Search for: "US v. Thomas Madison" Results 321 - 340 of 427
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13 Jun 2013, 3:59 am by Terry Hart
” • • • Redefining Free Culture was originally posted on Copyhype • • • FootnotesSee, for example, The Ethics of Consent, pp. 45-51 (Oxford University Press 2010), citing Thomas Hobbes, Adam Smith, Immanuel Kant, and John Stuart Mill.See, for example, Lynch v. [read post]
15 Aug 2013, 8:10 am
Property is quite useful for developing an understanding of the structures for managing the power to control and exploit things, principally real estate in the first year. [read post]
26 Apr 2018, 11:52 am by Andrew Hamm
  Question: In February, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in his dissent from the court’s denial of certiorari in Silvester v. [read post]
15 Jul 2007, 5:57 am
Remember, Thomas Jefferson and others, the founders, suggested that impeachment was an organic process. [read post]
17 Sep 2011, 11:39 pm by David Kopel
  Commentary During the Ratification PeriodThe Federalist PapersThe Federalist No. 29 (Alexander Hamilton)The Federalist No. 46 (James Madison)Tench CoxeOther FederalistsD. [read post]
1 Nov 2021, 9:38 am by Juan C. Antúnez
Not surprisingly, it’s a question that really smart people have ruminated on for a long time, including none other than Thomas Jefferson, who in a letter to James Madison wrote: The earth belongs in usufruct to the living; the dead have neither powers nor rights over it. [read post]
17 Apr 2023, 5:50 am by INFORRM
The force halted its use of the technology in 2020 following a Court of Appeal judgement that found its use interfered with privacy and data protection law. [read post]
19 Jun 2020, 3:56 pm by David Kopel
" James Madison explained that he kept those words out of the document because it would be "wrong to admit in the Constitution the idea that there could be property in men. [read post]
19 Mar 2018, 12:15 pm by Ronald Collins
Do you think Scalia would have signed onto Thomas’ dissent? [read post]
25 Mar 2020, 10:38 am by Jack Goldsmith, Ben Miller-Gootnick
The Amars argue that the term “Officers” is predominantly used in the Constitution to mean executive officials, that evidence from the Philadelphia Convention confirms this view, and that James Madison maintained that legislative succession was unconstitutional. [read post]
23 Feb 2016, 8:29 pm by Edward A. Fallone
Madison, Justice Joseph Story in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, and the modern Supreme Court in Edmond v. [read post]
11 Dec 2020, 9:07 pm
Madison, "it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is. [read post]