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7 Mar 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
It may be that they think of constitutionalism as akin not to singular personal/institutional virtues (like truthfulness or efficiency), but rather a more general appraisal of the overall character of an institutional setup. [read post]
6 Mar 2022, 10:35 am
Alexander Dugin and his kind would construct 天命 Tiānmìng meaning universes around ethno-blended  national singularities--in this case on lands now called or to be absorbed as Russia and China. [read post]
2 Mar 2022, 2:33 pm
 The one mercy of President Biden's 2022 State of the Union Address was that there was no surprises. [read post]
2 Mar 2022, 3:25 am by SHG
The phrase “freak of nature” is a common one, expressing that someone is special, unique, one in a million, as nature rarely produces someone of such singular characteristics. [read post]
28 Feb 2022, 7:08 am by Roger Parloff
According to the George Washington University Project on Extremism, 77 percent of those criminally charged in the siege were arrested at least in part based on evidence obtained from social media. [read post]
20 Feb 2022, 4:38 am
Assuming both, then it is likely that international normativity will resist its reduction to a singularity, or single expressive force. [read post]
29 Jan 2022, 12:41 pm
Pui-yin Lo is a barrister in private practice in Hong Kong and a Visiting Fellow of the Centre for Chinese Law of the Faculty of Law of the University of Hong Kong. [read post]
27 Jan 2022, 3:49 am by SHG
Note that “binder” is singular, because the pool of potential black female justices wasn’t deep. [read post]
24 Jan 2022, 6:04 pm
  Where one once spoke of democracy, trade, culture, rights, and the like as a singular construct, there is now a socialist variant, one with its theoretical driving source in China and its vanguard.[4] Law itself has acquired, once again, its own self legitimating character bound up in the intricacies of national context and history, but in a way that can be generalized and offered as an alternative way of imposing order on the world.[5]   In the process it has upset what had… [read post]
22 Jan 2022, 7:15 am by Kevin LaCroix
As it turns out, he also lived a surprisingly interesting life, as is well told in Harvard University Professor Christoph Wolff’s excellent one-volume Bach biography, Johann Sebastian Bach: The Learned Musician. [read post]
22 Jan 2022, 4:20 am by SHG
” In a parallel development, the authors show that the use of plural pronouns such as “we” and “they” has dropped somewhat since 1980 while the use of singular pronouns has gone up. [read post]
12 Jan 2022, 4:41 pm by INFORRM
Mark Hanna, Queen’s University, Belfast                 [read post]
12 Jan 2022, 5:01 am by Paul Rosenzweig
(I concede that this is not universally true, but that circumstance is a problem of a different nature and outside the bounds of my remit for this assessment). [read post]
7 Jan 2022, 12:05 pm
They share, however, certain discursive commonalities and modes of operation, and they construct a quite specific meaning universe that has served to organize the way actors, institutions, and their exchanges and interactions are perceived. [read post]
16 Dec 2021, 2:40 pm by Michael Froomkin
My second thought was that if I was a contract drafter (in some evil alternate universe; I’m much better at litigation!) [read post]
14 Dec 2021, 3:16 pm by David M. McLain
Lawyers are not required or allowed to pay a fee to be listed; therefore, inclusion in Best Lawyers is considered a singular honor. [read post]
9 Dec 2021, 3:37 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
An Australian marketing communications company called Clemenger BBDO is collaborating on the project with researchers from the University of Tasmania. [read post]
In addition to consulting, she has co-authored five of the leading books in the field and teaches at Cornell University. [read post]
16 Nov 2021, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Priyasha Saksena (University of Leeds) and Sonia Tycko (University of Oxford) will share the award for their respective articles “Jousting Over Jurisdiction: Sovereignty and International Law in Late Nineteenth-Century South Asia” Law and History Review 38, no. 2 (May 2020) and “The Legality of Prisoner of War Labour in England, 1648-1655,” Past and Present 246 (Feb 2020). [read post]
6 Nov 2021, 3:59 am by SHG
Much as I appreciate Columbia University professor turned New York Times columnist John McWhorter’s insights on culture war issues, he remains a linguist by profession. [read post]