The Cornell Law Review issue for January 2007 includes a symposium on Social Security, with the following articles:
Medical Proof, Social Policy, and Social Security's Medically Centered Definition of Disability
Frank S. Bloch
The Social Security Administration's New Disability Adjudication Rules: A Significant and Promising Reform
Frank S. Bloch, Jeffrey S. Lubbers & Paul R. Verkuil
A Response to Bloch, Lubbers & Verkuil's The Social Security Administration's New Disability Adjudication Rules: A Cause for Optimism . . . and Concern
Robert E. Rains
Social Security and Government Deficits: When Should We Worry?
Neil H. Buchanan
Comment on Neil H. Buchanan's Social Security and Government Deficits: When Should We Worry?
Benjamin A. Templin
Social Security Reform: Lessons From Private Pensions
Karen C. Burke & Grayson M.P. McCouch
Transofrming the Role of the Social Security Administration
Colleen E. Medill
Professional Responsibility and Social Security Representation: The Myth of the State-Bar Bar to Compliance with Federal Rules on Production of Adverse Evidence
Robert E. Rains
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