition, this article considers the literature that looks at the quality of lawyering. It compares, through (...)
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  8.  26
    The Economic Basis of Legal Culture: Networks and Monopolization.Anthony Ogus - 2002 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 22 (3):419-434.
    The paper provides an economic interpretation of legal culture. Drawing on analogies from other products and services markets, I argue that combinations of legal language, procedures and conceptual structures constitute a network which, mainly through cost considerations, come to occupy a dominant position in particular jurisdictions. The facts that a particular legal culture will be adopted by political rulers and that practising lawyers can both control entry to the profession and ‘capture’ law‐making processes suggest that (...) culture networks may be protected against competition. To the extent that they have monopolistic power, lawyers can exploit the key features of legal culture to extract rents: the law used can be more formalistic, more complex and more technical than is optimal. Whether the monopolistic power of a particular legal culture is sustainable depends on the relative strength of potential competitive forces. These can take the form of alternative cultures becoming available for particular branches of the law, thus partially dismantling the network, or through transfrontier transactions opening up the network to competition from foreign systems. (shrink)
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  9.  41
    Intelligent service robots for elderly or disabled people and human dignity: legal point of view.Katarzyna Pfeifer-Chomiczewska - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (2):789-800.
    This article aims to present the problem of the impact of artificial intelligence on respect for human dignity in the sphere of care for people who, for various reasons, are described as particularly vulnerable, especially seniors and people with various disabilities. In recent years, various initiatives and works have been undertaken on the European scene to define the directions in which the development and use of artificial intelligence should go. According to the human-centric approach, artificial intelligence should be developed, used (...)
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  10. The Role of CSR in the Corporate Identity of Banking Service Providers.Andrea Pérez & Ignacio Rodríguez del Bosque - 2012 - Journal of Business Ethics 108 (2):145-166.
    The study here is a qualitative research based on multiple case studies of banking service providers to analyze the role of corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the definition of the corporate identity of these kinds of organizations. The results show that, although companies increasingly integrate CSR into their business strategies, there are some aspects of its management such as its communication or the measurement of its results that detract from its success. These results have important implications for those managers pursuing (...)
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  11.  6
    Regulating The Marketing and Supply of Tourist Accommodation Services Through a Healthy and Fair Digital Platform.Ni Made Trisna Dewi, Ida Bagus Wyasa Putra, Ni Nengah Adiyaryani & I. Gusti Ngurah Parikesit Widiatedja - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:673-679.
    This article focuses on analyzing and identifying the characteristics of losses arising from the marketing and supply of digital tourist accommodation services based on the business competition law system in Indonesia and on the formulation of marketing and supply arrangements for digital tourist accommodation services that are healthy and fair for all tourism accommodation service business actors. normative research methods used in this research, with primary legal materials in the form of laws and regulations related to monopolistic (...)
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  12. Influence of Corporate Social Responsibility on Loyalty and Valuation of Services.Ma del Mar García de los Salmones, Angel Herrero Crespo & Ignacio Rodríguez del Bosque - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 61 (4):369-385.
    The study of corporate social responsibility has been the object of much research in recent decades, although there is a need to continue investigating its benefits as a marketing tool. In the current work we adopt a multi-dimensional perspective of social responsibility, and we carry out market research to determine the perceptions of users of mobile telephone services about economic, legal, ethical and social aspects of their operating companies. With these data we determine the structure and components (...)
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  13.  8
    Religious Culture and Customary Legal Tradition: Historical Foundations of European Market Development.Leonard P. Liggio - 2015 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 21 (1-2):33-66.
    This paper traces back the sources of our present legal system and of market economy to Medieval Europe which itself benefited from Hellenistic and Roman legal culture and commercial practices. Roman provinces placed Rome in the wider Greek cultural and commercial world. If Aristotle was already transcending the narrow polis-based conceptions of his predecessors, after him Hellenistic Civilization saw the emergence of a new school of philosophy: Stoicism. The legal thought in the Latin West will hence (...)
