Skip to content
Katherine C. Pearson, Editor, and a Member of the Law Professor Blogs Network on LexBlog.com

Cornell LR Symposium on Social Security

February 28, 2007

Symposium:  Social Security in Transition.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 189-395 (2007).

Bloch, Frank S.  Medical proof, social policy, and Social Security’s medically centered definition of disability.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 189-234 (2007).

Colloquy.  The Social Security Administration’s New Disability  Adjudication Rules.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 235-255 (2007).

Bloch, Frank S., Jeffrey S. Lubbers and Paul R. Verkuil.  The Social Secrity Administration’s new disability adjudication rules: a significant and promising reform.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 235-247 (2007).

Rains, Robert E.  A response to Bloch, Lubbers & Verkuil’s The Social  Security Administration’s new disability adjudication rules:  a cause for optimism.and concern.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 249-255 (2007).

Colloquy.  Social Security and Government Deficits.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 257-296 (2007).

Buchanan, Neil H.  Social Security and government deficits:  when should we worry?  92 Cornell L. Rev. 257-289 (2007).

Templin, Benjamin A.  Comment on Neil H. Buchanan’s Social Security and government deficits:  when should we worry?  92 Cornell L. Rev. 291-296 (2007).

Burke, Karen C. and Grayson M.P. McCouch.  Social Security reform:  lessons from private pensions.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 297-322 (2007).

Medill, Colleen E.  Transforming the role of the Social Security Administration.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 323-361 (2007).

Rains, Robert E.  Professional responsibility and Social Security representation:  the myth of the state-bar bar to compliance with federal rules on production of adverse evidence.  92 Cornell L. Rev. 363-395 (2007).

Posted in: