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  As we close out the year, we pause to review important developments in agricultural law from 2016. [read post]
12 Aug 2016, 4:49 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
The Nature of Sequential InnovationChristopher Sprigman, Christopher Buccafusco & Stefan Bechtold How to pick between innovating or borrowing. [read post]
11 Mar 2018, 6:42 am by Dave Maass
Recognizing the Year’s Worst in Government Transparency Government transparency laws like the Freedom of Information Act exist to enforce the public’s right to inspect records so we can all figure out what the heck is being done in our name and with our tax dollars. [read post]
In fact, in the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher became so frustrated by the BBC’s coverage of her administration that she launched a sweeping (but unsuccessful) review to “knock the BBC down to size. [read post]
21 May 2020, 6:44 am by Rohit De
As Kalyani Ramnath shows, in the colonies, “native subjects” demanded the right to trial by jury of their peers and protested the limited system of assessors. [read post]
22 Mar 2016, 9:48 pm by Stephen Page
”I protested that I was from Australia and that I was not a local lawyer. [read post]
19 Feb 2022, 11:14 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Rebecca Tushnet Bad Spaniels, Deceptive Raptors, and Tiny Hands: The Persistence of Commercial Speech as a Category Jennifer Rothman has done related work, but her focus has been on the different definitions of commerciality across IP regimes; I’m interested in a different question: holding constant the definition of commercial speech as defined by First Amendment jurisprudence, which is basically speech that does no more than merely propose a commercial transaction, does the Lanham Act cover… [read post]
  As we close out the year, we pause to review important developments in agricultural law from 2016. [read post]
25 Jul 2013, 5:18 pm by Larry Catá Backer
” Such words shocked Tang and Tang did not get an un-biased prosecutor after kneeing down in front of procuratorate building for 18 hours at the time when Hunan was under unprecedented server snow storm. [read post]
27 May 2020, 1:49 pm by Russell A. Miller
They also protested that the amended BND Act permits the collection and dissemination of strategic foreign-foreigner telecommunications information to German and non-German intelligence agencies without the necessary constitutional limitations. [read post]
23 Oct 2015, 1:07 pm by Rebecca Tushnet
Town of Gilbert: last Term’s sign case in which the Supreme Court struck down a city’s sign regulations on the theory that they were content-based and didn’t survive strict scrutiny. [read post]
23 Aug 2022, 5:01 am by Roger Parloff
At least eleven judges have denied such motions in fifteen rulings handed down in fourteen criminal cases stemming from the Capitol insurrection. [read post]
2 Mar 2018, 9:11 am by Guest Blogger
Stanley Fish This brief essay was delivered as a response to a paper co-written by Justice Thomas R. [read post]
18 Oct 2019, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
 The second case involved defending the right of the Ku Klux Klan to march in Austin, Texas, when the City Council, no doubt reflecting the views of a majority of their constituents, attempted to block the march—a protest against immigration—by evoking the undoubtedly dreadful history of the Klan in American history. [read post]
19 May 2019, 7:00 am by Zach Vertin
Erdogan doubled-down in Sudan in early 2017, investing in what by many accounts became a close relationship with then-embattled leader and International Criminal Court-indictee Omar al Bashir. [read post]