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  14. Legal Education Beyond the Academy: The Neoliberal Reorientation of Public Legal Education.Lisa Wintersteiger - 2019 - Law and Critique 30 (2):123-129.
    In order to re-make the world in its own image, neoliberal expansionism is predicated on the dominance of a particular regime of reason. The dominance of economic-juridical rationality relies in no small part on education to reproduce itself. In this sense, how and why a populace is educated in the law becomes a locus of struggle and of alternative and competing constructions of normative and political orders. Over the last decade the United Kingdom’s justice policy has become more attentive to (...)
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  15.  23
    Ethical and Legal Considerations of Alternative Neurotherapies.Ashwini Nagappan, Louiza Kalokairinou & Anna Wexler - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 12 (4):257-269.
    Neurotherapies for diagnostics and treatment—such as electroencephalography (EEG) neurofeedback, single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) imaging for neuropsychiatric evaluation, and off-label/experimental uses of brain stimulation—are continuously being offered to the public outside mainstream healthcare settings. Because these neurotherapies share many key features of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) techniques—and meet the definition of CAM as set out in Kaptchuk and Eisenberg—here we refer to them as “alternative neurotherapies.” By explicitly linking these alternative neurotherapy practices under a common conceptual framework, this paper (...)
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  16.  38
    Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Field of Consumer Energy Services in the Eu.Feliksas Petrauskas & Aida Gasiūnaitė - 2013 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 20 (1):119-139.
    Energy services have a particularly significant impact on the daily life and welfare of consumers. The importance of such services is high, and their regulation is also changing both at the EU and Member States level, especially after the adoption of the Third Energy Package1, which is focused on improving the operation of retail markets to yield real benefits for both electricity and gas consumers. In order to implement the main or the most relevant goal of the EU, (...)
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  17.  25
    Les services juridiques en Chine rurale.Fu Hualing & Nicole G. Albert - 2013 - Diogène n° 239-239 (3/4):166-193.
    The paper examines three factors that are driving and constraining the development of rural legal services delivery in China: geographic limitation, professional interest and political intervention. Firstly, geography matters and rurality creates natural barriers for rural residents in limiting the access to legal services. There is an inherent spatial inequality for rural population when it comes to the distribution of legal service and the geographic isolation and remoteness nurture a particular type of legal culture (...)
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  18. Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Field of Consumer Financial Services.Feliksas Petrauskas & Aida Gasiūnaitė - 2012 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 19 (1):179-194.
    Financial services have a very significant impact on and meaning to the daily life and welfare of consumers. The spectrum of these types of services is very broad, and their regulation is also changing both at EU and national (Member State) level. In order to implement the main or the most relevant EU level goals, such as high level consumer rights protection, consumer trust in business sector, proper and effective functioning of the EU internal market it is (...)
     
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  19.  17
    Between Morals and Markets? An Interdisciplinary Conceptual Framework for Studying Working Conditions at Catholic Social Service Providers in Belgium and Germany.Nadja Doerflinger, Dries Bosschaert, Adeline Otto, Tim Opgenhaffen & Lander Vermeerbergen - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 172 (1):15-29.
    Despite sharing Catholic Social Teaching as their system of morals and both being confronted with marketisation pressures, working conditions at German and Belgian Catholic social service providers of elderly care differ. We argue that an interdisciplinary approach is needed to understand such differences, as interpretation of CST is mediated by local contexts. Working conditions result from interactions shaped by each country’s respective religious, legal and socio-economic contexts, providing players with different levels of discretion and power resources. In Belgium, working (...)
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  20.  89
    Market anarchism as constitutionalism.Roderick T. Long - 2008 - In Roderick T. Long & Tibor R. Machan (eds.), Anarchism/Minarchism: Is a Government Part of a Free Country? Ashgate. pp. 133-154.
    A legal system is any institution or set of institutions in a given society that provides dispute resolution in a systematic and reasonably predictable way. it does so through the exercise of three functions: the judicial, the legislative, and the executive. The judicial function, the adjudication of disputes, is the core of any legal system; the other two are ancillary to this. The legislative function is to determine the rules that will govern the process of adjudication (this function (...)
