AuthorTitleCitationDocument TypeCase StatusSummaryYearRelevancy
Robert Westley , Tulane University School of Law Restitution Claims for Wrongful Enslavement and the Doctrine of the Master's Good Faith 3 British Journal of American Legal Studies 287 (Fall, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2CONTENTS I. Contemporary Legal Standards for Persons Who Were Free, i.e. Whites v. Enslaved Persons. 288 A. Slave Law's Racial Double Standard. 289 B. Defining Just and Unjust Enslavement Through the Eyes of the Masters. 291 C. The Perils and Scope of Comparative Examination of Slave Law Developments/Reform. 293 II. The Architecture of Slave... 2014  
Leora Bilsky, Talia Fisher Rethinking Settlement 15 Theoretical Inquiries in Law 77 (January, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In his canonical articles Against Settlement and The Forms of Justice, Owen Fiss argues that the erosion of civil litigation harms the deliberative process and the elucidation of public values in society. By revealing the hidden public dimension underlying not only public law litigation, but also the adjudication of private law disputes, Fiss's... 2014  
Atiba R. Ellis Reviving the Dream: Equality and the Democratic Promise in the Post-civil Rights Era 2014 Michigan State Law Review 789 (2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   C1-2Table of Contents Introduction: Equality and the Twin Pillars of the Democratic Promise. 790 I. Equality, Democracy Reinforcement, and Minorities. 797 A. Equality and Democratic-Reinforcement Theory. 798 B. Equality as Socially Contingent Construct. 806 C. Equality and Remedies for Exclusion for Minorities. 808 II. From Three-Fifths to Brown:... 2014  
Beth A. Colgan Reviving the Excessive Fines Clause 102 California Law Review 277 (April, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Millions of American adults and children struggle with debt stemming from economic sanctions issued by the criminal and juvenile courts. For those unable to pay, the consequences--including incarceration, exclusion from public benefits, and persistent poverty--can be draconian and perpetual. The Supreme Court has nevertheless concluded that many of... 2014  
David E. Pozen Self-help and the Separation of Powers 124 Yale Law Journal L.J. 2 (October, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Self-help doctrines pervade the law. They regulate a legal subject's attempts to cure or prevent a perceived wrong by her own action, rather than through a mediated process. In their most acute form, these doctrines allow subjects to take what international lawyers call countermeasures--measures that would be forbidden if not pursued for redressive... 2014  
Natsu Taylor Saito Tales of Color and Colonialism: Racial Realism and Settler Colonial Theory 10 Florida A & M University Law Review Rev. 1 (Fall 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 3 I. Dreams Deferred. 9 A. Liberatory Visions. 9 B. Persistent Disparities. 13 C. Retrenchment and Repression. 16 D. Racial Realism and Colonial Relations. 20 II. Colonial relations. 22 A. Colonialism: An Overview. 23 B. Settler Colonization. 25 C. Triangulation. 28 III. Recasting the Narrative. 30 A. Settler Origin Stories. 31 B. The... 2014  
Sudha Setty Targeted Killings and the Interest Convergence Dilemma 36 Western New England Law Review 169 (2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In the 1980s, Professor Derrick Bell posited a theory of interest convergence as part of his critical race theory work, arguing that the major strides forward in civil rights law and policy that benefited African Americans in the 1950s and 1960s only occurred because of the perceived benefits of those changes to white elites during that time. In... 2014  
Amos N. Jones The "Old" Black Corporate Bar: Durham's Wall Street, 1898-1971 92 North Carolina Law Review 1831 (September, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Over the last twenty years, eminent scholars such as David Wilkins have paid considerable attention to the new black corporate bar as a phenomenon worthy of treatment. This Article builds on that work by introducing a fascinating law-practice reality that developed in a unique setting in the early 1900s American South. What if Wall Street had... 2014  
Kareem U. Crayton The Art of Racial Dissent: African American Political Discourse in the Age of Obama 89 Chicago-Kent Law Review 689 (2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   When one refers to the art of dissent as it is often practiced in the judicial process, the point of the enterprise is to frame an alternative position that counters or competes with the majority's controlling viewpoint. The dissenter on a multi-member court is the one who registers disagreement with a decision taken by his colleagues, offering an... 2014  
Susan K. Serrano The Human Costs of "Free Association": Socio-cultural Narratives and the Legal Battle for Micronesian Health in Hawai'i 47 John Marshall Law Review 1377 (Summer, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction. 1377 II. Courts as Cultural Performance: Sites for Contesting Socio-Cultural Narratives. 1383 III. The Narratives in Korab v. McManaman. 1387 A. Plaintiffs' Equal Protection Counter-Narrative. 1389 B. Amici's Counter-Narrative: Redress for the Longlasting Impacts of Colonialism. 1392 C. The COFA Residents' Cultural Performance.... 2014  
