Sentences with phrase «by constitutional scholars»

With a story like that, you'd think that Gura would be celebrated as the toast of the town — respected by constitutional scholars and Supreme Court advocates for an extraordinary result or held out as an inspiration to young, unemployed lawyers languishing in document review jobs that taking big risks by starting a practice and handling compelling cases can yield big rewards.
This process is referred to by some constitutional scholars as the dialogue theory.

Not exact matches

Since NAFTA was approved by Congress under an implementing law, some constitutional scholars suggest the president would need to ask Congress to vote to withdraw from the agreement.
This relative «openness to revision and correction,» as constitutional scholar H. Jefferson Powell calls it, should be appreciated by Christians.
The essay by the distinguished jurist and constitutional scholar Robert H. Bork on «lawless law» was an important part of that symposium, and he returns to that subject in a comprehensive and devastating article in the New Criterion, titled «Adversary Jurisprudence.»
Attempts have been made by distinguished scholars to devise a logical system for achieving constitutional differentiation but it is a logic that has escaped the House of Commons.
«Further attestation to the existence of the two forces of opposite direction under the Buhari's dictatorial presidency is the recent launch of online signature project spearheaded by a risen constitutional lawyer and Georgetown University law scholar, Ms Carol Ajie; for the purpose of compelling President Buhari to obey court orders and other judicial consequential pronouncements or resign or be impeached.
He was paid by Peabody Energy «to provide an independent analysis of the proposed EPA rule as a scholar of constitutional law».
So, in its judgment as to how the United Kingdom may withdraw from the European Union, has the UK Supreme Court finally endorsed the view of the UK constitutional scholar Sir William Wade that a «constitutional revolution» occurred in 1972 by which the European Union institutions as opposed to Parliament became sovereign in the United Kingdom?
For example, Professor Amar, a constitutional scholar himself, remarked that he was «dazzled, really — by the analytic intelligence and sophistication of these questions and answers,» while Karlan could not find any distinction between the less - experienced Obama's exams and those prepared by full - time, first - rate academics.
And I'm too poor a constitutional scholar to know whether the government of the day may in effect ignore the expressed will of Parliament by simply failing to seek and obtain Royal Assent.
- Patrick J. Monahan, Dean, Osgoode Hall Law School, «This book by a leading teacher and scholar is an excellent, comprehensive text on constitutional law that incorporates relevant case law, scholarly doctrinal excerpts as well as explanatory research notes.
Authored by one of Canada's leading constitutional scholars, the 9th edition is a primary source book for students, academics and lawyers alike.»
«This book by a leading teacher and scholar is an excellent, comprehensive text on constitutional law that incorporates relevant case law, scholarly doctrinal excerpts as well as explanatory research notes.
The changes have come in the wake of a growing movement across the state, led by legal scholars, immigration attorneys and youth advocates who have contended for years that these referrals to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency violate a state law created to protect a juvenile's privacy, as well as the constitutional rights of these minors.
Or limiting freedom of the press, denying democratic rights etc.... well, the Parliamentary Gallery might; and some scholars of constitutional law; and some people who have this unusual belief that the current majority has as much of an obligation to obey laws passed by the past Parliament (until the laws are repealed or declared unconstitutional (oops)-RRB- as a former Tory Cabinet minister accused of things we can't speak of (because we don't know and were never told).
The constitutional critique has been advanced by scholars like Pam Samuelson and Tara Wheatland, accepted by a district court judge in the Tenenbaum case, dodged on appeal by the First Circuit, but rejected outright by the Eighth Circuit.
Indeed, some constitutional provisions — the Charter's guarantee of freedom of conscience among them — seem to be caught in a vicious circle of mutually reinforcing neglect by courts and scholars alike.
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