Search for: "Karen Tani"
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2 Dec 2019, 4:30 am
-- Karen Tani [read post]
11 Feb 2021, 6:00 am
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
28 Feb 2021, 9:30 pm
. -- Karen Tani [read post]
10 Dec 2022, 9:30 am
-- Karen Tani [read post]
31 Oct 2016, 9:30 pm
" The session is scheduled for Wednesday, Jan. 4 at 1:30, and will feature a panel including Dean Goluboff, Karen Tani, Rabia Belt, Rebecca Zietlow, and Chris Schmidt. [read post]
25 Aug 2020, 9:30 pm
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
7 Oct 2020, 9:30 pm
-- Karen Tani [read post]
11 Dec 2022, 9:30 pm
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
1 Oct 2020, 8:30 am
March 4, 2021: Stephen Kantrowitz (University of Wisconsin, Madison)March 25, 2021: Catherine Evans (University of Toronto)April 8, 2021: Kate Masur (Northwestern University)April 22, 2021: Sarah Milov (University of Virginia)-- Karen Tani [read post]
28 Feb 2020, 1:49 pm
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
7 Feb 2022, 9:00 am
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
23 Jan 2020, 8:27 pm
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
19 Sep 2023, 9:30 am
.-- Karen Tani [read post]
31 Jul 2015, 3:30 am
Karen Tani “Black lives matter. [read post]
6 Nov 2013, 7:38 am
Here. [read post]
13 Feb 2013, 2:40 pm
Last summer Karen Tani over at legal history blog (and here) and I had a couple of posts (and here) about the idea of "applied legal history" -- that is, legal history scholarship that speaks to contemporary issues. [read post]
2 Apr 2015, 5:00 am
New Article: Karen M. [read post]
21 May 2013, 9:47 am
Karen Tani at the Legal History Blog has drawn attention to Allan Beever's new book, Forgotten Justice: The Forms of Justice in the History of Legal and Political Theory (OUP, 2013). [read post]
11 Nov 2015, 5:16 am
A recent review essay in the Boston Review (and a cautionary response by Karen Tani) demonstrate the breadth of this scholarship, which includes studies that push the origins of the administrative state back to the early republic and studies that examine (in a term coined by Sophia Lee) administrative constitutionalism throughout the federal government. [read post]
22 Oct 2013, 4:00 am
Karen Tani “The inner city deserves a disaster relief plan,” wrote Reverend Jesse Jackson, on the eve of Detroit’s bankruptcy filing and in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. [read post]