Search for: "Williams v. Chicago" Results 141 - 160 of 1,067
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30 Sep 2021, 3:59 pm by Katie Barlow
University of Chicago law professor William Baude coined the term “shadow docket” in 2015 to refer to the orders that the court issues outside its formal process of hearing arguments, receiving extensive briefing, and issuing opinions that resolve the merits of a case. [read post]
9 Aug 2021, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
  One of the most extensive modern political-question discussions by the Supreme Court came in the 1993 Supreme Court ruling of Nixon v. [read post]
23 Jul 2021, 9:30 pm by ernst
New online from Law and History Review and Cambridge Core: From Disestablishment to Dartmouth College v. [read post]
14 Jul 2021, 6:17 am by Joseph D. Kearney
The Parens Patriae Model In 1892, in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. [read post]
24 Jun 2021, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
If I were to include a single additional case from a court, I would include one from a federal trial court rather than the Supreme Court: future Justice William Woods’s United States v. [read post]
21 Jun 2021, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Kurt Lash, The Reconstruction Amendments: The Essential Documents (University of Chicago Press, 2021)(2 vols.).Darrell A.H. [read post]
20 Jun 2021, 9:05 pm by Amanda Shanor
To the surprise of many, the Supreme Court jumped the queue to make new law on religious exemptions before it decided Fulton, via what University of Chicago Law School professor William Baude has called its “shadow docket,” decisions it makes by summary order without briefing or argument. [read post]