[cross-posted from bergerharris.com]
Professor Stephen Bainbridge recently announced the release of the paperback edition of his 2012 book “Corporate Governance after the Financial Crisis,” including a “new conclusion”:
In a short video on the Federalist Society website, Professor Gregory McNeal—an expert on drones and topics related to security, technology, and crime—discusses drones and property rights, and addresses the following questions:
Do property owners own the air above their property? Can they destroy a drone that flies onto their property? How should disputes between property owners and drone users be settled?
In an article for MedCityNews, attorney John Greenleaf introduces and then briefly highlights a position paper by the American College of Physicians (ACP) and Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) in the Annals of Internal Medicine called, “Online Medical Professionalism: Patient and Public Relationships,” which provides guidelines for physicians as they venture into the World Wide Web:
Jeremy Byellin offers some advice:
There are the obvious, lawyerly tasks like making court appearances, meeting or otherwise communicating with clients, drafting court documents, and researching.
At the Washington Post, Clay Conrad writes on the history of jury nullification in a piece entitled "History is clear: Juries were supposed to be able to overturn laws":