Posts tagged with: "scholarship" Results 9701 - 9720 of 20,161
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2 May 2024, 9:26 am by becassidy
  These and her other writings can be found on Cleveland State’s Engaged Scholarship repository [read post]
30 Mar 2021, 6:35 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
and study notes, study skill resources, online tutoring and homework help, free e-learning videos, scholarship [read post]
11 Feb 2007, 7:07 pm
The Virginia Law Review has joined Yale, Harvard, Penn, and Michigan in taking at least a portion of their law reviews to the Internet. This from Tim McCarten, Features Editor of the Virginia Law Weekly, in providing an excellent analysis of the state of online legal journalism, its advantages, and the role of legal blogs. Expect to see big growth. According to Jim Zucker, Virginia Law Review’s Editor-in-Chief, his counterparts at the nations’ other leading law reviews are almost… [read post]
27 Sep 2013, 9:46 am by Nonprofit Blogger
Here's a story that warms my heart: The National Law Journal is reporting that one student in 10 in the University of Chicago Law School’s next three incoming classes will graduate without the burden of education loans because of a... [read post]
20 Sep 2013, 6:13 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Noah Nehemiah Gillespie has published “Preserving Trust: Overruling Carcieri and Patchak While Respecting the Takings Clause” (PDF) in the George Washington Law Review. Here is the abstract: The potential benefit of new Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”) regulations for development on Native land has been overshadowed by two recent Supreme Court decisions—Carcieri v. Salazar and Match-E-Be-Nash-She- Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians v. Patchak—which cast doubt on the… [read post]
15 Aug 2013, 6:37 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Seth J. Fortin has published “The Two-Tiered Program of the Tribal Law and Order Act” (PDF) in the UCLA Law Review Discourse. Here is the abstract: The Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 was intended to significantly expand the sentencing powers of tribal courts, raising the maximum sentence for a given offense from one year to three. But the Act requires courts that would take advantage of these new powers to provide significant procedural protections to criminal defendants, while failing… [read post]
15 Jul 2013, 6:21 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Daniel Lee has published his note, “Statutes of Ill Repose and Threshold Canons of Construction: A Unified Approach to Ambiguity After San Carlos Apache Tribe v. United States” in the Seattle University Law Review. Here is the abstract: Historically, the San Carlos Apache Tribe depended on the Gila River to irrigate crops and sustain a population of around 14,000 tribe members. The river is also sacred to the Tribe and central to the Tribe’s culture and spirituality. Initially, the… [read post]
22 Jun 2013, 6:10 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Robert J. Martin has published “The Village of Kivalina is Falling Into the Sea: Should CERCLA Section 9626(b) Be Available To Move the Village from Harm’s Way?” in the Barry Law Review. Here is the abstract: The Village of Kivalina, and other similarly situated Native Alaska villages, are in danger of falling into the sea. Regional climate change is melting the permafrost that acts as the foundation of their communities. Sea ice that once acted as a barrier during storm season… [read post]
3 Apr 2013, 9:51 am by Nonprofit Blogger
The NCAA is a § 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization organized for the charitable purpose of fostering national amateur sports competition. Additionally, the NCAA asserts that it was founded “as a way to protect student-athletes.” The recent injury suffered by University of... [read post]
27 Feb 2013, 8:39 am by Legal Profession
The Winter 2013 (Vol. XXVI, No. 1) of the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics has just been released. The volume has the following: What If Legal Ethics Can't Be Reduced To A Maxim? by Andrew B. Ayers Achieving Procedural Goals... [read post]
10 Feb 2013, 5:46 am by White Collar Crime Prof Blogger
A recent publication in the Case Western Reserve Law Review by Dain C. Donelson and Robert A. Prentice, Scienter Pleading and Rule 10b-5: Empirical Analysis and Behavioral Implications. From the abstract: Pleading requirements are the keys to the courthouse. Nowhere... [read post]
5 Feb 2013, 6:37 am by Nonprofit Blogger
Pennsylvania recently released a list of the lowest rated public schools in the state. Based on this list, eligible students across the state may now have the opportunity to attend a higher-achieving public or nonpublic school pursuant to Pennsylvania’s Opportunity... [read post]
13 May 2015, 11:19 am by Nancy Rapoport
See here.  My buddy Michael LeRoy, who does very cool work, wrote it.  [read post]
Editor's Note: The following post comes to us from Geoffrey P. Miller, Stuyvesant P. Comfort Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. Compliance is hot. Pick up the New York Times or the Wall Street Journal and you are likely to find a story about yet another huge fine for regulatory infractions. In early May, to take a recent example, BNB Paribas, the big French bank, admitted that the $1.1 billion it had set aside for infractions involving sanctions regimes would not be… [read post]
4 Nov 2014, 12:16 pm by Jeremy Telman
Jeff Sovern (pictured), with whom readers may be familiar from our recent virtual symposium, has a new paper on SSRN, co-authored with three of his St. John's colleagues, Elayne E. Greenberg, Paul F. Kirgis, and Yuxiang Liu. The paper is... [read post]
21 Oct 2014, 8:29 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Here: PDF In Search of a Civil Solution: Tribal Authority to Regulate NonMember Conduct in Indian CountryPhilip H. Tinker PDF A Brief History of Indian Trust Administration Reform: Will the Past be Prologue?Joseph R. Membrino [read post]
2 Sep 2014, 8:42 am by Kate Fort
Here. Abstract: Despite a treaty in 1866 between the Cherokee Nation and the federal government granting them full tribal citizenship, Cherokee Freedmen—the descendants of African American slaves to the Cherokee, as well as of children born from unions between African Americans and Cherokee tribal members—continue to be one of the most marginalized communities within Indian Country. Any time Freedmen have sought the full rights and benefits given other Cherokee citizens, they have… [read post]
22 Jul 2014, 4:36 am by Immigration Prof
Former Attorney General during the Administration of George W. Bush, Alberto Gonzales is now dean and law professor at Belmont University College of Law in Nashville, Tennessee. As Attorney General, Gonzales was involved in the nominations and confoirmations of Chief... [read post]
10 Jul 2014, 4:47 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Gerald Torres has published “American Blood: Who is Counting and For What?” in the St. Louis University Law Journal‘s most recent symposium issue. An excerpt: For Indians, the problem of “who counts” is complex. That it could be asked at all reveals that asking “who counts?” is an artifact of power. The question could be whether Indians have “American blood”? Could they be part of the political community that was being created by Europeans in… [read post]