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9 May 2019, 4:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
  In this respect, petitioner contends that her assignment violates respondent’s past practice of assigning a teacher to no more than one “duty period” – such as in-school suspension, lunch, or study hall – per year. [read post]
9 May 2019, 4:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
  In this respect, petitioner contends that her assignment violates respondent’s past practice of assigning a teacher to no more than one “duty period” – such as in-school suspension, lunch, or study hall – per year. [read post]
9 May 2019, 4:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
  In this respect, petitioner contends that her assignment violates respondent’s past practice of assigning a teacher to no more than one “duty period” – such as in-school suspension, lunch, or study hall – per year. [read post]
9 May 2019, 4:00 am by Public Employment Law Press
  In this respect, petitioner contends that her assignment violates respondent’s past practice of assigning a teacher to no more than one “duty period” – such as in-school suspension, lunch, or study hall – per year. [read post]
16 May 2007, 8:50 am
Michael Stokes Paulsen, How Yale Law School Trivializes Religious Debotion, 27 Seton Hall L. [read post]
16 May 2007, 8:50 am
Michael Stokes Paulsen, How Yale Law School Trivializes Religious Debotion, 27 Seton Hall L. [read post]
20 Sep 2016, 10:20 am by Larry Tolchinsky
The Case of the Land-Locked Property An example of rescission in a real estate contract occurred in the case of Hall v. [read post]
21 Feb 2018, 1:48 am
German court finds Facebook in breach of data protection law as, when creating a profile, certain settings are activated by default and are in breach of German Data Protection Law. [read post]
4 Nov 2013, 8:09 am by David S. Kemp
Berkeley, School of Law (Boalt Hall), Kemp served as Senior Executive Editor of the California Law Review and worked as a summer intern with the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc.Follow @DavidSKemp on Twitter [read post]
2 Mar 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  When the working class threatened the interests of robber barons in late nineteenth century, for example, the illiterate and semiliterate poor were kept from the polls through literacy tests and poll taxes, not unlike the restrictive voter identification laws introduced after the Shelby County v. [read post]
29 Jun 2017, 8:30 am by Joseph Tartakovsky
Yet I suspect that for those of us toiling in the less hallowed halls of state attorneys general, the ultimate desideratum is something else altogether: clear, stable law, expressed if possible in firm rules that bring order and consistency to the decisions of the U.S. [read post]