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  21. The Oxford handbook of empirical legal research.Peter Cane & Herbert M. Kritzer (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The art, craft, and science of policing -- Crime and criminals -- Criminal process and prosecution -- The crime-preventive impact of penal sanctions -- Contracts and corporations -- Financial markets -- Consumer protection -- Bankruptcy and insolvency -- Regulating the professions -- Personal injury litigation -- Claiming behavior as legal mobilization -- Families -- Labor and employment laws -- Housing and property -- Human rights instruments -- Constitutions -- Social security and social welfare -- Occupational safety and health -- (...)
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  22.  21
    Employment in Public Services: The Case for Special Treatment.Gillian S. Morris - 2000 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 20 (2):167-183.
    Traditionally many systems subjected public employees to a separate and more restrictive labour law regime than their private sector counterparts. However, these status-based restrictions were generally modified or abandoned during the 1960s and 1970s. Greater homogeneity of treatment of public and private sector workers was also subsequently reflected in employment practices in Britain and elsewhere as a product of the «marketization» of public services, a strategy which involved replacing centralized regulation by greater local determination in accordance with «business» needs. (...)
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  23.  78
    The Marketization of Security Services.Rutger Claassen - 2011 - Public Reason 3 (2).
    This paper discusses the normative credentials of the “commodification of security,” i.e. subjecting protection against (criminal) threats to the market. It distinguishes between a “pure security market,” in the absence of public protection by the police, and an “additional security market,” co-existing with public provision. It argues that a pure security market is not so much unstable (as Nozick’s invisible hand argument for the minimal state implied) but undesirable, because of persisting levels of unjustifiable violence. This (...)
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  24.  3
    Caught in the Labyrinth of Unemployment: A Legal Analysis of Technology’s Transformative Role in Reshaping Active Labor Policies in Greece.Sofia Alexopoulou - forthcoming - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique:1-21.
    This paper examines the use of language in the legal processes established by Law 4921/2022 through a social lens, focusing on the digital transformation of the Greek Public Employment Service (DYPA) and the enactment of rigorous active labor market policies (ALMPs). By analyzing relevant documents, the study reveals a neoliberal orientation that prioritizes individual responsibility over traditional state welfare activities. While the advantages of digitalization—such as improved efficiency in job placement and streamlined administrative processes—are acknowledged, the paper also (...)
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  25.  45
    Three (Potential) Pillars of Transnational Economic Justice: The Bretton Woods Institutions as Guarantors of Global Equal Treatment and Market Completion.Robert Hockett - 2005 - Metaphilosophy 36 (1-2):93-127.
    Abstract:This essay aims to bring two important lines of inquiry and criticism together. It first lays out an institutionally enriched account of what a just world economic order will look like. That account prescribes, via the requisites to that mechanism which most directly instantiates the account, “three realms of equal treatment and market completion”—the global products, services, and labor markets; the global investment/financial markets; and the global preparticipation opportunity allocation. The essay then suggests how, with minimal if any (...)
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  26.  57
    Health Benefits of Legal Services for Criminalized Populations: The Case of People Who Use Drugs, Sex Workers and Sexual and Gender Minorities.Joanne Csete & Jonathan Cohen - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (4):816-831.
    Criminalization is a form of social marginalization that is little appreciated as a determinant of poor health. Criminalization can be understood in at least two ways — in the narrow sense as the imposition of criminal penalties for a certain behavior, and more broadly as the conferral of a criminalized status on all individuals in the population, whether proven guilty of a specific offense or not. Both criminal penalties and criminalized status threaten the mental and physical health of these populations (...)
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  27.  9
    Demoralizing Markets: Vendor Conscience and Impersonalism.Mark Peacock - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-11.
    In a recent contribution to this Journal, Matthew Caulfield urges business owners to curtail the influence of their moral conscience on market decisions: in deciding with whom to transact, vendors should adopt an attitude of impersonalism; they should not deny service on account of moral objections to customers' personal characteristics. The history of service denial in the United States is dominated by business owners denying service to Black customers. Civil rights legislation since the Reconstruction era has been designed to (...)
