Search for: "Rose v. State" Results 61 - 80 of 2,589
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19 Oct 2023, 5:19 am by Jacob Wirz
We believe there is merit in more broadly exploring what the United States can learn from comparative administrative law in general. [read post]
17 Oct 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
We believe there is merit in more broadly exploring what the United States can learn from comparative administrative law in general. [read post]
9 Oct 2023, 2:34 pm by Kevin LaCroix
In response, policyholders have argued (with varying degrees of success from state to state) that public policy concerns are the properly left to the legislative branch. [read post]
4 Oct 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
It did not review a challenge to changes to agricultural laws that sparked nation-wide protests for months, and is only now hearing a challenge to the alteration of the federal status of one Indian state that was enacted in 2019. [read post]
2 Oct 2023, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
But a cursory comparison of the equivalent piece of Australian federal legislation  to the legislation at issue in Loper Bright Enterprises v Raimondo suggests it is at least not true in all cases. [read post]
27 Sep 2023, 8:00 am by Guest Blogger
More specifically, in his opinion last Term dissenting from a denial of cert in Buffington v. [read post]
15 Sep 2023, 1:29 pm by Ilya Somin
Abortions rose in nearly every state where the procedure remains legal, but the change was most visible in states bordering those with total abortion bans. [read post]
4 Sep 2023, 5:44 am by Kevin LaCroix
(Please note that these figures do not include state court securities class action lawsuit filings.) [read post]
3 Sep 2023, 12:23 am by Frank Cranmer
Douglas Strang, Scottish Legal News: Higgs v Farmor’s School and others. [read post]
22 Aug 2023, 12:16 pm by David Badertscher
Use of the death penalty in the United States rose gradually during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth  centuries with a sharp rise in the twentieth century until 1972 when a moratorium was established by the U.S. [read post]
  This was the case in R v Rogers [2014] EWCA Crim 1680, where there was no act of money laundering in England but it was sufficient that the underlying fraud generating the criminal property took place in England and there were English victims. [read post]