Citation: Re. Hundt, THE PUBLICS AIRWAVES - WHAT DOES THE PUBLIC-INTEREST REQUIRE OF TELEVISION BROADCASTERS, Duke law journal, 45(6), 1996, pp. 1089-1129
Citation: Jt. Hamilton, PRIVATE INTERESTS IN PUBLIC-INTEREST PROGRAMMING - AN ECONOMIC-ASSESSMENT OF BROADCASTER INCENTIVES, Duke law journal, 45(6), 1996, pp. 1177-1192
Citation: Rj. Krotoszynski, INTO THE WOODS - BROADCASTERS, BUREAUCRATS, AND CHILDRENS TELEVISION PROGRAMMING, Duke law journal, 45(6), 1996, pp. 1193-1248
Citation: Jb. Ruhl, COMPLEXITY THEORY AS A PARADIGM FOR THE DYNAMICAL LAW-AND-SOCIETY SYSTEM - A WAKE-UP CALL FOR LEGAL REDUCTIONISM AND THE MODERN ADMINISTRATIVE STATE, Duke law journal, 45(5), 1996, pp. 849-928
Citation: Wj. Rogers, BEYOND ECONOMIC-THEORY - A MODEL FOR ANALYZING THE ANTITRUST IMPLICATIONS OF EXCLUSIVE DEALING ARRANGEMENTS, Duke law journal, 45(5), 1996, pp. 1009-1048
Citation: Rg. Schaffer, THE PUBLIC-INTEREST IN PRIVATE PARTY IMMUNITY - EXTENDING QUALIFIED IMMUNITY FROM 42-USC-1983 TO PRIVATE PRISONS, Duke law journal, 45(5), 1996, pp. 1049-1087
Citation: Hh. Chen, MALPRACTICE IMMUNITY - AN ILLEGITIMATE AND INEFFECTIVE RESPONSE TO THE INDIGENT-DEFENSE CRISIS, Duke law journal, 45(4), 1996, pp. 783-818
Citation: Ma. Orourke, DRAWING THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN COPYRIGHT AND CONTRACT - COPYRIGHT PREEMPTION OF SOFTWARE LICENSE TERMS, Duke law journal, 45(3), 1995, pp. 479-558
Citation: Jb. Lurvey, WHO IS BESPEAKING TO WHOM - PLAINTIFF SOPHISTICATION, MARKET-INFORMATION, AND FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS, Duke law journal, 45(3), 1995, pp. 579-610