Search for: "Colleges and Universities" Results 6761 - 6780 of 48,511
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9 Dec 2021, 8:42 am
After working for a lawyer while home from college one summer, he decided to go to law school. [read post]
9 Dec 2021, 3:00 am by Paul Caron
Colleges Turn to Law Schools to Find Their Next President: Law deans are in demand when it comes to filling vacant college and university presidencies. [read post]
9 Dec 2021, 2:00 am by mes286
Quinney College of Law – Erika George, Samuel D. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 10:12 pm by Scott A. Norcross
The deadline to kick off is Jan. 1, 2023 and there will be a universal launch date. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 9:30 pm by ernst
Carle, Professor of Law, American University Washington College of Law. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 9:01 pm by Austin Sarat
Austin Sarat is the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science at Amherst College. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 2:55 pm by CrimProf BlogEditor
Patrick Keenan (University of Illinois College of Law) has posted Moving from Policies to Performance: Complexities and Evidence (Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Vol. 49, No. 2, 2021) on SSRN. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 2:47 pm by Josh Blackman
In the view of the United States, Grutter's inter-pretation of equal-protection principles is correct, and all traditional stare decisis factors—including the sub-stantial reliance interests of colleges and universities around the Nation—strongly support adhering to Grut-ter. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 10:16 am by Eugene Volokh
Recall Emerson College's conclusions that a student group's "China Kinda Sus" stickers are forbidden "discriminatory conduct"; or the University of San Diego Law School's investigation of a professor for a blog post critical of China; or the attempts to tar the theory that COVID spread from a Wuhan lab leak as "racist," which apparently contributed to social media platforms' banning (for over a year) posts asserting that theory. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 8:49 am by Media Law Prof
Jonathan Abel, University of California, Hastings, College of Law, is publishing Cop-'Like': The First Amendment, Criminal Procedure, and Police Social Media Speech in the Stanford Law Review. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 8:20 am by Keith E. Whittington
University leaders who emphasize the importance and value of intellectual diversity on college campuses can send a helpful message not only to the members of their own campus community but also to the broader world about the nature of the university mission. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 3:20 am by Steve Lubet
Dan Segal of Pitzer College, who wrote a post on the AAUP’s Academe Blog bemoaning his investigation by the college for “harassment on the grounds of sex/gender [and] ancestry,” in which he was ultimately cleared. [read post]
8 Dec 2021, 3:00 am by Tara
Favre is a professor at Michigan State University College of Law and founding officer of the Animal Legal Defense Fund. [read post]
7 Dec 2021, 1:17 pm by CrimProf BlogEditor
Charles MacLean and Adam Lamparello (Metropolitan State University School of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice and Assistant Professor of Public Law Georgia College and State University) have posted Justice for All: Repairing American Criminal Justice (Introduction and Sample Chapter) (Routledge,... [read post]
7 Dec 2021, 12:24 pm by luiza
  During college and between college and law school, Zoe worked and volunteered for various legal and community organizations. [read post]
7 Dec 2021, 10:52 am by Christopher Ernst
As Professor Joan Stearns Johnson of the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law notes “Notably, this comment to Rule 4.1 does not condone lying; rather, it states only that certain types of statements during negotiation could be considered puffery or something other than a statement of a material fact. [read post]
7 Dec 2021, 10:52 am by Christopher Ernst
As Professor Joan Stearns Johnson of the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law notes “Notably, this comment to Rule 4.1 does not condone lying; rather, it states only that certain types of statements during negotiation could be considered puffery or something other than a statement of a material fact. [read post]
7 Dec 2021, 8:44 am by Eugene Volokh
The special case of university student lawsuits And there is one other large array of cases where pseudonymity requests have often (though not always[26]) been granted: Lawsuits against universities by students who claim they had been wrongly punished based on false accusations and botched investigations, usually related to alleged sexual assault.[27] There the students' concerns are chiefly reputational: "being accused of sexual assault is a serious allegation with which… [read post]