Ethan P. Fallon The Lingering Battleground Between Race and Education 60 Loyola Law Review 727 (Winter, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Equal access to a quality education remains a strong American value, but current data reveal that an increasing number of public schools are becoming resegregated or segregated for the first time. This resegregation trend is reversing the progress toward an integrated public school system while also limiting access to higher education institutions.... 2014  
Andrea Giampetro-Meyer The Proper Place for Intellectual Property in Employment Discrimination Law 25 George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal L.J. 1 (Fall, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Intellectual property law . . . [has] far too long . . .been cloaked by a presumption of race and gender neutrality. Every day, in companies across the United States, marketing professionals are making decisions about how to meet the needs of consumers in specific markets. How can a financial services company offer advice to African Americans who... 2014  
Reed Elizabeth Loder Toward Reconciling Environmental and Animal Ethics: Northeast Wolf Reintroduction 10 Journal of Animal & Natural Resource Law 95 (June, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   It is lunchtime at a conference on conservation biology focused on managing wildlife that overpopulates a region. The open-seated event follows a session on hunting delisted wolves in the Western states where they have recovered since being successfully introduced into the greater Yellowstone Park region and Central Idaho. At the table is Alice... 2014  
Seth Davis Tribal Rights of Action 45 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 499 (Winter, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   What power do the federal courts have to supply tribal rights of action when Congress has been silent? This Article answers that question by linking two seemingly disparate schools of thought: federal Indian law and tort theory. Focusing upon tribal rights of action forces us to correct significant misunderstandings about perennial debates... 2014  
Kim D. Chanbonpin Truth Stories: Credibility Determinations at the Illinois Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission 45 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 1085 (Summer 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   This is the first scholarly Article to investigate the inner workings of the Illinois Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission (TIRC). The TIRC was established by statute in 2009 to provide legal redress for victims of police torture. Prisoners who claim that their convictions were based on confessions coerced by police torture can utilize the... 2014  
Eric K. Yamamoto , Miyoko Pettit , Sara Lee Unfinished Business: a Joint South Korea and United States Jeju 4.3 Tragedy Task Force to Further Implement Recommendations and Foster Comprehensive and Enduring Social Healing Through Justice 15 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal J. 1 (2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction 3 II. Social Healing Through Justice: A Framework for Shaping, Implementing and Assessing Social Healing (or Reconciliation) Initiatives 7 III. Jeju 4.3 Historical Backdrop 24 IV. Mutual Engagement: United States, South Korea and Jeju Residents 32 A. South Korea's Partial Steps Toward Reconciliation 33 B. United States' Need to... 2014  
Ryan Greenwood War and Sovereignty in Medieval Roman Law 32 Law and History Review 31 (February, 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The theory of just war in medieval canon law and theology has attracted to it a large body of scholarship, and is recognized as an important foundation for Western approaches to the study of ethics in war. By contrast, the tradition on war in medieval Roman law has not received much attention, although it developed doctrines that are distinct from... 2014  
Rasheena Latham Who Really Murdered Trayvon? A Critical Analysis of the Relationship Between Institutional Racism in the Criminal Justice System and Trayvon Martin's Death 8 Southern Journal of Policy and Justice 80 (Spring 2014) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   There has always been some sort of system in place to maintain white supremacy in America. This control mechanism has not been more apparent than in the criminal justice system. A critical review of America's criminal justice system shows the overwhelming prejudicial treatment of people of color. This disparate treatment can be seen through the... 2014  
  1. Right of Publicity 2. Breach of Contract 3. Fraud by Concealment 4. Promissory Fraud 5. Breach of Good Faith the and Fair Dealings 6. Breach of Fiduciary Duty 7. Conspiracy 8. Unjust Enrichment 9. Icerd 10. Conversion 11. Accounting (8/5/2014) Trial Court Documents   Plaintiffs D.W. Hunter, and L. Evans Jr. on behalf of the Class of 15 Great Grandchild of Anna S. Harrington, Actress, a.k.a. (Aunt Jemima 1935-1955) hereby brings forth this Class Action... 2014  
  Amended Complaint (9/4/2014) Trial Court Documents   1. RIGHT OF PUBLICITY 2. BREACH OF CONTRACT 3. FRAUD BY CONCEALMENT 4. PROMISSORY FRAUD 5. BREACH OF GOOD FAITH AND FAIR DEALINGS 6. BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY 7. CONSPIRACY 8. UNJUST... 2014  
