Search for: "RICHARD JAMES" Results 161 - 180 of 4,462
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20 Jul 2023, 8:55 am by Eugene Volokh
.' " Judge Richard Posner has referred to the doctrine as a "ubiquitous oxymoron. [read post]
13 Jul 2023, 12:06 pm by Legal Aggregate
(KQED radio program including commentary from Richard Thompson Ford) When the U.S. [read post]
12 Jul 2023, 1:57 am by Seán Binder
Zoë Richards reports for NBC News. [read post]
10 Jul 2023, 4:00 am by Marc Bhalla
The sentiment is well captured by artist Amii James in My Legs (2020). [read post]
10 Jul 2023, 1:01 am by rhapsodyinbooks
(One of his sons, Richard, born in 1780, later served in the cabinets of James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, James K. [read post]
8 Jul 2023, 10:45 pm by Tess Graham
Huan Ramón de la Fuente and Pablo Arrocha Olabuenaga (September 23, 2022) Richard Gowan on Ukraine and How Russia’s War Reverberates at the United Nationsby Richard Gowan (September 20, 2022) Ukrainian translation: Річард Гоуен про Україну та те, як… [read post]
6 Jul 2023, 5:49 am by Eugene Volokh
To give one example from the Ninth Circuit: The plaintiffs in this case previously were denominated "James Rowe, Jane Rowe and John Doe. [read post]
26 Jun 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Sandy Levinson is surely correct that James Madison left much to be desired as a constitutional theorist, throwing out ideas that he did not fully explain or develop. [read post]
22 Jun 2023, 2:45 am by Seán Binder
Rebecca Kaplan, Scott Wong, and Zoë Richards report for NBC News. [read post]
19 Jun 2023, 2:54 am by Seán Binder
Mariya Knight and Richard Roth report for CNN. [read post]
16 Jun 2023, 4:00 am by Jim Sedor
Richard Blumenthal Launches Probe into PGA Tour-Saudi Alliance MSN – Rick Maese (Washington Post) | Published: 6/12/2023 Sen. [read post]
14 Jun 2023, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
The more temperate James Madison instead developed the moderate notion of “interposition. [read post]
  And it is, at the same time, the beginning of new era in American political life, one in which federal prosecutions of former presidents are—fortunately or unfortunately, as Trump might say—no longer either unthinkable or an eventuality to be avoided, either by prudential exercises of prosecutorial discretion (as in the case of Bill Clinton) or by preemptive exercises of the presidential power of clemency (as in the case of Richard Nixon). [read post]