Search for: "People v. Harris (1970)" Results 1 - 20 of 136
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29 Mar 2024, 7:28 pm
Here one encounters a re-affirmation of the fundamental approach and sensibilities (which themselves have been evolving since the 1970s) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the group that tends to include many "home" states in goal economic production networks. [read post]
14 Mar 2024, 10:07 am by admin
Last week, Bayer broke its Philadelphia losing streak, with a win in Kline v. [read post]
1 Dec 2023, 7:23 am by Amy Howe
O’Connor ran for the seat in her own right in 1970; she won and was re-elected again in 1972. [read post]
10 May 2023, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
"[B]ut, of course, he never did" (OI, v.1, 330).In assessing Calabresi's scholarship in the 1970s, one also has to account for his more philosophical work, such as Tragic Choices (1978) (co-authored with Philip Bobbitt). [read post]
31 Dec 2022, 3:12 pm by James Romoser
” Both Burger and Justice Harry Blackmun (the author of Roe) were apoplectic. [read post]
12 Oct 2022, 4:32 pm by Mark Walsh
And then it is on to the argument in Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts Inc. v. [read post]
7 Sep 2022, 5:23 am by Eugene Volokh
It is widely accepted that, consistent with the Dormant Commerce Clause, a firm doing multistate business must bear the cost of discovering and complying with state laws—tort laws, tax laws, franchise laws, health laws, privacy laws, and much more—everywhere it does business.[21] People and firms operating in "real space" must take steps to learn and comply with state law in places they visit or do business, or must avoid visiting or doing business in those… [read post]
5 Jul 2022, 9:00 pm by Rodger Citron
Wade is the representative case of Justice Harry Blackmun’s tenure on the Supreme Court, so too will Dobbs v. [read post]
7 Jun 2022, 4:30 am by Karen Tani
Alyass, Harvard University, “The People’s War on Drugs: Community Activism, the Carceral State, and the Crack Crisis in 1980s Detroit”Michael Z. [read post]
20 Mar 2022, 9:00 pm by Austin Sarat
”For a brief period in the 1960s and 1970s, courts rejected the “hands off” doctrine and used the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment as a justification to scrutinize and reform the conditions of confinement in America’s prisons.Pugh v Locke, decided in 1976, is one of the most famous examples of this approach. [read post]