August marks the one-year anniversary of no-fault divorce becoming legal in all 50 states.
So I applaud Judge Rakoff for raising the issue of shadowy, no-fault securities settlements.
FORBES: Judge Rakoff Indicts No-Fault Securities Settlement Syndrome
New Zealand has a national, no-fault insurance scheme, and as a result, far less anxiety about malpractice litigation.
The Lib Dems also favour a system of no-fault compensation to cut down on the need for costly litigation following medical errors.
But Mr Cable's department has issued a call for evidence to see whether firms with fewer than 10 employees would favour the no-fault dismissal rule.
According to a 2007 paper by Justin Wolfers at the Wharton School, divorce rates rose sharply after other states adopted no-fault divorce, but this trend reversed within a decade.
The case was among the first to begin putting into practice a little-noticed provision in a package of laws passed in 2010 that more famously established no-fault divorce in New York.
The high court ultimately agreed with WLF that Congress mandated preemption of design defect claims when it adopted the Vaccine Act, which established a national, comprehensive, no-fault compensation program for vaccine-related injuries.
FORBES: High Court Upholds Federal Preemption of Design Defect Claims Against Vaccine Makers
By providing a comprehensive, no-fault compensation regime to address vaccine-relate injuries, Congress sought to protect vaccine manufacturers from the same kind of burdensome litigation that previously drove so many vaccine manufacturers from the market.
FORBES: High Court Upholds Federal Preemption of Design Defect Claims Against Vaccine Makers
To understand the harm that could be done by an unlimited federal power to define the terms of domestic-relations law, Young recalls when a few states, venturing beyond the national consensus, began experimenting with no-fault divorce.
The result of this is that no-fault lack-of-fit between an employee and the first manager, team, or project is likely to lead either to termination or stagnation (which are fast and slow varieties of the same thing).
So, in these days of women empowerment, no-one can fault their spouses for setting up the AFLPM.
Ignore the fact Worcestershire lost heavily on Saturday - it was through no fault of Solanki who looked more glum-faced than most of his colleagues when collecting his runners-up medal.
It found that insurers of "at-fault" drivers had no control over the amount spent on repairs or replacement vehicles by "not-at-fault" drivers.
The D-1 fault runs beneath the No. 2 reactor, and the government doesn't allow nuclear-power plant operators to build reactors directly above active faults.
Through no fault of their own -- I've looked into the eyes of those out-of-work teachers, out-of-work businessmen and women, small business owners, construction workers who've been laid off.
And here's the thing: the deadline for the sale is November 2013 - though, arguably through no fault of its own, RBS has acknowledged that it is going to miss that deadline.
By contrast, almost no one could afford outright the medical bills of a serious hit-and-run car accident, or a long-term illness brought about through no fault of your own.
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The underlying concept of the 1949 Geneva Conventions the crux of traditional humanitarian law is that every reasonable effort should be made to protect non-combatants caught up in fighting through no fault of their own.
However, the IAAF decided not to punish individual World Cup 2002 contestants - accepting the GB squad members suffered through no fault of their own because of Chambers' actions.
Such a fund should also be available to help those in the tourist industry who could be put out of business, through no fault of their own, as a result of foot-and-mouth.
Listen to this: He is fighting for responsible young people who came to this country as children, through no fault of their own, and were raised as Americans -- the only country they know -- because he believes that these young people also deserve the chance to go to college, to contribute to our economy, to serve the country they know and love.
Think about the investments this President has made to raise standards and reform our public schools. (Applause.) Think about how my husband has been fighting for the DREAM Act, so that talented, hardworking young people -- (applause) -- young people who were brought to this country through no fault of their own, so they can have a chance to earn their citizenship.
He seems oddly at home in these whittled-down conditions, whereas the rest of the actors, through no fault of their own, never look as shrivelled by hunger as they should.
African-Americans understand this as a question of citizens and homeowners displaced through no fault of their own who deserve the support of a government into which they have paid all these years.
While conceding the 30-year-old may have been at fault against United, Wenger is in no hurry to make a change to a side that has set a new club record of 25 matches unbeaten in all competitions.
Americans might prefer to regard their country as an inward-looking place that periodically got dragged into the world's affairs through no fault of its own.
"With this data now available from more than one study, it really becomes the responsibility of parents, physicians, and teachers to pay attention to the relative-age effect and not intervene with treatment and labeling of children who it's no fault of their own what time of year they were born, " Garland says.
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No-one was seriously hurt in the incident, which is believed to have been caused by an electrical fault.
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