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31 Aug 2016, 4:17 pm by INFORRM
The law First, a whistle stop tour of the relevant aspects of data protection law. [read post]
17 Aug 2016, 5:03 pm by INFORRM
So a country holiday turned into more of a battlefield tour – but it was also one which, quite unexpectedly, brought me face to face with another kind of horror, one which I thought I’d left safely behind for a while: the British press. [read post]
11 Aug 2016, 10:25 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Predictable v. unpredictable. [read post]
9 Aug 2016, 10:50 am by David Kris
Most of the group also had some former U.S. government service, and several were plausible candidates for at least one more tour of duty in the future. [read post]
27 Jun 2016, 4:30 am by Kenneth Anderson
His wife was also a diplomat (whether from State or DEA or USAID, I don’t recall). [read post]
21 Jun 2016, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
[And, Property teachers, the Woodward Avenue tour (pp. 16-17) takes you within a block of the house at issue in Sanborn v. [read post]
13 Jun 2016, 8:04 am by Rebecca Tushnet
 Unclear how far the Court had gone, and remains unclear; Court hasn’t taken a commercial speech case since then, though it has had Reed v. [read post]
23 May 2016, 10:13 am by John Chierichella and Keith Szeliga
Volume V—The Land Mines Strewn Throughout the Data Room M&A transactions, like most transactions in life, involve a cost/benefit analysis. [read post]
13 May 2016, 4:35 pm by Law Offices of Jeffrey S. Glassman
Additional Resources: Duck Boat Collision Kills One Person in Boston, May 2, 2016, JEMS, By Amy Anthony More Blog Entries: Wilkins v. [read post]
13 May 2016, 4:27 pm by INFORRM
The case (Power Places Tours Inc and others v Free Spirit and another) is unusual as one of the injunctions granted was to protect US residents from being harassed online by an individual, notwithstanding that they did not appear to have any special connection to the jurisdiction or to have suffered any detriment within it. [read post]
9 May 2016, 4:00 am by The Public Employment Law Press
”The Appellate Division, however, held that the penalty imposed by the Commissioner, a one-year “dismissal probation” and a 30-day forfeiture of annual leave credits, was “excessive in light of the mitigating circumstances, i.e., [Gomez’s] several tours of active military duty, including a year in Afghanistan for which he was decorated, and the substantial pay lost in connection with his military service. [read post]