Not exact matches
The oldest
law school in Canada, McGill, ranks just under U of T. Its highly regarded
law journal is cited by The Supreme Court of Canada more often
than any other
university - affiliated journal, and McGill
law graduates regularly make up a quarter of The Supreme Court's annual clerkships.
Some 14 states have enacted more restrictive voting
laws than they had in the 2012 presidential election, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University School of
Law.
Orr has ties to the state other
than his work with Chrysler (for which he billed more
than $ 1 million in fees), having received his
law and graduate degrees from the
University of Michigan.
«It doesn't really change the landscape significantly other
than insulate companies from lawsuits,» said Yaron Nili, a
law professor at the
University of Wisconsin who focuses on corporate governance.
Yale only trumps other schools because its expenditures per student are greater
than other schools, Brian Leiter, a
law professor at The
University of Chicago, argued to National Jurist magazine in 2013.
It will allow the coordination of local and state
law enforcement to provide security for the event, which is already expected to cost the
university more
than $ 500,000 in security fees.
«The amount of spam I'm getting because of the spammers reacting to the new anti-spam
law to reduce spam is worse
than any spam I got before,» added
University of Waterloo political science professor Emmett Macfarlane.
In fact, one study from Stanford
University that considered whether more guns save lives discovered that states with more relaxed gun
laws had higher rates of gun violence
than states with strict regulations.
«If this is true then it looks like Cohen may have made an unreported loan to the campaign rather
than a contribution,» said Richard L. Hasen, an expert in election
law at the
University of California, Irvine.
An analysis by
University of Chicago
Law School economists David S. Evans, Howard Chang, and Steven Joyce entitled «The Impact of the U.S. Debit Card Interchange Fee Regulation on Consumer Welfare: An Event Study Analysis» quantifies just how much consumers are expected to lose, rather
than gain, from The Durbin amendment.
York
University marketing professor Alan Middleton points out that because AT&T sponsors the U.S. committee and not the Olympic Games itself, it has more leeway to criticize Russia's
laws than would a Games sponsor like Coke or Samsung.
«I think the real depressing result here is the increased perception that both the
law enforcement and intelligence agencies and their overseers are nothing more
than partisan political playthings for the party in power,» Steve Vladeck, an expert on national security
law at the
University of Texas Austin, tells me.
Undergraduates at the
University of California at Berkeley tilt even more strongly in the selfish direction
than the Yale
Law students.
He was the Ames Professor of
Law at Harvard and taught there for more than thirty years before moving, in the late 1980s, to the Emory University law school, where he helped establish the Center on Law and Religi
Law at Harvard and taught there for more
than thirty years before moving, in the late 1980s, to the Emory
University law school, where he helped establish the Center on Law and Religi
law school, where he helped establish the Center on
Law and Religi
Law and Religion.
As
University of Chicago
law professor Philip Hamburger ably demonstrates in Separation of Church and State, the matter is actually far less benign
than the picture the
University of Virginia graduates were given.
Curtis Berger shocked his Columbia
University Law School associates at a convocation for the opening of the school year by saying, «I do not assert that legal education makes our graduates evil, but I do believe that [it makes them] less feeling, less caring, less sensitive to the needs of others,... even less alarmed about the injustices of our society than they were when they entered law school.&raq
Law School associates at a convocation for the opening of the school year by saying, «I do not assert that legal education makes our graduates evil, but I do believe that [it makes them] less feeling, less caring, less sensitive to the needs of others,... even less alarmed about the injustices of our society
than they were when they entered
law school.&raq
law school.»
If you care to believe the Hofstra
University study on the matter there is more abuse percentage wise in our own public schools
than there ever has been in the Catholic Church.Not justifying it but you must remember that our public schools have
laws and unions that are protected by the
laws of our very own government.
Thus the G.I. Bill, the Public Facilities Act, the National Defense Education Act, and the various forms of student aid initiated in the 1960s — BEOGs, SEOGs, Work - Study, Pell grants, etc. — have subsidized the survival of many colleges and
universities, but inexorably they have served as well to make the grantee institutions more anxious to observe the
laws and regulations of the State
than the strictures of the Church whose sponsorship is, by comparison, so intangible.
Two
university professors told us that Gulf & Western operates with a budget larger
than the government's, that it rivals the government in political influence, and that it obtains the labor
laws it desires.
If you're interested in digging deeper, you might like knowing that Wake Forest
University has published a short, objective Q&A primer on the current
law (rather
than history) of separation of church and state — as applied by the courts rather
than as caricatured in the blogosphere.
Yes, according to Merle Weiner, a
law professor at the
University of Oregon, who proposes that rather
than focus on marriage, the state should create a parent - partner status that would legally bind parents — married, cohabiting, living apart, romantic partners or not — with certain mandatory obligations in order to give their children what they need to thrive.