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  28.  30
    (1 other version)Engaging the commodified face: The use of marketing in the child adoption process.Matthew Higgins & Warren Smith - 2002 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 11 (2):179–190.
    This paper evaluates the ethical consequences of the use of marketing techniques in the child adoption process within England and Wales. Since 1995 the political climate in the UK has seen a reassessment of the manner in which the state organises care for children who are within its legal guardianship. Successive UK governments have acknowledged the under‐utilisation of child adoption as a moral and efficient means of child‐care. However, the presentation of child adoption in a more active fashion involves (...)
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  29.  22
    More Power to the Consumer? Problems and Possibilities in Improving the Price-Quality Ratio of Legal Services by the Dutch Bar.Z. D. Laclé & N. J. H. Huls - 2007 - Legal Ethics 10 (1):51-71.
    (2007). More Power to the Consumer? Problems and Possibilities in Improving the Price-Quality Ratio of Legal Services by the Dutch Bar. Legal Ethics: Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 51-71.
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  30.  52
    In Search of Core Values.W. Bradley Wendel - 2013 - Legal Ethics 16 (2):350-366.
    The hypothetical social contract between a profession and society exchanges the privilege of self-regulation for the profession's promise to regulate itself in the public interest. When it no longer appears that the profession is exercising its privilege responsibility, there will be pressure to reform the regulation of the market for legal services, for example by allowing non-lawyers to provide legal services, or permitting lawyers to practice in partnerships with non-lawyers. So far the American profession has (...)
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  31.  54
    Rebooting the cab rank rule as a limited universal service obligation.Andrew Higgins - 2017 - Legal Ethics 20 (2):201-223.
    ABSTRACTThis article critically examines the value and scope of the cab rank rule in England and Australia. Despite the laudable non-discrimination principle underpinning it, the cab rank rule is subject to so many exceptions it is debatable whether the rule has any effect, positive or negative, on access to justice. On the other hand, when the rule is followed, it has the potential to unnecessarily distort the legal services market. Despite legitimate questions about its continued relevance, the (...)
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  32.  92
    “Harmonious” Norms for Global Marketing the Chinese Way.Leïla Choukroune - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 88 (3):411-432.
    Whereas the concept of "socialist rule of law" punctuated political discourse in the late 1990s, the idea of a "socialist harmonious society" is today casting a strange light on Chinese legal reform. Is there a Confucian vision of China's marketing law and practice? To what extent have China's norms for marketing, mainly intellectual property and advertising law, been challenged by the new government policy toward a harmonious society? In the post World Trade Organization accession period, the theoretical framework of (...)
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  33.  36
    Market-Based Reforms in Health Care are Both Practical and Morally Sound.James Stacey Taylor - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (3):537-546.
    Markets have long had a whiff of sulphur about them. Plato condemned innkeepers, whose pursuit of profit he believed led them to take advantage of their customers, Aristotle believed that the pursuit of profit was indicative of moral debasement, and Cicero held that retailers are typically dishonest as this was the only path to gain. And even those who are more favorably disposed towards markets in general are frequently inclined to be suspicious of markets in medical goods and services. (...)
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  34.  18
    How Culture Displaced Structural Reform: Problem Definition, Marketization, and Neoliberal Myths in Bank Regulation.Anette Mikes & Michael Power - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-21.
    We use content analysis to show that the diagnosis of the financial crisis of 2007–2009 shifted significantly from a focus on the need for structural change in the banking industry to an emphasis on culture and reform at the organizational level. We consider four overlapping subsystems in which this shift in problem–solution clusters played out—political, regulatory, legal, and consulting—and show that the “structural reform agenda,” which was initially strong and publicly prominent in the political arena, lost attention. Over time (...)
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  35. Rhode, The Delivery of Legal Services by Non-Lawyers, 4 Geo. J.L. Deborah - 1990 - Legal Ethics 209:214-215.
     
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  36.  70
    Marketing in Heterozygous Advantage.Gregory Todd Jones & Reidar Hagtvedt - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 77 (1):85-97.
