Search for: "U.S. v. McConnell" Results 441 - 460 of 509
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
12 Mar 2024, 12:10 am by Josh Richman
Ron Wyden and former Congressman Chris Cox in Gonzalez v. [read post]
12 Jan 2012, 2:58 pm by Benjamin Wittes
 The Supreme Court has developed this concept further since Youngstown; the most frequently cited case is Dames & Moore v. [read post]
21 Apr 2015, 12:58 pm by Lyle Denniston
  They lost again, both in that court and in the U.S. [read post]
4 Aug 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
He credits them (specifically, Michael McConnell) with having changed his mind about a number of important legal issues, in particular, the constitutionality of vouchers (used for religious school tuition), which he came to regard as not unconstitutional or as nonjusticiable—that is, an issue for the legislatures, not the courts, to decide. [read post]
14 Dec 2011, 1:18 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
  Michael McConnell has made a prominent originalist argument defending Brown v. [read post]
21 Feb 2019, 4:00 am by Administrator
In the U.S., at the University of Chicago, 10% of the first year class in 2015 either majored in Philosophy or had an advanced degree in the discipline.[3] Law professors across the U.S. have discussed the idea of making the subject a mandatory course.[4] Also, a number of legal journals [5] are devoted exclusively to publishing scholarly articles on the subject of law and philosophy. [read post]
6 Dec 2023, 4:57 am by Beatrice Yahia
He added that the previous airlifts “delivered via a U.S. [read post]
29 Sep 2017, 9:28 am by Victoria Kwan
On September 15, Kennedy participated in a U.S. [read post]
12 Feb 2021, 11:53 am by Philip Bobbitt
That is the nature of this modality of argument in U.S. constitutional construction. [read post]
29 Jan 2021, 5:01 am by Jonathan Shaub
The most famous case on executive privilege is United States v. [read post]
17 Oct 2018, 4:00 am by Ken Chasse
Access to Justice (A2J): for our work as lawyers, we don’t know enough about the technology that produces much of the evidence we have to deal with. [read post]