An Unlikely Romance: The United States and Intermediated Markets

An Unlikely Romance: The United States and Intermediated Markets

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Americans are infatuated with the stock markets, and today’s stock markets are dominated by a small number of large institutions that manage enormous amounts of money. Those two facts are paradoxical given the history of stock markets in the United States. Modern stock markets in the United States are the consequence of federal legislation responding to widespread social and economic harm caused by the stock market crash of 1929. That legislation was designed to avoid the concentration of economic power in a small number of institutions. Despite those historical facts, over the past century, the centrality of the stock markets in the U.S. economy has steadily grown, and a handful of enormous institutions have come to manage an outsized portion of the money in those markets.

This Article explores the historical choices and forces that led us to this point. It describes the cultural and political forces that led U.S. lawmakers to favor market financing, at first reluctantly, but eventually unabashedly. It catalogs federal lawmaking around the securities markets over the near century between 1929 and today. This review of lawmaking uncovers how, over this time, lawmakers’ affinity for markets strengthened as their skepticism of institutions disappeared. It concludes that once policymaking embraced the capital markets, the development of investment intermediaries was
all but inevitable.

Emily Winston *

* Assistant Professor, University of South Carolina School of Law.

 

Cost Cushion or Cash Cow? A Federal Drugpricing Program Called into Question

Cost Cushion or Cash Cow? A Federal Drugpricing Program Called into Question

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With a specific focus on DSH hospitals, this Comment proposes that Congress amend the statutory provisions governing the 340B Program to require covered entities to reinvest 340B funds in improving the quality and accessibility of health care for their low-income and uninsured patient populations. The true potential of the 340B Program to improve the quality of healthcare for low-income and uninsured patients will remain unknown and unharnessed until gaps in the oversight of the 340B Program are closed. Congress must amend the 340B statute to require covered entities to use and account for 340B funds in a way that is consistent with the policy goals of the program. In addition, the program’s current auditing and oversight mechanisms must be adapted to ensure that appropriate recourse may be taken if 340B funds are not properly used.

Caleb C. Briggs *

* J.D., 2024, University of Richmond School of Law; B.A., 2020, University of Virginia.

 

Hitting Snooze Amidst Virginia’s Mental Health Crisis: The Shortcomings of the Bed of Last Resort and the Need for a Continuum of Crisis Care

Hitting Snooze Amidst Virginia’s Mental Health Crisis: The Shortcomings of the Bed of Last Resort and the Need for a Continuum of Crisis Care

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This Comment examines the history, structure, and unintended consequences of the Bed of Last Resort law by tracking its development and how it currently operates within Virginia’s broader mental health system. This Comment also evaluates the efficacy of the Bed of Last Resort law by comparing it to best practices for treating those experiencing mental health emergencies, focusing specifically on the Crisis Now model for a continuum of crisis care. This Comment concludes with proposals for improving the Bed of Last Resort law without completely overhauling the legislation.

Mary C. Fritz *

* J.D., 2024, University of Richmond School of Law; B.A., 2020, Villanova University.

 

Preface

Preface

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The University of Richmond Law Review is proud to present its ninth annual issue of online scholarship. For the past nine years, the University of Richmond Law Review Online has been dedicated to publishing a diverse range of scholarly works in an exclusively digital format. This modern approach allows the Law Review to embrace greater flexibility and foster innovative contributions to legal discourse. Today, the expansive Online platform is read by lawyers, judges, students, and many others around the globe.

 

Mariah L. Riley *

* Online Editor, University of Richmond Law Review Vol. 58. J.D., 2024, University of Richmond School of Law.

 

Applying the Fair Use Doctrine in Music Copyright “Borrowing” Infringement Cases

Applying the Fair Use Doctrine in Music Copyright “Borrowing” Infringement Cases

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Copyright fair use is a broad, statutory doctrine that permits fair use of any type of copyrighted work. But the fair use defense is virtually nonexistent in copyright infringement cases involving musical compositions, such as the famous “Blurred Lines” case. Defendants and courts neglect to consider it for reasons unknown. One might conjecture that this simply reflects a tacit understanding in the music industry that original music should be untouched. In fact, musical borrowing is a longstanding and accepted tradition, which makes copyright fair use particularly amenable to musical compositions. Disconcertingly, ignoring fair use of musical compositions in infringement cases almost certainly means that courts have been generating erroneous outcomes for many years.

This Article overviews the tradition of musical borrowing, briefly surveys copyright infringement cases involving musical compositions, and considers how the fair use doctrine would apply in such cases. The objective is to compel defendant composers to raise the fair use defense in appropriate cases and, ultimately, help courts correct this glaring oversight in U.S. copyright jurisprudence.

Shea Bettwy *

* LL.M., University of Galway; J.D., University of California, Berkeley School of Law; B.A., University of Notre Dame.