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Insider trading law is theoretically problematic. Despite this, an essentially coherent transatlantic insider trading regime has been established by the E.U. Insider trading directive. This paper shows that the E.U. Directive is heavily influenced by U.S. securities law. Of interest however is...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012758340
The legal indeterminacy thesis argues that law is indeterminate, either due to inherent linguistic ambiguity, or due to the nature of logical argument or because law is rife with antinomies. Parallel to this argument is another related argument, that law is a relatively autonomous discipline...
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Two of the most important constitutional decisions in history, Marbury v. Madison and Van Gend amp; Loos, share common issues and reach similar results. Marbury is as well known to U.S. jurists as Van Gend is to European jurists. However few people are familiar with both decisions. This article...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012765236
Rather than seeing law as a vague norm or overly precise and possibly untenable rights this article argues for a simpler functionalist definition of law as a set of conditionals associated with imperatives. As such it hopes to bypass two fruitless parallel debates which however do not address...
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This paper briefly explores the possibility and limitations of a common European foreign and security policy (CFSP). It concludes that, contrary to the recieved wisdom, a the material basis for a viable CFSP does in fact already exist due to national security policies such as the French Force...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012719513
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Just as war is sometimes fallaciously represented as a zero sum game -- when in fact war is a negative sum game - stock market trading, a positive sum game over time, is often erroneously represented as a zero sum game. This is called the "zero sum fallacy" -- the erroneous belief that one...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005083519