Vol. 118

SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND CORPORATE LAW

Daniel Hemel * & Dorothy S. Lund **

The #MeToo movement has shaken corporate America in recent months, leading to the departures of several high-profile executives as well as sharp stock price declines at a number of firms. Investors have taken notice and taken action: Shareholders at more than a half dozen publicly traded companies have filed lawsuits since the start of 2017 allegĀ­ing that corporate fiduciaries breached state law duties or violated federal securities laws in connection...

Since its inception more than four decades ago, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has transformed from a relatively powerless monitoring body to a major regulatory hurdle for cross-border deals. This shift has been accompanied by increasing conĀ­cerns from scholars and transacting parties regarding CFIUSā€™s lack of accountability and transparency. Yet, CFIUSā€™s scope has only continued to widen, as evidenced by...

THE RESTORATION REMEDY IN PRIVATE LAW

Omri Ben-Shahar * & Ariel Porat **

One of the most perplexing problems in private law is when and how to compensate victims for emotional harm. This Essay proposes a novel way to accomplish this remedial goalā€”a restoration measure of damages. It solves the two fundamental problems of compensation for emoĀ­tional harmā€”measurement and verification. Instead of measuring the emoĀ­tional harm and awarding the aggrieved party money damages, this Essay proposes that defendants pay...

The harmless error doctrine is beset with problems, both theoretical and practical. In Harmless Error and Substantial Rights, recently published in the Harvard Law Review, Professor Daniel Epps proposes a reconceptualization of constitutional criminal procedure rights that is designed to address these problems. Epps argues that those constituĀ­tional criminal procedure rights that are capable of being violated by prosĀ­ecutors...

Bribery and corruption violations are often hard to detect. For this reason, the U.S. enforcement authorities typically struggle to produce the right incentives for corporations to cooperate with public enforcement efforts in anticorruption cases. In November 2017, following the successĀ­ful implementation of an eighteen-month pilot program, the Trump Administration announced its revised Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) Corporate Enforcement...

Until recently, the Supreme Court interpreted the Federal Power Act (FPA) to draw an impermeable boundary between the jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and those of state public utility commissions.Ā But the Courtā€™s recent decisions inĀ FERC v. Electric Power Supply Association (EPSA)Ā andĀ Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing, LLCĀ appear to relax the formalistic test tradiĀ­tionĀ­ally used to resolve...

The American criminal justice system is a system of pleas. Few who know it well think it is working. And yet, identifying plausible strategies for law reform proves challenging, given the widely held scholarly assumption that plea bargaining operates ā€œbeyond the shadow of the law.ā€ That assumption holds true with respect to substantive and constitutional criminal lawā€”the two most studied bodies of law in the criminal justice systemā€”neither...

Contemporary scholarship and jurisprudence concerning the Constitutionā€™s separation of powers is characterized by sharp disagreeĀ­ment about general theory and specific outcomes. The leading theories diverge on how to model the motives of institutional actors; on how to weigh text, history, doctrine, and norms; and on whether to characterize the separation of powers system as abiding in a stable equilibrium or as enthralled by transformative...

This Note assesses First Amendment freedom of speech claims with regard to online civil rights testing. Transactions that have conventionally occurred in person are now more often completed online, and providers transacting online have been increasingly using algoĀ­rithms that syntheĀ­size usersā€™ data. While these algorithms are helpful tools, they may also be yielding discriminatory results, whether intenĀ­tionally or unintentionally.

In...

The opioid crisis in the United States has affected and continues to affect the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. Driven by opioids and fentanyl, overdose is a leading cause of death. It has claimed more lives than guns, breast cancer, and car accidents. While some potential solutions have sought to strengthen criminal laws and provide harsher sanctions to drug dealers to combat drug abuse, harm reduction practices continue to best address...