Search for: "PROFESSORS OF SECOND AMENDMENT LAW" Results 421 - 440 of 4,895
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7 May 2015, 9:18 am by The Federalist Society
To discuss the case, we have John Stinneford, who is an Associate Professor of Law and Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center at the University of Florida Levin College of Law. [read post]
10 Oct 2011, 4:04 pm by Eugene Volokh
(Eugene Volokh) I’ll be on a The Second Amendment in the Courts After Heller and McDonald panel Nov. 12, 2011 at the Appellate Judges Education Institute Summit in Washington, D.C. [read post]
3 Oct 2022, 4:45 am by SHG
Then again, do students in the second and third year of law school have no option to delve deeper into Supreme Court law than to learn one prawf’s personal views or “drop the course,” meaning do without? [read post]
5 Mar 2014, 11:35 am by Harold O'Grady
Andrew Napolitano.mp3 This podcast features an interview with Brooklyn Law School Visiting Professor of Law  Andrew Napolitano who teaches courses on Constitutional Interpretation and Individual Rights and First Amendment Law. [read post]
29 Mar 2010, 7:34 pm by mhugard
Professor Afsharipour: When I went to the New York City office of Davis Polk, I had already clerked for a year, so I started out technically as a second-year associate. [read post]
11 Jun 2016, 4:16 am by SHG
” The rights of free speech and press protected in the First Amendment didn’t need the Second Circuit’s approval. [read post]
22 Apr 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
But they ultimately make sense against a liberal democratic starting point, and in the service of the protection of liberal democratic constitutionalism.David Landau is the Mason Ladd Professor and Associate Dean for International Programs at Florida State University College of Law. [read post]
20 Sep 2013, 11:02 am by Ken White
A university might conceivably strike a balance that prevents Professor Guth from shouting in the face of a colleague "I HOPE YOUR KIDS DIE BECAUSE YOU SUPPORT THE SECOND AMENDMENT," which for all I know he is planning to do next week. [read post]
16 Jun 2020, 1:19 pm by Josh Blackman
The Second Amendment is now normal constitutional law, we were assured. [read post]
27 Nov 2023, 8:07 am by Eric Goldman
By guest blogger Lisa Ramsey, Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law The Supreme Court will likely hold in Elster that Section 2(c) is consistent with the First Amendment, but will it clarify how to balance trademark and free speech rights? [read post]
20 Apr 2018, 1:03 pm by J. Michael Goodson Law Library
Created by Duke Law Professors Joseph Blocher and Darrell Miller, the authors of the forthcoming book The Positive Second Amendment: Rights, Regulation, and the Future of Heller, this database includes transcriptions of state and national gun laws from the medieval age to 1776 in England, and from the colonial era to mid-1900s America. [read post]
27 Mar 2010, 2:52 pm
Cyndee is an international trade lawyer with Lang Michener LLP and an adjunct law professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law and teaches a course of NAFTA and bilateral trade agreements. [read post]
17 Jul 2022, 2:17 pm by Erik J. Heels
From 2011-2013, I taught the Patent Law 101 class as an adjunct professor at Maine Law. [read post]
12 Nov 2021, 9:30 pm by ernst
Bloomberg Law Podcasts interviews two legal historians on this term’s Supreme Court cases, Adam Winkler on the Second Amendment, and Mary Ziegler on reproductive rights.Save the date: Oxford University Faculty of Law announces a Book Talk for Thai Legal History (CUP, 2021), by Andrew Harding and Munin Pongsapan, February 25, 2022, 12:00PM to 1:00PM. [read post]
20 Sep 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  In thinking about how constitutional design can escape Sandy’s (or America’s) iron cage, two key design principles seem relevant: the principles of tiering and sequencing.[12]  Rosalind Dixon is a Professor of Law and Justice at the University of New South Wales. [read post]
26 Jan 2024, 7:53 am by Vikram David Amar
A zero-tolerance policy for being accused of sexual misconduct is quite another, at least from the perspective of due process.But whether or not one agrees with the district court’s ruling as a faithful implementation of the Fourteenth Amendment, Parrish’s criticism reflects an ignorance of law in general, and constitutional law in particular. [read post]