  Motion for Preliminary Injunction, Temporary Restraining Order, T.r.o. (5/1/2014) Trial Court Documents   COMES NOW, the PLaintiff, Cliff Paul, in Pro Se, facing immenent danger and bodily hark from the Defendants. Donald Sterling, Owner of the Los Angeles Clippers, is a racist, and under 42... 2014  
  Brief of Amicus Curiae David Boyle in Support of Petitioners, on the Non-jurisdictional Issues (1/29/2013) Briefs   The present amicus curiae, David Boyle (hereinafter, Amicus), is respectfully filing this Brief in Support of Petitioners, Dennis Hollingsworth et al., in Case 12-144 (Hollingsworth v.... 2013  
  Brief of Amicus Curiae David Boyle in Support of Respondent Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the United States House of Representatives, on the Non-jurisdictional Issues (1/29/2013) Briefs   The present amicus curiae, David Boyle (hereinafter, Amicus), is respectfully filing this Brief in Support of Respondent, The Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group (BLAG) of the United States... 2013  
  Petition for a Writ of Certiorari (9/3/2013) Briefs   Petitioner- Ruth Nelson was individually and d/b/a The Master's Hands a construction company which she wholly owned and operated as an LLC, at the time of the action brought by Respondents... 2013  
  Armstead v. City of New Orleans 517 Fed.Appx. 264, United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit. (3/22/2013) Cases As of January 6, 2020 case has not been reversed or overruled. Milton Armstead, a nonprisoner, moved in the district court for leave to proceed in forma pauperis (IFP) on his complaint seeking reparation and wages that were unpaid to his enslaved ancestors. The district court found no error in the magistrate judge's determination that Armstead had sufficient monthly income after paying expenses, as listed in... 2013  
  Hand v. Houk Not Reported in F.Supp.2d, United States District Court, S.D. Ohio, Western Division. (5/29/2013) Cases As of January 6, 2020 case has not been reversed or overruled. Petitioner, Gerald Hand, was convicted by an Ohio jury of the aggravated murders of his wife, Jill Hand, and of his friend and former employee, Walter Lonnie Welch. The same jury recommended that Hand be sentenced to death. After unsuccessful attempts to challenge his conviction and his sentence in state courts, he filed a petition for a writ of... 2013  
Maxine Burkett A Justice Paradox: on Climate Change, Small Island Developing States, and the Quest for Effective Legal Remedy 35 University of Hawaii Law Review 633 (Spring, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Despite their clear and significant vulnerability to climate change, small island developing states have not had the opportunity to pursue in earnest a remedy for the impacts of that change. All small island developing states face significant challenges to their economic well-being and the availability of basic resources-including food and water.... 2013  
Starla J. Williams, J.d., Ll.m. A Values-based Pedagogy for the Legal Academy in a Post-racial Era 16 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 235 (Winter 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   [E]ven if eradicating racism is an impossible goal, the fight for tolerance and equality carries an inherent value. Post-racial America is redefining diversity in the legal academy. Despite the views of many observers that the election of the first African-American President of the United States ushered the nation into an era of racial idealism,... 2013  
Anthony Sebok, W. Bradley Wendel American Bar Association Commission on Ethics 20/20 Informational Report to the House of Delegates 20130415P City Bar Center for Continuing Legal Education 90 (4/15/2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Alternative litigation finance (ALF) refers to the funding of litigation activities by entities other than the parties themselves, their counsel, or other entities with a preexisting contractual relationship with one of the parties, such as an indemnitor or a liability insurer. These transactions are generally between a party to litigation and a... 2013  
Kevin R. Johnson , Joanna E. Cuevas Ingram Anatomy of a Modern-day Lynching: the Relationship Between Hate Crimes Against Latina/os and the Debate over Immigration Reform 91 North Carolina Law Review 1613 (June, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Our contribution to the Race Trials symposium considers the protracted legal battles to bring justice to the perpetrators of the killing of a young Mexican immigrant in rural Pennsylvania. From that sensational case, we attempt to draw more general civil rights lessons. The Article specifically contends that hate crimes directed at Latina/os,... 2013  
Patricia A. Broussard Black Women's Post-slavery Silence Syndrome: a Twenty-first Century Remnant of Slavery, Jim Crow, and Systemic Racism--who Will Tell Her Stories? 16 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 373 (Spring 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   One hot summer's day in the late 1950s, a young mother put her three young children down for a nap. She also bathed and prepared four of her sister's children for naptime. This young woman had volunteered to care for her nephew and nieces while their mother, her younger sister, was in the hospital delivering her fifth child. A short while after... 2013  