    As the rapidly advancing possibilities of biotechnology have outstripped the adaptive capacity of current legal and ethical institutions, a vigorous debate has arisen that considers the boundaries of appropriate use of this technology, particularly when applied to humans. This article examines ethical concerns surrounding the development of markets in a particular form of human genetic engineering in which heterozygotes are fitter than both homozygotes, a condition known as heterozygous advantage. To begin, we present a generalized model of the condition, (...)
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  37.  50
    The Break-up of the Financial Services Authority.Eilís Ferran - 2011 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 31 (3):455-480.
    The history of British financial market supervision seems to be repeating itself: in 1997 a new Government announced sweeping reform to the institutional framework just days after it came to power; with another new Government in place after the 2010 election, major institutional restructuring has started all over again.This article contends that while fixing the Financial Services Authority (FSA) was a solid option in principle, politics dictated the result. It then proceeds to examine the substance behind the politics. (...)
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  38. Privacy in (mobile) telecommunications services.Jacques Penders - 2004 - Ethics and Information Technology 6 (4):247-260.
    Telecommunications services are for long subject to privacy regulations. At stake are traditionally: privacy of the communication and the protection of traffic data. Privacy of the communication is legally founded. Traffic data subsume under the notion of data protection and are central in the discussion. The telecommunications environment is profoundly changing. The traditionally closed markets with closed networks change into an open market with open networks. Within these open networks more privacy sensitive data are generated and have to (...)
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  39.  78
    Do no harm: A defense of markets in healthcare. [REVIEW]William Kline - 2010 - HEC Forum 22 (3):241-251.
    This paper argues that the rules that constitute a market protect autonomy and increase welfare in healthcare. Markets do the former through protecting rights to self-ownership and a cluster of rights that protect its exercise. Markets protect welfare by organizing and protecting trades. In contrast, prohibition destroys legitimate markets, giving rise to so-called black markets that harm both the autonomy and well-being of agents. For example, a fee-for-service medical system is a highly developed and specialized market. It is (...)
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  40.  32
    Changes of Legal Regulation on Natural Gas Market in the Context of the Third European Union Energy Package.Virginijus Kanapinskas & Algimantas Urmonas - 2011 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 18 (1):233-249.
    The article analyzes the changes of legal regulation on natural gas market in the context of the third European Union (EU) energy package. The paper consists of the introduction, two parts and conclusions. The first part analyses the main provisions on the natural gas market of the Third EU energy package. The second part of the paper focuses on the effect of the Third EU energy package on legal regulation of natural gas market in Lithuania. (...)
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  41.  15
    Matter Mills and London-Lite offices: exploring forms of the onshoring of legal services in an age of globalisation.Emily Carroll & Steven Vaughan - 2019 - Legal Ethics 22 (1-2):3-27.
    ABSTRACTThis paper explores professional identity formation and the increasing differentiation and fragmentation of the corporate end of the legal profession through a consideration of onshoring, t...
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  42.  26
    Firm Linkages to Scandals via Directors and Professional Service Firms: Insights from the Backdating Scandal.Jay J. Janney & Steve Gove - 2017 - Journal of Business Ethics 140 (1):65-79.
    We examine market reactions to the stock options backdating scandal in a slightly unusual way, but focusing on firms who were not perceived to have had a backdating concern, but were instead linked to firms who did have a backdating concern. These linkages can be found via board interlocks and the roles those directors perform. In addition we examine the linkages which occur from shared professional services firms, such as auditors and outside legal counsel. That these potential (...)
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  43.  17
    Digitalization of educational technologies of higher education institutions as a means of achieving a competitive advantage in the market of educational services.Elvina Aripovna Vanieva - 2021 - Kant 38 (1):10-14.
    Digitalization is becoming an integral part of the development of all spheres of society, including the education system. The purpose of this research is to analyze trends in the development of digitalization in modern higher education institutions, the prospects for their interaction and mutual influence. The dialectical method, instrumental and functional approaches are used. The author concludes that in Russia, according to modern needs, requests and interests of the population, there is a qualitative process of development of digitalization of higher (...)
