Through
4/26
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
David Hoffman of Penn Carey Law says that “generative interpretation” can replace the messy and expensive way lawyers currently hash out the meaning of words in legal agreements, using dictionaries and Latin canons.
Penn In the News
Benjamin Keys of the Wharton School says that shifting title insurance costs to lenders won’t solve the current problem with the mortgage market.
Penn In the News
Jill Fisch of Penn Carey Law says that no one has scrutinized shareholder agreements in the context of whether boards of directors fundamentally manage corporations.
Penn In the News
Allison Hoffman of Penn Carey Law says that the Supreme Court may be open to addressing administrative law issues around the Affordable Care Act.
Penn In the News
Danny Cullenward of the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at the Weitzman School of Design says that a life-cycle assessment is simpler than a land-use analysis but misses meaningful system-level insight, like the complexity inherent in a biological system like a forest.
Penn In the News
In a co-written Op-Ed, David Zaring of the Wharton School says that the SEC’s in-house adjudication system can survive a constitutional challenge if the Supreme Court, Congress, or the agency itself implement a right to removal to federal court.
Penn In the News
Cary Coglianese of Penn Carey Law says that a lower discount rate for regulatory benefits will increase the present value of future social benefits, whether for climate change policies or any other policy.
Penn In the News
Danny Cullenward of the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at the Weitzman School of Design says that Europe’s climate regulators are far more active, whereas cycles of enforcement through litigation are more likely to determine whether a similar level of attention emerges in the U.S.
Penn In the News
David Zaring of the Wharton School examines how the Supreme Court’s justices might handle the question of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s funding.
Penn In the News
At the 1-hour-12-minute mark of “Bloomberg Markets: The Close,” Jeremy Siegel of the Wharton School discusses the potential economic ramifications of a government shutdown.