A study by Robin Wilson of the Washington and Lee
University School of
Law reports that women with MBAs get divorced or separated more often than those who have only a bachelor's degree, while women with law or medical degrees are more likely to divorce or separate than their male counterpar
Law reports that women with MBAs get divorced or separated more often
than those who have only a bachelor's degree, while women with
law or medical degrees are more likely to divorce or separate than their male counterpar
law or medical degrees are more likely to divorce or separate
than their male counterparts.
Paavo Kotiaho (
University of Helsinki) spoke on this panel of the importance of examining
law in its own right rather
than dismissing
law as merely the technical vehicle through which neoliberal reforms are enacted.
Despite these challenges, Teachout maintains that she has more
than the requisite number of signatures and that her residency in New York has been uninterrupted since she accepted a tenure - track position at Fordham
University Law School in 2009.
A report from the New York State Office of Campus Safety found that less
than half of the state's colleges and
universities are compliant with the «Enough is Enough»
law on sexual assault.
Shanley, a
University at Buffalo
Law School graduate, has more
than twenty years of legal and managerial experience.
Become open to learning about the
law and policies pertaining to your office and ask questions often, and partner with local
universities» academic as they know more about your ministerial needs and guides understand the domestic culture
than an expatriate of Euro / American background.
His political mentor, Roy Jenkins, once opined that it was pity Blair hadn't read history rather
than law at
university.
Meanwhile, Zephyr Teachout, a Fordham
University law professor challenging Cuomo in the upcoming Democratic primary, told WCBS 880's Paul Murnane that she believes the behavior is worse
than the prostitution scandal that cost former Gov. Eliot Spitzer his job — she described that as a «private indiscretion.»
The scheme provided SILVER with two different streams of unlawful income: (i) approximately $ 700,000 in kickbacks SILVER received by steering two real estate developers with business before the state legislature to a
law firm with which he was associated, and (ii) more
than $ 3 million in asbestos client referral fees SILVER received by, among other official acts, awarding $ 500,000 in state grants to a
university research center of a physician who referred patients made ill by asbestos to SILVER at Weitz & Luxenberg.
Personal Info Birthplace: Staten Island, NY High School: Brooklyn Tech High School (public - requires entrance exam) Higher Education: SUNY New Paltz,
University of Buffalo
Law School NY19 Connection: Attended SUNY New Paltz, 1970 - 1974; Returned to live in Kingston in 1981 and thereafter moved to Woodstock where he has resided through today Length of Residency in NY19: Kingston, NY and Woodstock, NY since 1983; greater than 34 years Prior Job History: Served as a Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) Volunteer working with Native American tribes in Nebraska, Western Nebraska Legal Services attorney between 1977 - 1980; Ulster County Public Defender's Office in the 1980s and early 1990s, Law Offices of Dave Clegg practicing predominantly personal injury law and elder abuse cases until prese
Law School NY19 Connection: Attended SUNY New Paltz, 1970 - 1974; Returned to live in Kingston in 1981 and thereafter moved to Woodstock where he has resided through today Length of Residency in NY19: Kingston, NY and Woodstock, NY since 1983; greater
than 34 years Prior Job History: Served as a Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) Volunteer working with Native American tribes in Nebraska, Western Nebraska Legal Services attorney between 1977 - 1980; Ulster County Public Defender's Office in the 1980s and early 1990s,
Law Offices of Dave Clegg practicing predominantly personal injury law and elder abuse cases until prese
Law Offices of Dave Clegg practicing predominantly personal injury
law and elder abuse cases until prese
law and elder abuse cases until present.
Dr Catharine Abell, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy,
University of Manchester Dr Arif Ahmed, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy,
University of Cambridge David Archard, Professor of Philosophy, Queen's
University Belfast Helen Beebee, Samuel Hall Professor of Philosophy,
University of Manchester Simon Blackburn, former Professor of Philosophy,
University of Cambridge, Fellow, Trinity College Cambridge, and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, UNC - Chapel Hill Margaret A. Boden, Research Professor of Cognitive Science,
University of Sussex Dr Stephen Burwood, Lecturer in Philosophy,
University of Hull Dr Peter Cave, Lecturer in Philosophy, Open
University Andrew Chitty, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy,
University of Sussex Michael Clark, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy,
University of Nottingham Antony Duff, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy,
University of Stirling John Dupré, Professor of Philosophy of Science,
University of Exeter Dr Nicholas Everitt, Senior Research Fellow in Philosophy,
University of East Anglia Simon Glendinning, Professor of European Philosophy, LSE C. Grayling, philosopher and Master of the New College of the Humanities Dr Peter King, Lecturer in Philosophy,
University of Oxford Dr Brendan Larvor, Reader in Philosophy and Head of Philosophy,
University of Hertfordshire Dr Stephen
Law, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, Heythrop College,
University of London Ardon Lyon, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, City
University London H. Mellor, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy,
University of Cambridge Peter Millican, Gilbert Ryle Fellow and Professor of Philosophy,
University of Oxford Richard Norman, Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy,
University of Kent Eric Olson, Professor of Philosophy,
University of Sheffield David Papineau, Professor of Philosophy, King's College London Derek Parfit, Professor of Philosophy,
University of Oxford Duncan Pritchard, Professor and Chair in Epistemology,
University of Edinburgh Janet Radcliffe Richards, Professor of Practical Philosophy,
University of Oxford Jonathan Rée, philosopher and author Theodore Scaltsas, Professor and Chair of Ancient Philosophy,
University of Edinburgh Peter Simons, Professor of Philosophy, Chair of Moral Philosophy and Head of the School of Social Sciences and Philosophy, Trinity College Dublin Tom Sorell, Professor of Politics and Philosophy,
University of Warwick Dr Tanja Staehler, Reader in Philosophy and Head of the Department of Philosophy,
University of Sussex Thomas Uebel, Professor of Philosophy,
University of Manchester Dr Nigel Warburton, philosopher and author Keith Ward, Regius Professor Emeritus of Divinity,
University of Oxford John White, Emeritus Professor of the Philosophy of Education, Institute of Education,
University of London Stephen Wilkinson, Professor of Bioethics, Lancaster
University RE professionals (other
than teachers):
«Often the cover - up is more damning
than the underlying conduct,» said James Cohen, a professor of criminal
law at Fordham
University's
law school.