Robert Bejesky Closing Gitmo Due to the Epiphany Approach to Habeas Corpus During the Military Commission Circus 50 Willamette Law Review 43 (Fall 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I. Introduction. 44 II. Detention in Afghanistan. 47 III. Guantánamo Bay. 53 A. Advantages of Moving Detainees to Guantánamo Bay. 53 B. Standard for Detention and Guilt. 55 1. Suspected Terrorists. 55 2. The Identity of Detainees and the Right to Detain. 57 C. Harsh Treatment. 60 1. Interrogations and Human Rights Abuses. 60 2. Lack of Evidence... 2013  
Tony Kupersmith Cutting to the Chase: Corporate Liability for Environmental Harm under the Alien Tort Statute, Kiobel, and Congress 37 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 885 (Spring, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Prospectors first discovered commercial quantities of oil in Nigeria over fifty years ago. Today, the country's oil industry accounts for over 95 percent of export earnings and about 40 percent of government revenues, but the environmental costs have been nearly as staggering as the financial benefits. For instance, a recent study by the United... 2013  
Kim Forde-Mazrui Does Racial Diversity Promote Cultural Diversity?: the Missing Question in Fisher v. University of Texas 17 Lewis & Clark Law Review 987 (2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   In Fisher v. University of Texas, the Supreme Court declined to revisit the constitutionality of race-based admissions policies in higher education. The Court instead remanded the case to the lower court to re-evaluate whether the University's use of race as an admissions factor is necessary to achieve the benefits of student-body diversity. The... 2013  
Philip Alston Does the past Matter? On the Origins of Human Rights: the Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law. By Jenny S. Martinez. New York, N.y.: Oxford University Press. 2012. Pp. 254. $29.95. 126 Harvard Law Review 2043 (May, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   How far back can we trace the genealogy of today's international human rights system? And does it matter where we come out on such an arcane academic question? Historians, international lawyers, and human rights activists have recently suggested that there is, in fact, much at stake here. But there the consensus ends, and the accounts reflected in... 2013  
Katherine A. West Following in North Carolina's Footsteps: California's Challenge in Compensating its Victims of Compulsory Sterilization 53 Santa Clara Law Review 301 (2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Introduction. 301 I. History of Eugenics. 305 A. Eugenics. 305 B. California Eugenics. 307 II. The End of State-Sponsored Eugenics. 313 A. The Decline of State Sterilization Programs. 313 B. Redressing Harm. 315 III. The Case for Compensation. 316 A. States' Moral Obligation. 316 B. North Carolina's Movement to Compensate Victims. 317 IV.... 2013  
Yxta Maya Murray From Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried: Carrie Mae Weems' Challenge to the Harvard Archive 8 Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left Left 1 (2012-2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Who owns the violent past? In the early 1990s, New York artist Carrie Mae Weems traveled to Harvard University's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology to see some mysterious photographs. Entering into the archives, she first signed a contract promising not to use any Peabody images without permission. She next found herself staring down at... 2013  
Dr. Christopher Malcolm Geo-political Insignificance, Information Sharing, and Economic Survival: an Unofficial Perspective from Within the Caribbean Region 19 Law & Business Review of the Americas 23 (Winter, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Dearly beloved we are gathered here today to think about this thing called . . . life. PRINCE AND THE REVOLUTION, LET'S GO CRAZY (Purple Rain 1984) THIS perspective is personal and reflects individual thoughts, including some that have been shared in public fora, which have occupied my mind at one time or another over the last several years.... 2013  
Dr. Sven Simon , Avraham Weber Ghetto Pensions 14 German Law Journal 1787 (9/1/2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Under the Nazi regime, tens of thousands of Jews lived in ghettos, working more or less normal jobs. Some of these ghettos had their own employment centers, and some employers even paid into retirements funds. Legislation known as German Pensions for Work in Ghettos, or by its German acronym, ZRBG (Gesetz zur Zahlbarmachung von Renten aus... 2013  
Renata E.B. Strause , Allyson R. Bennett , Caitlin B. Tully , M. Douglass Bellis , Eugene R. Fidell How Federal Statutes Are Named 105 Law Library Journal J. 7 (Winter, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   ¶1 Given the number of public laws enacted since the First Congress began work on March 4, 1789, it is no surprise that some effort has been made to assign names to statutes, since mere sequential numbers, much less volume and page citations to the Statutes at Large, are hard to remember. This is not to say that some federal legislation is not... 2013  
Jenny S. Martinez Human Rights and History 126 Harvard Law Review Forum 221 (May, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   What is international human rights, does it have a history, and does that history matter? As Professor Philip Alston notes in his book review, Does the Past Matter?: On the Origins of Human Rights, these issues are the subject of considerable academic debate. In my recent book, The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law, I... 2013  
