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HOWARD
F. CHANG
Professor of Law organized a panel discussion
on international law for the annual meeting of the American Law and
Economics Association in May. He delivered the 23d annual Kenneth
M. Piper Memorial Lecture at the Chicago-Kent College of Law in April
2001 on “Immigration and the Workplace.” He also presented this paper
in March 2001 at the 7th National Asian Pacific American Conference
on Law and Public Policy at Harvard University, at a law faculty workshop
at the University of California at Davis, and at a seminar at the
Copenhagen Business School in Denmark. He also presented “The Economic
Analysis of Immigration Law” at the University of Michigan Law in
February 2000. His paper “A Liberal Theory of Social Welfare: Fairness,
Utility, and the Pareto Principle” was presented at the annual meeting
of the American Law & Economics Association in May 2000, at seminars
at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Summer Institute
in August 2000, at Harvard University Law School in December 2000,
at seminars at New York University School of Law in January 2000,
at the Wharton School in March 2000 and the Copenhagen Business School
in March 2001. Chang lectured on “The Use of Trade Restrictions to
Promote Conservation and Their Legal Status Under the GATT” at a symposium
on international fisheries held in Tokyo in March 2001 under the auspices
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan and the Association for
Comparative Studies of Legal Cultures. He serves on the 2001-2002
executive committee of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS)
Section on Law and Economics. |
The Economic
Analysis of Immigration Law, in Migration Theory: Talking Across Disciplines,
eds. Caroline B. Brettell and James F. Hollifield (Routledge, 2000)
Incentives
to Settle under Joint and Several Liability: An Empirical Analysis of
Superfund Litigation (co-author Hillary Sigman), 29 University of Chicago
Journal of Legal Studies 205 (2000)
A Liberal
Theory of Social Welfare: Fairness, Utility, and the Pareto Principle,
110 Yale Law Journal 173 (2000)
Migration
as International Trade: The Economic Gains from the Liberalized Movement
of Labor, 3 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs
371 (1998-99), reprinted in 20 Immigration and Nationality Law Review
339 (Gabriel J. Chin ed., 2000)
The Possibility
of a Fair Paretian, 110 Yale Law Journal 251 (2000)
Toward a
Greener GATT: Environmental Trade Measures and the Shrimp-Turtle Case,
74 Southern California Law Review 31 (2000)
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