Search for: "People v. White (1970)" Results 101 - 120 of 367
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5 Feb 2020, 1:52 pm by Stephen Griffin
  They worked for years to reverse this common understanding of the 1970s, and they had plenty of help. [read post]
3 Feb 2024, 7:50 am by Rebecca Tushnet
 Xiying Tang: Deception might not come into it: the question is whether white guys should be making these things, not whether people are confused about who’s making it. [read post]
14 Feb 2007, 6:38 am
Thanks to Greg Lastowka for pointing me to this case: Bach v. [read post]
21 Jan 2013, 6:32 am by The Charge
  It is curious that Justices White and Rehnquist, in their dissent from Roe v. [read post]
9 Jun 2017, 2:56 am by NCC Staff
Georgia (1972), which for a brief time in the 1970s stopped capital punishment in the United States. [read post]
24 Jan 2022, 1:56 pm by David Bernstein
While "white" and "black" were familiar categories, almost no one considered themselves or anyone else to be Hispanic, "Latino" or "Asian" before 1970 [as opposed to Mexican, Cuban, Chinese, Japanese, etc.] and it was by no means inevitable that white ethnic groups like Cajuns, Italians, Poles, and Jews would be classified as generic whites. [read post]
14 Jan 2013, 5:35 am by JB
 Moreover, as the Burger Court developed its equal protection jurisprudence in the 1970s, it decided two cases, Geduldig v. [read post]
30 Oct 2017, 7:09 am by Andrew Hamm
According to Ginsburg, Carter in the 1970s recognized that the nation’s judges – primarily white men – did not reflect the demographic make-up of the United States. [read post]
16 Nov 2015, 7:32 am by Hanibal Goitom
(Photo by Flickr user the United Nations, Jan. 1, 1970). [read post]
28 Mar 2022, 8:31 am by Quinta Jurecic, Andrew Kent
One might have hoped, post-Trump, to see the same type of energy for reform —though admittedly the partisan dynamics are less favorable to legislative cooperation today than they were in the 1970s. [read post]
17 Jul 2012, 3:01 am by Albéniz Couret Fuentes
” Thayer’s argument was echoed in Justice Edward Douglas White’s concurring opinion in the 1901 decision in Downes v. [read post]
9 Feb 2015, 8:39 am
Robert Blakey, the primary author of the statute, once told Time Magazine, "We don't want one set of rules for people whose collars are blue or whose names end in vowels, and another set for those whose collars are white and have Ivy League diplomas. [read post]