Search for: "Progressive v. Emergency" Results 201 - 220 of 1,631
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
19 Nov 2017, 10:18 am by Garrett Hinck
And Orin Kerr discussed four considerations to supplement his amicus brief in Carpenter v. [read post]
16 Oct 2014, 7:00 am by Guest Blogger
Aziza AhmedFor the conference on Public Health in the Shadow of the First AmendmentIn Roe v. [read post]
31 Dec 2013, 1:36 pm by Lyle Denniston
  Briefing in those two is now in progress. [read post]
14 Sep 2020, 12:04 pm by James Romoser
But in the election law context, cases typically reach the justices in an emergency posture and must be litigated at high speed. [read post]
14 Sep 2020, 4:16 pm by INFORRM
All the same, reports have emerged in recent days of Oracle apparently contacting its clients to inform them that it will stop offering third party targeting services across the EU from 15 September. [read post]
4 May 2020, 1:17 pm by David Bernstein
This Article concludes by noting that as this debate has progressed, certain areas of historical consensus have emerged. [read post]
25 Apr 2023, 12:01 pm by Dennis Crouch
As artificial intelligence progresses at an unprecedented pace, numerous cases have emerged where generative AI has played a crucial role in conceiving an invention. [read post]
20 Sep 2022, 9:22 am by Eric Goldman
The issuance of this decision now tees up the more typical appellate options, which could include an appeal to the Fifth Circuit en banc, an appeal to the Supreme Court’s shadow docket for an emergency restoration of the injunction, or an appeal to the Supreme Court through the normal certiorari petition process. [read post]
23 Jun 2017, 12:58 pm by Dan Ernst
This Article challenges these accounts by framing the modern class action’s emergence as part of a broader mid-century battle over how to conceptualize collective rights within the emerging New Deal state. [read post]
11 Sep 2015, 1:21 pm by Stephen Griffin
  Second, of particular relevance to conceptions of government, history was seen as a cycle (often a cycle of decline), rather than a journey into a future that would progressively not resemble the past (I am not using “progressive” in a normative or political sense). [read post]