Search for: "Matter of Oxford" Results 561 - 580 of 2,453
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23 Dec 2020, 2:53 am by INFORRM
 Last year the University of Oxford’s Internet Institute found “organised social media manipulation campaigns” now prevalent in 70 countries around the world – and that number is not likely to shrink. [read post]
17 Dec 2020, 9:28 pm by Chukwuma Okoli
There is also a special treatment of the concept of domicile which is one of the cardinal concepts in the field of English private international law and by necessary implication that of Nigeria, and which is one of the fundamental connecting factors that indicate the law or jurisdiction that governs a dispute particularly in matters related to jurisdiction, family law, property law, and other issues affecting the legal rights and privileges of parties. [read post]
15 Dec 2020, 5:14 pm
  The essay considers the transformations in societal organization exposed during the first shocks of the COVID-19 pandemics and what it suggests for the "new normal" going forward (there is no going back, no matter how strong the nostalgia for that past). [read post]
14 Dec 2020, 10:21 am by Robbie Kenney
Considered the “gold standard” in COVID detection, the PCR tests utilizes a repetitive cycling process to magnify the viral matter with every cycle. [read post]
14 Dec 2020, 7:52 am
Roger, The Origins of Informality: Why the Legal Foundations of Global Governance are Shifting, and Why It Matters (Oxford Univ. [read post]
9 Dec 2020, 10:12 am by Brad Schnure
Their findings are similar to what other data on the matter has shown in which any positive test beyond 30-35 Cycle Thresholds are not infectious. [read post]
8 Dec 2020, 9:11 am by John Jascob
While the Act’s reforms are a matter of course nearly two decades on, it is worth reflecting on how significant the statute’s changes were. [read post]
8 Dec 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Adam Cox and Cristina Rodriguez, The President and Immigration Law (Oxford University Press, 2020).Peter M. [read post]
7 Dec 2020, 10:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
Filled with memorable characters, her book is both a necessary reminder of why this center of the international clove trade mattered so much in the early seventeenth century and also a meditation on historical meaning and memory. [read post]
7 Dec 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
 For the Symposium on Adam Cox and Cristina Rodriguez, The President and Immigration Law (Oxford University Press, 2020).Peter L. [read post]
6 Dec 2020, 9:20 am by ernst
Baker (D.Phil, Oxford, 2017) is a private scholar living in the Diocese of Orange:This book considers the role of popes and bishops in the development of the law of the Church between 1120 and 1234. [read post]
4 Dec 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Adam Cox and Cristina Rodriguez, The President and Immigration Law (Oxford University Press, 2020).Bijal Shah In The President and Immigration Law, Professors Adam B. [read post]
4 Dec 2020, 12:01 am by rhapsodyinbooks
The author has a PhD in history for the University of Oxford and now lectures on world history. [read post]
1 Dec 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
 In this account of immigration federalism, a president’s preferences matter a great deal. [read post]
24 Nov 2020, 9:30 pm by ernst
  So too, he has held visiting professorships at top institutions around the globe, such as Harvard, Oxford, Toronto, and the European University Institute. [read post]
23 Nov 2020, 9:20 pm
  The reason I spent all those formative coverage attorney years parsing sentences and hunting for the elusive Oxford comma. [read post]
23 Nov 2020, 8:13 pm
  The reason I spent all those formative coverage attorney years parsing sentences and hunting for the elusive Oxford comma. [read post]
22 Nov 2020, 8:11 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
They include bushfires, Covid-19, WFH, lockdown, circuit-breaker, support bubbles, keyworkers, furlough, Black Lives Matter and moonshot. [read post]
20 Nov 2020, 9:00 am by Chukwuma Okoli
Cheshire, then Vinerian Professor of Law at the University of Oxford, issued a clarion call for the wider study of private international law in general and the renaissance of English private international law in particular.[1] As explored below, it is pertinent for African States to respond to that call today, especially within the context of the need to actualise the Agenda 2063 of the African Union, which aims for the establishment of a continental market with the free movement of… [read post]