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3 Nov 2014, 11:08 am by Benjamin Bissell
Today marks the beginning of oral arguments in the landmark Zivotofsky v. [read post]
5 Apr 2010, 7:09 pm by Jason C. Brown
In March of 2010, the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library updated its "Same-Sex Marriage in Minnesota" resource. [read post]
16 Sep 2011, 11:58 am by Keith Gerver
Blum concludes by thanking the many individuals who have made the HLS-Brookings Program possible, in particular Ben Wittes, her co-director, Minow,  and Brookings President Strobe Talbott,  as well as the many others who will make this conference a success.   [read post]
24 Oct 2013, 10:26 am by Paul Rosenzweig
The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence was to have had a hearing today on proposed reforms to the NSA surveillance programs. [read post]
25 Mar 2021, 7:22 am by William Ford, Rohini Kurup
Over the past two months, Congress has convened a series of hearings on the failures that enabled the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol. [read post]
23 Apr 2018, 8:32 am by William Ford
Employment Announcements (More details on the Job Board) Associate Editor, Lawfare Note: The associate editor also serves as a research assistant for Benjamin Wittes at the Brookings Institution. [read post]
2 Nov 2020, 8:46 am by Quinta Jurecic
And as Benjamin Wittes noted when the Mueller report was released in April 2019, the report itself set that speculation to rest—or, at least, should have: The special counsel’s work was focused on criminal violations only, and the counterintelligence portions of the investigation were passed back to the FBI. [read post]
On Jan. 31 and Feb. 5, The Washington Post reported that former President Trump routinely “tore up briefings and schedules, articles and letters, memos both sensitive and mundane” in violation of the Presidential Records Act (PRA) and that some of the records received by the Jan. 6 committee had been “ripped up and then taped back together. [read post]
The national fight against the spread of the novel coronavirus demands a leader who can take charge of and defeat a grave threat, and who can put partisan politics aside to create a shared sense of national purpose. [read post]
22 May 2017, 9:19 am by Quinta Jurecic
As Benjamin Wittes and I have written, his publicly released statement to the House clarified some lingering questions about his involvement—namely, acknowledging that he knew Trump had decided on firing Comey before he drafted his memo—but raised further concerns regarding to what extent Rosenstein was aware of the role of the Russia investigation in Comey’s firing. [read post]
16 Oct 2014, 10:54 pm
Bruno de Witte, Professor of European Union Law, Current UM-HiiL-Chair 11:00-11:40 Implications for corporate law and governance Corporate Governance and Responsibility: Paradigms Lost Jan Eijsbouts, Professor of Corporate Social Responsibility 11:40-12:20 Implications for private law Corporate Codes and promissory language Jan Smits, Professor of European Private Law, UM-HiiL-Chair 2010-2012 12:20-13:30 Lunch break Panel II: Enforcing corporate social responsibility – Societal… [read post]
30 Apr 2018, 9:25 am by Matthew Kahn
  Employment Announcements (More details on the Job Board) Associate Editor, Lawfare Note: The associate editor also serves as a research assistant for Benjamin Wittes at the Brookings Institution. [read post]
25 Jun 2018, 3:00 am by Victoria Clark
Tamara Cofman Wittes, a senior fellow with the Center for Middle East Policy, will moderate the discussion. [read post]
29 Jul 2020, 6:01 am by Zoe Bedell, John Major
Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act has long provided internet platforms like Twitter and Facebook with immunity from claims based on third-party content that appears on their platforms. [read post]
7 Feb 2017, 5:48 pm by Nora Ellingsen
A little more than a week ago, Benjamin Wittes posted a piece about the malevolence and incompetence of Trump’s Executive Order on visas and refugees—an order that, in his words, is both wildly over-inclusive and wildly under-inclusive. [read post]
3 Apr 2019, 10:05 am by Stephen Bates
At 11:00 a.m. on March 1, 1974, lawyers and reporters gathered in Judge John Sirica’s courtroom in Washington. [read post]
Wittes has argued that the Justice Department’s probe has been “a remarkably quick and aggressive investigation” that “will only heat up more as the months grind on. [read post]