Search for: "Herbert Short" Results 261 - 280 of 363
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9 Mar 2016, 8:10 am by Michael Gerhardt
” There is, in short, no historical support for the claim that the Senate has a tradition of shutting down the Supreme Court appointment process in presidential election years. [read post]
12 Jan 2017, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
Trump’s Cabinet nominees in short order, but will likely proceed much more slowly and carefully in processing his judicial nominees, including whichever nominee he names to fill the Supreme Court seat made vacant by Justice Antonin Scalia’s death almost a year ago.As intimated above, the historical distinction between executive and judicial nominees makes good structural sense. [read post]
16 Feb 2012, 5:47 pm by Steve Bainbridge
Nagy & Herbert Thomas, Ferrara on Insider Trading and the Wall 2-71 to -74 (2008). 4. [read post]
26 Jun 2019, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
The words of the Nineteenth Amendment (like those of the Fifteenth Amendment prohibiting racial discrimination in voting) are short and sweet. [read post]
4 Feb 2022, 2:29 pm by Alden Abbott
Sonotone (1979)) would give short shrift to an “efficiencies offense” justification for a merger challenge. [read post]
29 Jul 2022, 8:06 am by Aurelien Portuese
” Despite this, calls to amend or repeal the Robinson-Patman Act—supported by, among others, competition scholars like Herbert Hovenkamp and Robert Bork—have failed. [read post]
5 Aug 2021, 4:51 am by Matthias Weller
HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention Repository Rescheduled: “The HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention: Prospects for Judicial Cooperation in Civil Matters between the EU and Third Countries” – Conference (now) on 9 and 10 September 2022, University of Bonn, Germany As a result of the ongoing pandemic situation, we decided to reschedule the Conference to Friday and Saturday, 9 and 10 September 2022. [read post]
27 Jul 2016, 6:28 am
’ In re Herbert B., 303 Md. 419, 417 (Maryland Court of Appeals 1985); see In re Earl F., 208 Md. [read post]
8 May 2019, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Like Balkin, I believe that the administration of Donald Trump is better viewed as a disjunctive presidency, similar to that of Jimmy Carter or Herbert Hoover, a symptom of the unraveling conservative order rather than the opening bid of a new authoritarian populist regime or consolidation of the existing Republican regime.[1]I’d like to use the opportunity of my deep agreement with Balkin to explore one of the weaknesses of our shared position. [read post]
28 Jan 2015, 9:28 am
Friday afternoon at the Mere Anglicanism Conference in Charleston began with a talk by Mary Eberstadt, a former special assistant to Ambassador Jeane J. [read post]
31 Dec 2020, 10:00 am by ernst
  In that year she also worked for Herbert Hoover’s election as president but also protested that his handlers, seeing a chance to win the votes of White Southerners appalled by the selection of the Irish Catholic Al Smith to head the Democratic ticket, were ignoring Black Republicans and dealing only with the party’s “lily-white” Southern faction. [read post]
29 Aug 2017, 7:31 am by JB
He would preside over the end of the Reagan regime, just as Jimmy Carter had ushered in the end of the New Deal/Civil Rights Regime and Herbert Hoover had presided over the end of the long period of Republican dominance following the Civil War. [read post]
17 Aug 2020, 10:00 am by Guest Blogger
In short, the rule “in force in all the English Colonies upon this continent down to the time of the Declaration of Independence, and in the United States afterward,” which “continued to prevail under the Constitution as originally established,” was that aliens, while residing within a sovereign’s territory, “were within the allegiance, the obedience, the faith or loyalty, the protection, the power, the jurisdiction” of that sovereign and therefore… [read post]
29 Jun 2010, 2:34 pm
HERBERT KOHL, D-Wisc.: Justice Scalia considers himself to be an originalist who interprets the Constitution by looking solely at the text. [read post]
18 Jul 2011, 9:56 am by Moria Miller
Burbank David Berger Professor for the Administration of Justice In July, Stephen Burbank, the David Berger Professor for the Administration of Justice at Penn Law, will be a featured speaker at the Fourteenth World Congress of the International Association of Procedural Law in Heidelberg, Germany, where he will present a paper on private enforcement of statutory and administrative law, co-authored with Sean Farhang of the University of California, Berkeley, and Herbert Kritzer of the… [read post]