Search for: "UNIVERSAL SERVICE V POST-CONFIRMATION" Results 301 - 320 of 913
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7 Sep 2020, 10:04 am by Paul Rosenzweig, Vishnu Kannan
And the Senate confirmation process for political appointees is not always expedient. [read post]
PREVIOUS MONTH’S UPDATE To read the July 2020 Environmental Action News post, click here: https://blog.aklandlaw.com/2020/07/articles/ak-news/july-monthly-real-estate-law-action-news/ . [read post]
13 Aug 2020, 7:01 am by Yosie Saint-Cyr
In reliance on the minority position in Potash, the respondents pointed to the Nilsson decision (Nilsson v The University of Prince Edward Island) of a Human Rights Panel appointed under Prince Edward Island’s Human Rights Act. [read post]
7 Aug 2020, 7:47 pm
 While there have been changes around the edges (to be discussed in a future post), the IGWG and its supporters took pains to affirm and deepen their commitment to the fundamental structure and approach adopted for the First Daft of 2019. [read post]
4 Aug 2020, 10:43 am by Leslie Griffin
Boyd professor of law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. [read post]
31 Jul 2020, 7:20 am by Ronald Collins
” — Oliver Wendell Holmes, Brown University Commencement Address (1897) The following is a series of questions posed by Ronald Collins to Catharine Pierce Wells in connection with her new book, “Oliver Wendell Holmes: A Willing Servant to an Unknown God” (Cambridge University Press, 2020). [read post]
17 Jul 2020, 12:35 am by INFORRM
Thereafter, the full session of STF confirmed the preliminary injunction.IndiaKhan v. [read post]
11 Jul 2020, 3:19 am by Jeanne Huang
by Jie (Jeanne) Huang, Associate Professor of the University of Sydney Law School, Jeanne.huang@sydney.edu.au Recently, in Australian Information Commission v Facebook Inc ([2020] FCA 531), the Federal Court of Australia (‘FCA’) addresses substituted service and the Hague Service Convention in the contexts of the COVID-19 pandemic. [read post]
2 Jul 2020, 9:05 pm by Joshua Burd
WHAT WE’RE READING THIS WEEK In an essay in the Washington Post, Shweta Bansal, Colin Carlson, and John Kraemer of Georgetown University, refuted the idea that colleges and universities can safely open for in-person instruction this fall. [read post]