Loyola University Chicago, School of Law: LAW eCommons
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    Spotlight On: By the Hand Club for Kids

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    Incentives to Comply with Competition Law

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    According to two authors, achieving compliance with competition laws is a question of “incentives to promote compliance and to promote the ethical value of compliance.”1 This Discussion Paper addresses the question of “Incentives to Comply with Competition Laws.” It addresses this topic in three steps. First, this Discussion Paper asks about the meaning of “compliance” and considers theoretical questions related to efforts at compliance. Second, this Discussion Paper addresses analytic ambiguity of competition law and other challenges to the achievement of a robust compliance culture. Third, this Discussion Paper asks – as among private enterprises subject to the laws, public overseers enforcing the laws, or individual actors engaged in conduct that implicates the laws – whose responsibility is compliance

    Ninety Years of Asian Americans at Loyola

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    Corporate Ethics: Approaches and Implications to Expanding the Corporate Mindset of Profitability

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    This Article discusses the convergence of law and ethics in the context of corporations. It begins by detailing past attempts at and limitations on regulating corporate conduct. It then explores the business judgment rule in the context of ethical conduct. Finally, it considers the growing influence of millennials and social investing on corporate conduct, and concludes by cautioning corporate directors to adopt ethical practices in order to remain relevant in the marketplace

    Paying Homage to a Colleague, Friend, and Mentor: Dean Nina Appel

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    An Unfinished Project: John Courtney Murray, Religious Freedom, and Unresolved Tensions in Contemporary American Society

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    Religious freedom has re-emerged as a controversial issue in the courts, in the Church, and in the public square in the United States. This essay examines the groundbreaking contribution that John Courtney Murray, SJ made to bring about a paradigm shift in Roman Catholic teaching on religious freedom. This shift can be traced to the Church’s transitioning from the view that “error has no rights” to only people—not ideas—have rights. The essay underscores Murray’s focus on human conscience and addresses tensions that have emerged in the United States between voices that affirm the right to religious freedom and those that affirm other fundamental human rights. The essay proposes the adoption of an integral ecology of human rights built upon an option for the legally and religiously marginalized

    Sovaldi: The High Price for a Cure

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    Loyola University Chicago, School of Law: LAW eCommons
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