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20 Oct 2011, 1:42 am by David
v=43f2bBjGi_8 Now, that’s quite a quirky repertory, and it stands in favorable comparison to Tom’s: the periodic table, plagiarism, pollution, the new math, the Vatican II conference, and of course the silent letter ‘e’. [read post]
19 Oct 2011, 6:41 am by Charon QC
Perhaps not human rights law… in fact… not a lot of law… but The White Rabbit is a very good read….. [read post]
15 Oct 2011, 4:43 am by Mandelman
  So, plotting data on a ‘V” shaped model but having it turn out to be a different letter of  the alphabet, is a like drawing the route New Jersey on a map of Australia. [read post]
14 Oct 2011, 7:16 am by Richard Mumford
This contrasted with a more applicant-oriented description of the scheme given by Sedley LJ in R (Saadat) v Rent Service [2002] HLR 32: The fundamental purpose of the housing benefit scheme … is to ensure that people who are not under-occupying property and not over-paying rent are not made homeless through genuine inability to pay. [read post]
14 Oct 2011, 4:00 am by Terry Hart
” Argument recap: The constitutionality of zombie copyrights — Rebecca Tushnet provides some thoughts on last week’s oral arguments in Golan v. [read post]
6 Oct 2011, 6:02 pm by Contributor
Plaintiffs cannot directly sue people for exercising their democratic right to participate in the political process, though they can frame those activities perceived to be contrary to their interests as torts.[15] Common torts that are used by plaintiffs include: defamation, inducing breach of contract, conspiracy, trespass, nuisance, and interference with contractual relations.[16] Examples of SLAPP lawsuits include framing boycotts as intentional interference with economic relations[17]… [read post]
5 Oct 2011, 1:44 pm by Jeff Gamso
  Add LWOP with financial support (from prison earnings, say) to the family of the victim, and the polls consistently show less than 50 percent.The polls also show that somewhere around two-thirds of the people think we've executed innocent people in the past 5 or 10 years but that roughly two-thirds of them still support the death penalty (again, as an abstract, yes or no question). [read post]