Search for: "Northwestern University Law Review" Results 801 - 820 of 1,487
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
29 May 2012, 7:41 pm
The University of Michigan Law School, working with the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, released what is believed to be the first national registry of exoneration. [read post]
29 May 2012, 2:14 pm
Robin Bradley Kar, University of Illinois College of Law, has published On the Early Eastern Origins of Western Law and Western Civilization: New Arguments for a Changed Understanding of Our Earliest Legal and Cultural Origins (Part 1) (Part 2) and (Part 3), in the University of Illinois Law Review. [read post]
26 May 2012, 3:02 pm by legalinformatics
Asylum Law John Gastil, Penn State University; Katherine Knobloch, University of Washington; Robert Richards, Penn State University: Vicarious Deliberation: How the Oregon Citizens’ Initiative Review Influences Deliberation in Mass Elections Mary Glavin, Carnegie Mellon University: Free Appropriate Public Education: Anxiety of Agency in Special Education Law Jeremiah Hickey, St. [read post]
26 May 2012, 3:02 pm by legalinformatics
Asylum Law John Gastil, Penn State University; Katherine Knobloch, University of Washington; Robert Richards, Penn State University: Vicarious Deliberation: How the Oregon Citizens’ Initiative Review Influences Deliberation in Mass Elections Mary Glavin, Carnegie Mellon University: Free Appropriate Public Education: Anxiety of Agency in Special Education Law Jeremiah Hickey, St. [read post]
Editor’s Note: Simon Wong is a partner at Governance for Owners, an adjunct professor of law at the Northwestern University School of Law, and a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science. [read post]
25 May 2012, 3:39 am by Russ Bensing
Some folks at Michigan Law School and Northwestern University School of Law tried to put a number on that by creating a “National Registry of Exonerations,” which purports to list all of the people in the U.S. who’ve been exonerated in the past 23 years. [read post]
22 May 2012, 9:24 am by Steve Hall
The answer, it turns out, is over 2,000 in the last 23 years, according to a study out Monday from the University of Michigan Law School and the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University. [read post]
22 May 2012, 7:32 am by Gritsforbreakfast
Innocent people set up by corrupt cops in Tulia and the Dallas "Sheetrock"/fake-drug scandal could have never been cleared if DNA were the only means to exoneration, but those cases resulted in false convictions nonetheless.The big news surrounding the innocence movement this week is a new national "exoneration registry" compiled by the Northwestern University Center on Wrongful Convictions, which attempts to include non-DNA cases in the count of… [read post]
22 May 2012, 4:15 am by Lawrence Cunningham
  We are also running an ad for the book in the Sunday New York Times book review section on Summer Reading (June 3), as we target both a law school audience and a more general readership. [read post]
This new national registry or database was painstakingly assembled by the University of Michigan Law School and the Center on Wrongful convictions at Northwestern University School of Law. [read post]
21 May 2012, 12:00 pm
The registry, a joint project of the University of Michigan Law School and the Northwestern University School of Law, is the most comprehensive accounting of exonerations ever compiled. [read post]
21 May 2012, 11:29 am by Steve Hall
A joint project administered by the University of Michigan Law School and the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University, the Registry profiled 873 specific cases of exoneration from 1989 through March 1, 2012. [read post]
15 May 2012, 8:43 am by McNabb Associates, P.C.
“The old view of jurors is that they are blank slates,” said Shari Seidman Diamond, a professor at the Northwestern University School of Law. [read post]
4 May 2012, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
“From the Streets to the Courts: Doing Grassroots Legal History of the Civil Rights Era,” Ariela Gross’s review for the Texas Law Review of Tomiko Brown-Nagin’s Courage to Dissent is here. [read post]
3 May 2012, 9:52 am by Alfred Brophy
"   Among Jason's many works are the Copyfraud and Other Abuses of Intellectual Property (Stanford University Press, 2011) and "When the Supreme Court is Not Supreme" in the Northwestern University Law Review last year. [read post]
23 Apr 2012, 10:03 am by CivPro Blogger
Scott Dodson (William & Mary) has posted on SSRN his essay Rethinking Extraordinary Circumstances, which will appear in the Northwestern University Law Review. [read post]
21 Apr 2012, 11:11 am by CrimProf BlogEditor
Nathan Alexander Sales (George Mason University School of Law) has posted Regulating Cybersecurity (Northwestern University Law Review, Forthcoming) on SSRN. [read post]
20 Apr 2012, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
An H-Diplo review by Joseph Margulies (Northwestern University) of Mary Dudziak's Wartime has been cross-posted on H-Law. [read post]
12 Apr 2012, 5:58 pm by Andy Dorchak
Northwestern University’s collection of foreign governments can be a great starting point for researchers relying on free resources. [read post]
12 Apr 2012, 3:09 pm by Christopher Suarez
Recently, a group of researchers, including John Allison of the University of Texas, Emerson Tiller of Northwestern, Samantha Zyontz of George Mason, and Tristan Bligh, published a piece in the Stanford Technology Law Review that continues this worthwhile empirical inquiry. [read post]