Antitrust
Learning to Love the State Action Doctrine, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law (2006)
Will Physician Unions Improve Health System Performance?, Federal Trade Commission Hearing on Health Care Competition Law and Policy (2003)
Physician Unions and the Future of Competition in the Health Care Sector, U.C. Davis Law Review (2000)
Antitrust Conspiracy Doctrine and the Hospital Enterprise, Boston University Law Review (1994)
Health Care Law
Learning to Love the State Action Doctrine, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law (2006)
Will Physician Unions Improve Health System Performance?, Federal Trade Commission Hearing on Health Care Competition Law and Policy (2003)
Overview of the Health Care Marketplace, Structural, Legal and Policy Issues, Federal Trade Commission Health Care Workshop (2002)
Will Physician Unions Improve Health System Performance?, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law (2002)
Physician Unions and the Future of Competition in the Health Care Sector, U.C. Davis Law Review (2000)
Medical Malpractice and Managed Care Organization: The Implied Warranty of Quality, Law and Contemporary Problems (1997)
Health Care Price Controls and the Takings Clause, Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly (1994)
Antitrust Conspiracy Doctrine and the Hospital Enterprise, Boston University Law Review (1994)
Jurisprudence
THEORY, IDENTITY, VOCATION: THREE MODELS OF CHRISTIAN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, Seton Hall Law Review, forthcoming (2009)
Recognizably Christian scholarship is becoming more commonplace in the American legal academy, yet little systematic...
Book Review, Stephen J. Grabill, Rediscovering the Natural Law in Reformed Theological Ethics, Journal of Law and Religion (2008)
Law, Higher Law, and Human Making, Pepperdine Law Review (forthcoming) (2008)
This paper examines what Christian theology teaches about the nature of human creative activity, and...
Thomas Aquinas and the Metaphysics of Law, Alabama Law Review (2007)
Despite modernity’s longstanding aversion to metaphysics, legal scholars are increasingly questioning whether law can be...
Found Law, Made Law and Creation: Reconsidering Blackstone's Declaratory Theory, Journal of Law and Religion (2007)
The subject of this paper is Blackstone’s famous declaratory theory of law– the claim that...
Who Cares? Why Bother?: What Jeff Powell and Mark Tushnet Have to Say to Each Other, Oklahoma Law Review (2002)
Legal Education
THEORY, IDENTITY, VOCATION: THREE MODELS OF CHRISTIAN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, Seton Hall Law Review, forthcoming (2009)
Recognizably Christian scholarship is becoming more commonplace in the American legal academy, yet little systematic...
Legal Profession
THEORY, IDENTITY, VOCATION: THREE MODELS OF CHRISTIAN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, Seton Hall Law Review, forthcoming (2009)
Recognizably Christian scholarship is becoming more commonplace in the American legal academy, yet little systematic...
Religion
THEORY, IDENTITY, VOCATION: THREE MODELS OF CHRISTIAN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, Seton Hall Law Review, forthcoming (2009)
Recognizably Christian scholarship is becoming more commonplace in the American legal academy, yet little systematic...
Theological Perspectives on Law
THEORY, IDENTITY, VOCATION: THREE MODELS OF CHRISTIAN LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP, Seton Hall Law Review, forthcoming (2009)
Recognizably Christian scholarship is becoming more commonplace in the American legal academy, yet little systematic...
Book Review, Stephen J. Grabill, Rediscovering the Natural Law in Reformed Theological Ethics, Journal of Law and Religion (2008)
Law, Higher Law, and Human Making, Pepperdine Law Review (forthcoming) (2008)
This paper examines what Christian theology teaches about the nature of human creative activity, and...
Thomas Aquinas and the Metaphysics of Law, Alabama Law Review (2007)
Despite modernity’s longstanding aversion to metaphysics, legal scholars are increasingly questioning whether law can be...
Found Law, Made Law and Creation: Reconsidering Blackstone's Declaratory Theory, Journal of Law and Religion (2007)
The subject of this paper is Blackstone’s famous declaratory theory of law– the claim that...