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  44.  6
    Valuing the Unique: The Economics of Singularities.Nora Scott (ed.) - 2010 - Princeton University Press.
    In this landmark work of economic sociology, Lucien Karpik introduces the theory and practical tools needed to analyze markets for singularities. Singularities are goods and services that cannot be studied by standard methods because they are multidimensional, incommensurable, and of uncertain quality. Examples include movies, novels, music, artwork, fine wine, lawyers, and doctors. Valuing the Unique provides a theoretical framework to explain this important class of products and markets that for so long have eluded neoclassical economics. With this innovative (...)
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  45.  64
    Research with Pregnant Women: New Insights on Legal Decision‐Making.Anna C. Mastroianni, Leslie Meltzer Henry, David Robinson, Theodore Bailey, Ruth R. Faden, Margaret O. Little & Anne Drapkin Lyerly - 2017 - Hastings Center Report 47 (3):38-45.
    U.S. researchers and scholars often point to two legal factors as significant obstacles to the inclusion of pregnant women in clinical research: the Department of Health and Human Services’ regulatory limitations specific to pregnant women's research participation and the fear of liability for potential harm to children born following a pregnant woman's research participation. This article offers a more nuanced view of the potential legal complexities that can impede research with pregnant women than has previously been reflected (...)
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  46.  23
    The Sexual Politics of Anti-Trafficking Discourse.Prabha Kotiswaran - 2021 - Feminist Legal Studies 29 (1):43-65.
    20 years since the negotiation of the Palermo Protocol on Trafficking in 2000, the anti-trafficking field has gone from an early, almost exclusive preoccupation with sex work to addressing extreme exploitation in a range of labour sectors. While this might suggest a reduced focus on the nature of the work performed and a greater focus on the conditions under which it is performed, in reality, anti-trafficking discourse remains in the grip of polarised positions on sex work even as the carceral (...)
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  47.  15
    Business Managers in Ancient Rome: A Social and Economic Study of Institores, 200 B.C.-A.D. 250 (review).Nicholas K. Rauh - 1996 - American Journal of Philology 117 (3):501-504.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Business Managers in Ancient Rome: A Social and Economic Study of Institores, 200 B.C.–A.D. 250Nicholas K. RauhJean-Jacques Aubert. Business Managers in Ancient Rome: A Social and Economic Study of Institores, 200 B.C.–A.D. 250. Leiden, New York, and Köln: E. J. Brill, 1994. xvi + 520 pp. Cloth, Gld. 220, $125.75 (US). (Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition, Volume XXI.)Aubert’s declared purpose in this study is to examine the (...)
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    Privatizing the Adjudication of Disputes.Edward P. Stringham & Bryan Caplan - 2008 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 9 (2):503-528.
    Must the state handle the adjudication of disputes? Researchers of different perspectives, from heterodox scholars of law who advocate legal pluralism to libertarian economists who advocate the privatization of law, have increasingly questioned the idea that the state is, or should be, the only source of law. Both groups point out that government law has problems and that non-state alternatives exist. This Article discusses some problems with the public judicial system and several for-profit alternatives. Public courts lack both incentives (...)
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    Legal services lawyers: when conceptions of lawyering and values clash.Corey S. Shdaimah - 2012 - In Leslie C. Levin & Lynn Mather (eds.), Lawyers in practice: ethical decision making in context. London: University of Chicago Press. pp. 317.
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    Valuing the Unique: The Economics of Singularities.Lucien Karpik - 2010 - Princeton University Press.
    In this landmark work of economic sociology, Lucien Karpik introduces the theory and practical tools needed to analyze markets for singularities. Singularities are goods and services that cannot be studied by standard methods because they are multidimensional, incommensurable, and of uncertain quality. Examples include movies, novels, music, artwork, fine wine, lawyers, and doctors. Valuing the Unique provides a theoretical framework to explain this important class of products and markets that for so long have eluded neoclassical economics. With this innovative (...)
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