Search for: "Harvard v. State" Results 641 - 660 of 3,480
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23 May 2022, 8:55 am by Lawrence Solum
Sunstein (Harvard Law School; Harvard University - Harvard Kennedy School (HKS)) has posted The Alito Draft on SSRN. [read post]
23 May 2022, 6:11 am by Gabriel Schoenfeld
” To Adrian Vermeule, an integralist—that is, an advocate of establishing a Catholic confessional state—and a chaired professor at Harvard Law School, communism and liberalism have far more in common than it would seem at first glance. [read post]
22 May 2022, 1:58 am by Thalia Kruger
This tech revolution was unprecedently accelerated by the 2020 pandemic whilst national States’ borders were closed, and travel activity diminished (if not directly forbidden by some States). [read post]
18 May 2022, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar and Jason Mazzone
That was the knock, of course, on the infamous (and thoroughly discredited) Bush v. [read post]
16 May 2022, 4:00 am by jonathanturley
Recently the editors of the New York Times seriously warned that some states likely would outlaw interracial marriage if Roe v. [read post]
15 May 2022, 4:48 pm by INFORRM
On 12 May 2022, there were hearings in the cases of Lee -v- Brown before Collins Rice J and MPL -v- WSZ before Saini J. [read post]
11 May 2022, 11:00 am by Matthew Tokson
 The article looks at the state of Fourth Amendment law following the Supreme Court’s groundbreaking 2018 opinion in Carpenter v. [read post]
10 May 2022, 11:12 am by CrimProf BlogEditor
United States: Ineffective Assistance of Counsel in the Crimmigration Context (Harvard Latin American... [read post]
5 May 2022, 5:30 am by Guest Blogger
Texas (state may not prohibit homosexual acts between consenting adults), Mapp v. [read post]
3 May 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
I highlight “national” because only one of the fifty American states allows similar full-life tenure. [read post]
1 May 2022, 6:15 am by Lawrence Solum
Cass Sunstein, After the Rights Revolution: Reconceiving the Regulatory State (Harvard University Press 1990). [read post]
29 Apr 2022, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Had one looked at this issue in 1921, the United States would have had company: At that time, Australia and Canada, countries that, like the United States, were influenced by the British tradition, provided judges with indefinite tenure during good behavior.[3]However, each of these countries amended their constitutions and adopted mandatory retirement ages for their federal judges later in the 20thcentury – 70 in Australia, 75 in Canada. [read post]