Search for: "Continuing Legal Education v. Rules" Results 41 - 60 of 3,582
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
The post Barrett confirmation hearings continue appeared first on JURIST - News - Legal News & Commentary. [read post]
22 Mar 2022, 4:00 am by Catherine Morris
Donziger is an extension of the civil RICO case of Chevron Corp. v. [read post]
28 Apr 2014, 8:00 am by Dan Ernst
Stuart Chinn, University of Oregon School of Law, has posted The Ideology Behind Brown v. [read post]
27 Jun 2022, 10:33 am by Yang Liu, Brandon Vines
Factual and Legal Background The Title 42 rule is based on quarantine provisions in the Public Health Services Act of 1944. [read post]
26 Aug 2011, 1:12 pm by Jim Gerl
There is one US Supreme Court decision concerning legal representation:  In Winkelman by Winkelman v. [read post]
10 Jul 2013, 1:18 pm
Montgomery County Bd. of Educ., 295 Md. 442, 444, 456 A.2d 894 (1983), the Maryland General Assembly has continually considered and failed to pass bills that would abolish or modify the rule. [read post]
11 Aug 2023, 10:11 am by Cynthia Marcotte Stamer
IDR Process Suspended The IDR process currently is suspended following the August 3 , 2023 ruling by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas in Texas Medical Association v. [read post]
30 Aug 2023, 8:25 am by Eric Goldman
[Note: if it’s not obvious, “CE” is an abbreviation for “continuing education. [read post]
11 Mar 2008, 2:00 am
The OBA Civil Litigation Section recently held a Continuing Legal Education seminar on the deemed undertaking rule (Rule 31.1.01(3)) and the filing of transcripts. [read post]
6 Nov 2022, 6:00 am by Lawrence Solum
  The notion that the common law involves judicial legislation was the view of the legal realists, and continues to dominate legal theory in post-realist legal thought. [read post]
18 Jun 2018, 6:32 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
It's not every day that a federal court imposes Continuing Legal Education requirements as a sanction to attorneys in a case, but that is what happened in to Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach in Fish v. [read post]
13 Oct 2023, 7:31 am by Seyfarth Shaw LLP
 The Second Circuit deemed these allegations to be nothing more than legal conclusions couched as factual allegations and ruled that they did not raise a reasonable inference of injury. [read post]