21,121 research outputs found
Deliberate Indifference, Professional Judgment, and the Constitution: On Liberty Interests in the Child Placement Context
Incitement, Threats, and Constitutional Guarantees: First Amendment Protections pre- and post-Elonis
[Excerpt] While the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects the freedom of expression, individuals issuing threats or advocating illegal conduct may be subject to punishment. What constitutes proscribable speech has long been evolving, and the recent jurisprudence suggests that First Amendment protections are more robust for advocacy of illegal conduct than for threats. Elonis v. United States provided the Court with a golden opportunity to clarify First Amendment threat jurisprudence; however, those hoping for an illuminating analysis cannot help but be disappointed. Part I of this Article discusses the developing First Amendment jurisprudence regarding the regulation of incitement, focusing on how constitutional protections for such speech have increased over time. Part II discusses the constitutional limitations on the regulation of threats, noting the Court\u27s consistent refusal to address what kind of subjective intent is necessary in order for an individual to be convicted of having made a threat. Part III focuses on Elonis in particular, explaining how the case wasted the opportunity to clarify a number of First Amendment issues. The article concludes by pointing to several areas the Court may be forced to address in the not-too-distant future, including some of the confusions created by the Elonis opinion itself
Characterization of arbitrage-free markets
The present paper deals with the characterization of no-arbitrage properties
of a continuous semimartingale. The first main result, Theorem
\refMainTheoremCharNA, extends the no-arbitrage criterion by Levental and
Skorohod [Ann. Appl.
Probab. 5 (1995) 906-925] from diffusion processes to arbitrary continuous
semimartingales. The second main result, Theorem 2.4, is a characterization of
a weaker notion of no-arbitrage in terms of the existence of supermartingale
densities. The pertaining weaker notion of no-arbitrage is equivalent to the
absence of immediate arbitrage opportunities, a concept introduced by Delbaen
and Schachermayer [Ann. Appl. Probab. 5 (1995) 926-945]. Both results are
stated in terms of conditions for any semimartingales starting at arbitrary
stopping times \sigma. The necessity parts of both results are known for the
stopping time \sigma=0 from Delbaen and Schachermayer [Ann. Appl. Probab. 5
(1995) 926-945]. The contribution of the present paper is the proofs of the
corresponding sufficiency parts.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051604000000558 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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