Search for: "Maryland v. Garrison" Results 21 - 34 of 34
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3 Feb 2023, 6:30 am
Haan (Washington and Lee University School of Law), on Tuesday, January 31, 2023 Tags: Corporate governance, political economy, Proxy voting, Shelby County v. [read post]
3 Feb 2023, 6:30 am
Haan (Washington and Lee University School of Law), on Tuesday, January 31, 2023 Tags: Corporate governance, political economy, Proxy voting, Shelby County v. [read post]
7 Apr 2014, 6:02 am
This post examines an opinion in which a U.S. [read post]
30 Aug 2018, 4:44 pm by Kevin LaCroix
  Moreover, according to the DOJ, some funds used for the scheme were paid from Alstom U.S. to a consultant’s account in Maryland. [read post]
4 May 2020, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
 John Marshall ended his first paragraph in McCulloch v. [read post]
17 Jun 2021, 7:30 am by Sandy Levinson
  As I have written elsewhere, it is a total mystery why John Marshall chose to acknowledge Maryland as a “sovereign state” in McCulloch v. [read post]
29 Nov 2018, 9:01 pm by Jim Sedor
Supreme Court has not reviewed a lobbyist registration case since 1954’s United States v. [read post]
30 Oct 2008, 4:00 am
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm. v. [read post]
16 Jul 2016, 5:07 am by David Kris
The government’s long-awaited proposal for addressing cross-border data requests, in the form of draft legislation, is finally here. [read post]
8 Jan 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
” I have no particular brief for high Federalists from New England, but I do wonder what we might think had Garrison actually been influential and several New England states accepted his view and tried to secede, say, after the Supreme Court’s decision in Prigg v. [read post]
27 Dec 2008, 10:19 am
This version of events has since been brought into question as other causes of death (murder by Johannes Kepler, suicide, and mercury poisoning among others) have come to the fore. * 1649: Sir Arthur Aston, Royalist commander of the garrison during the Siege of Drogheda, was beaten to death with his own wooden leg, which the Parliamentarian soldiers thought concealed golden coins. * 1660: Thomas Urquhart, Scottish aristocrat, polymath and first translator of Rabelais into English, is said… [read post]
12 Mar 2012, 8:13 am by Ronald Collins
In December 1833, the American Monthly Review commented on a newly published book by Joseph Story. [read post]
25 Feb 2010, 10:57 am by admin
The following is a summary review of articles from all over the nation concerning environmental law settlements, decisions, regulatory actions and lawsuits filed during the past week. [read post]