- American Constitutional Law and Politics
- Judicial and Constitutional Studies
- Biotechnology and Related Fields
- Legal and Constitutional Studies
- Religion and Society Interactions
- Pharmaceutical Economics and Policy
- Mormonism, Religion, and History
- Private Equity and Venture Capital
- Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research
- Legal Education and Practice Innovations
- Biosimilars and Bioanalytical Methods
- Catholicism and Religious Studies
- Legal Systems and Judicial Processes
- European Political History Analysis
- Historical and Contemporary Political Dynamics
- Comparative and International Law Studies
- Multicultural Socio-Legal Studies
- Criminal Law and Evidence
- Colonialism, slavery, and trade
- Wine Industry and Tourism
- Intellectual Property and Patents
- Toxin Mechanisms and Immunotoxins
- Reformation and Early Modern Christianity
- Political and Social Issues
- Protein purification and stability
University of Cambridge
2012-2024
University of Notre Dame
2012-2024
University of Toronto
2023
Advent Life Sciences (United Kingdom)
2016-2018
Princeton University
1983-2010
Advent Technologies (Greece)
2010
The American College
2009
American College of Financial Services
2009
Princeton Public Library
2009
Office of the Attorney General
1985
With more than 40 million tourists visiting wineries each year, wine tourism is increasingly seen as a business strategy that provides economic benefits not only for the industry but also surrounding region. These come with environmental cost of increasing carbon emissions. This important issue, however, has received very limited attention in existing policies, footprint studies, and sustainability frameworks. In this study, we provide first-ever macro-level emission profile activities...
Thousands of biotech companies are developing promising products, but have insufficient resources to complete the clinical testing process, while large, well-funded increasingly focused on need access external innovation. As a result, licensing deals an essential and growing part this industry. Yet, casting shadow over market is classic Lemons Problem: Does asymmetrical information put licensees at severe disadvantage, leading dominated by inferior opportunities, with best products retained...
With the rapid growth of monoclonal antibody-based products, new technologies have emerged for creating modified forms antibodies, including fragments, conjugates and multi-specific antibodies. We created a database 450 therapeutic antibodies in development to determine which indications will constitute "next generation" antibody products. conclude that future closely resemble already been approved commercial sale.
This article develops a framework for driving innovation under highly ambiguous conditions. An analysis of the most novel medicines past 20 years shows that very large group small companies created more breakthroughs, at considerably less overall cost, than much smaller companies. article’s findings present first large-scale empirical validation theoretical literature predicting superiority decentralized parallel searches in environments. Accordingly, attempt to “de-risk” portfolio by...
Journal Article Religion and the Republic: James Madison First Amendment Get access Donald L. Drakeman, A.B., J.D. General Counsel, a Ph.D. candidate in religion Dartmouth College; Columbia Law School; Essex Chemical Corporation, Clifton, New Jersey; Princeton University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar of Church State, Volume 25, Issue 3, Autumn 1983, Pages 427–445, https://doi.org/10.1093/jcs/25.3.427 Published: 01 October 1983
A recent study of R&D alliances between new biotechnology firms ( NBFs ) and pharmaceutical investigated how deal with the “swimming sharks” dilemma involved in allying capable appropriating value. It concludes that are less likely to select alliance partners related expertise because greater appropriation risk. Based on our experience as NBF managers a survey executives, we believe such situations uncommon, more shows seeking diversification. Thousands seek top 100 firms, larger company...
1. Introduction 2. Reynolds: the historical construction of constitutional reality 3. Everson: a case premeditated law office history 4. The battle for high ground 5. Original meanings: where is highground? 6. Incorporating originalism 7. Conclusion.
Everson v. Board of Education and the Quest for Historical Establishment Clause Get access Donald L. Drakeman Lecturer *Department Politics, Princeton University. The author would like to thank Daniel Dreisbach his thoughtful comments on a draft this paper. Search other works by on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar American Journal Legal History, Volume 49, Issue 2, April 2007, Pages 119–168, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/49.2.119 Published: 01 2007
Six years after its founding as colonial America’s fourth college in 1746, Princeton prescribed a design for ‘robes’ to be worn by the president and ‘as many of [the students] shall see fit … .’ Perhaps not students actually saw wear them, for, 1755, trustees voted require that ‘all except freshmen obliged appear Habits’. They recanted just three later, revoked requirement ‘wear peculiar Habits’, thus beginning University’s own peculiar, nearly 300-year habit continually revising approach...
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