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4 Dec 2009, 7:59 pm
The trial began in January in Perugia, a university town about 115 miles (185 kilometers) north of Rome. [read post]
19 May 2017, 7:25 am by Dan Ernst
Allan Vestal, Drake University Law School, has posted The First Wartime Water Torture by Americans, Maine Law Review 69 (2017): 1-66:The first use of wartime water torture by Americans occurred during the Philippine-American War of 1899 to 1902, when American soldiers and their indigenous minions used the “water cure” to extract information from Filipinos who resisted the occupation of their land, and to punish them. [read post]
10 Dec 2010, 12:22 pm by Biersdorf & Associates
However, regardless of the outcome of my case, I know that what Columbia and New York have done to the people of West Harlem is unfair and un-American. [read post]
13 Jul 2009, 12:28 am
Common Legalism: On the Common Law Origins of American Regulatory Culture is a new paper by Noga Morag-Levine, Michigan State University College of Law. [read post]
17 Dec 2010, 12:00 pm by Karen Tani
Via H-Law, we've received word of the following call for papers:Call for Papers: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Law and the Development of the American State The Center for Law, Justice & Culture at Ohio University invites proposals for a workshop, “Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Law and the Development of the American State” to be held May 20 - 21, 2011. [read post]
21 Apr 2011, 3:00 am by Karen Tani
Ogden, below) prompted me to check up on the University of Kansas's Landmark Law Cases and American Society series. [read post]
30 Sep 2008, 9:00 am
American Balancing and German Proportionality: The Historical Origins is a new paper by Moshe Cohen-Eliya, Academic Center of Law and Business (Israel) and Iddo Porat, Academic Center of Law and Business and University of San Diego School of Law. [read post]
10 Jul 2018, 10:17 am
Farah Peterson, University of Virginia School of Law, is publishing Interpretation as Statecraft: Chancellor Kent and the Collaborative Era of American Statutory Interpretation in volume 77 of the Maryland Law Review (2018). [read post]
10 Jul 2018, 10:16 am by Christine Corcos
Farah Peterson, University of Virginia School of Law, is publishing Interpretation as Statecraft: Chancellor Kent and the Collaborative Era of American Statutory Interpretation in volume 77 of the Maryland Law Review (2018). [read post]
3 Jun 2015, 11:00 am by Paul Caron
Mehrotra (Director, American Bar Foundation), Making the Modern American Fiscal State: Law, Politics, and the Rise of Progressive Taxation, 1877-1929 (Cambridge University Press, 2013)): Mehrotra’s award-winning book is a tour de force. [read post]
29 Jan 2009, 12:40 am
Thurgood Marshall in Africa is an H-Law review by Babacar M'Baye, Department of English and Department of Pan-African Studies, Kent State University, of Mary Dudziak's Exporting American Dreams: Thurgood Marshall's African Journey. [read post]
3 Apr 2012, 8:00 pm by DC Marijuana Lawyer
On Monday, Oaksterdam University president Richard Lee had his university raided, his home searched, and he himself was detained by the DEA. [read post]
14 May 2012, 9:38 pm by Arts Faculty Librarian
In 2009, Sid Lapidus, an alumnus of Princeton University, gifted over 150 books, pamphlets, and prints related to the intellectual origins of the American Revolution to the Princeton University Library. [read post]
26 Jan 2016, 4:30 am by Tom Kosakowski
 The expected panelists are: Karen Campbell, American Express; Joan C. [read post]
22 Jul 2011, 2:44 pm by Danielle Citron
My colleague Rena Steinzor and Sidney Shapiro recently published The People’s Agents and the Battle to Protect the American Public: Special Interests, Government, and Threats to Health, Safety, and the Environment (University of Chicago Press). [read post]
6 May 2010, 7:07 am by Daniel Solove
I’m delighted to announce that Yale University Press has joined our book review program. [read post]
29 Mar 2010, 8:34 am by Matthew Reid Krell
  Beginning with the prehistory of the American academy (that is, pre-American Association of University Professors) (AAUP), they trace academic freedom from its Enlightenment beginnings in the German faculty-governance model to its new home in American universities that faced the complicating issue of lay governance. [read post]