It was none other
than Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan who tried to dissuade Sheila Abdus - Salaam from continuing her
law studies at Columbia
University.
The seeming implication by Breslin's camp is that Martland, an Albany High School graduate who left the Capital Region for Princeton
University and Brooklyn
Law School and spent more
than two decades as a prosecutor and lawyer in the public and private sector downstate, is an outsider.
In addition to teaching at New York
University School of
Law, he's writing a book for which he reportedly received an advance of more
than $ 1 million from publishing house Alfred A. Knopf.
There have been more
than 900 publications related to the topic since 1984, with the vast majority of them published since 2005, according to Owen D. Jones, director of the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on
Law and Neuroscience and a professor of both law and biology at Vanderbilt Universi
Law and Neuroscience and a professor of both
law and biology at Vanderbilt Universi
law and biology at Vanderbilt
University.
«In 2012 alone over 250 judicial opinions — more
than double the number in 2007 — cited defendants arguing in some form or another that their «brains made them do it,»» according to an analysis by Nita Farahany, a
law professor and director of Duke
University's Initiative for Science and Society.
According to a recent study led by Gábor Horváth, a biological physicist at Eötvös
University in Hungary, cave painters understood — better
than many artists of the modern age — the
laws governing animal motion.
Philippe M. Binder, a physicist at the
University of Hawaii at Hilo, suggests that the theory implies researchers seeking unified
laws can not hope for anything better
than a «theory of almost everything.»
Although the judge ruled on procedural grounds rather
than the merits of the
law, the decision gives hope to union organizers such as Andrea Jokisaari, a Ph.D. student in materials science and engineering at the
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who has been active in the years - long effort to organize the campus's research assistants, The Chronicle» s Vimal Patel notes in another article.
Although the CDC largely withdrew from funding research on gun violence more
than 20 years ago (under intense congressional pressure), there are active research programs in medicine, public health,
law, and the social sciences under way in
universities and think tanks.
Two years later, a group of more
than 100 U.S.
university presidents and chancellors known as the Amethyst Initiative called for a re-evaluation of the legal drinking age — citing a «clandestine» culture of heavy drinking episodes among college students as one reason that the age - 21
law is not working.
The Länder, which are largely responsible for
university legislation, are at present experiencing a wave of new
university laws which imitate rather
than shape the reforms developed by the
universities.
Between 2005 and 2012, more
than 1585 U.S. published judicial opinions describe the use of neurobiological evidence by criminal defendants to shore up their defense, according to a study published last week in the Journal of
Law and the Biosciences by legal scholar Nita Farahany of Duke
University in Durham, North Carolina, and colleagues.
Researchers from the
university's Penryn Campus in Cornwall worked with Peruvian officials for more
than two years to develop a new protection
law.
Rather
than force firms into old legal frameworks, Arun Sundararajan at New York
University's Stern School of Business argues that
laws should be tweaked to accommodate them.
Here's how it might work: Next year and in each year thereafter, Congress would set an overall cap on fossil fuels extracted by upstream energy producers, which David A. Weisbach of the
University of Chicago
Law School identifies as «fewer
than 3,000 entities» — petroleum refiners, coal mines and domestic natural gas processors — «plus imports at a few locations.»
As
law enforcement agencies, community organizations, and public health officials work to develop effective crime - prevention strategies, new research from the
University of Iowa finds that individuals who report being victims of crime to police are less likely to become future victims of crime
than those who do not report their initial experiences.
The representatives shared the opinion that problems arising after the qualification period can be solved more easily by a separate wage agreement for science (Wissenschaftstarifvertrag)
than by further amendments of the
university law or general industrial
law.