Giorgio Resta, Vincenzo Zeno-Zencovich Judicial "Truth" and Historical "Truth": the Case of the Ardeatine Caves Massacre 31 Law and History Review 843 (November, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   It is frequently claimed that adjudication before a court of law and historical adjudication are two entirely different tasks. The methods and techniques employed by judges and historians contrast sharply. The judge faces many constraints, in terms of choice of subject matter, the arguments to be considered, the evidence to be evaluated, the... 2013  
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin Justice in Times of Transition: a Reflection on Transitional Justice Transitional Justice: Nomos Li. Edited by Melissa S. Williams, Rosemary Nagy and John Elster. New York, New York University Press. 2011. Pp. Xiv + 367. $60.00 (Cloth). 29 Constitutional Commentary 81 (Summer, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   Transitional Justice as a motif, a discourse and a practice continues to entice analysis from scholars, practitioners and policy makers. It is a field that has rapidly expanded, and that has both the fortune and disadvantage of being termed an industry. The growth of transitional justice is both an opportunity and a warning, as the challenges... 2013  
David A. Singleton Kids, Cops, and Sex Offenders: Pushing the Limits of the Interest-convergence Thesis 57 Howard Law Journal 353 (Fall, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   INTRODUCTION. 354 I. THE CASE-STUDY. 359 A. Coston v. Petro: The Constitutional/Human Rights Frame. 359 B. OJPC's Introduction to the Social Science. 365 C. Transforming the Media Narrative. 368 D. Litigating Mikaloff and Coston. 372 1. Mikaloff v. Walsh. 372 2. Hyle v. Porter. 374 II. THREE QUESTIONS ABOUT OJPC'S USE OF INTEREST-CONVERGENCE... 2013  
Dorothy E. Roberts Law, Race, and Biotechnology: Toward a Biopolitical and Transdisciplinary Paradigm 9 Annual Review of Law and Social Science 149 (2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   biotechnologies, biopolitics, genomics, race, social justice For example, in 2005, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first racially labeled drug, BiDil, to treat heart failure in self-identified African American patients (Kahn 2013). Eggs and sperm are solicited and sold according to race in the marketplace of... 2013  
Alexandra R. Harrington Life as We Know It: the Expansion of the Right to Life under the Jurisprudence of the Inter-american Court of Human Rights 35 Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review 313 (Spring 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The idea of protecting life within the context of human rights law is perhaps elemental since, as the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has explained on numerous occasions, without protecting life all other human rights protections are meaningless. Indeed, a survey of international and regional human rights treaties and conventions demonstrates... 2013  
Natsu Taylor Saito Lift Every Voice : Mari Matsuda's Jurisprudence of Antisubordination 18 Asian Pacific American Law Journal 51 (Fall 2012-Spring) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I believe the antisubordination principle . . . can inform our law in a way that is as principled and as disciplined as the ideas of property, equality, and due process. . . . A jurisprudence of antisubordination is an attempt to bring home the lost ones, to make them part of the center, to end the soul-killing tyranny of inside/outside thinking.... 2013  
Michael J. Kelly Never Again? German Chemical Corporation Complicity in the Kurdish Genocide 31 Berkeley Journal of International Law 348 (2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   I apologize for the German participation in the Kurdish genocide. The trade of German companies with Saddam's regime was an illegal act. They should not have done that. Germany has to tell the people of Kurdistan that it was a mistake. Gassing Halabja took place with the help of German companies. --Claudia Roth, co-Chair, German Green Party, July... 2013  
Charles E. Rounds, Jr. Old Doctrine Misunderstood, New Doctrine Misconceived: Deconstructing the Newly-minted Restatement (Third) of Property's Power of Appointment Sections 26 Quinnipiac Probate Law Journal 240 (2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The United States Constitution is quickening into an organism with common law attributes, while state common law as enhanced by equity, once a principles-based regime, is suffocating under the weight of layer upon layer of partial, hyper-technical codifications. Major players in the codification movement are the Uniform Law Commission and The... 2013  
Andrea Freeman Payback: a Structural Analysis of the Credit Card Problem 55 Arizona Law Review 151 (Spring, 2013) Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources   The market failure deemed the credit card problem is in fact a story of unprecedented market success. Advanced underwriting technology has facilitated identification of the most profitable credit card consumer as one who is on the verge of bankruptcy. The resulting market segmentation represents a massive upward redistribution of wealth from the... 2013  
24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41