Areto Imoukhuede, Education Rights and the New Due Process, 47 Indiana Law Review. This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamental duty of government to provide high quality, public education. Access to public education is a fundamental duty, or positive fundamental right because education is a basic human need and a constituent part of all democratic rights
In the past seventy years, the idea of education as a fundamental right has spread in democratic cou...
This manuscript recognizes the importance of rights-talk in the law of education, but encourages sup...
In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez h...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
This article, however, goes beyond the argument that education is one of the most valuable benefits ...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
This Article explains why there is a fundamental duty for the government to provide public education...
This paper suggests that although each state within the United States currently recognizes a right t...
This article relies upon the political and economic analysis of such great thinkers as Aristotle and...
Public education is “the most important function of state and local government” and yet not a “funda...
While litigation continues in an effort to establish a fundamental right to education under the U.S....
Benjamin Franklin once wrote “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”[1] However, nearly...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
In the past seventy years, the idea of education as a fundamental right has spread in democratic cou...
This manuscript recognizes the importance of rights-talk in the law of education, but encourages sup...
In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez h...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
This article, however, goes beyond the argument that education is one of the most valuable benefits ...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
This Article explains why there is a fundamental duty for the government to provide public education...
This paper suggests that although each state within the United States currently recognizes a right t...
This article relies upon the political and economic analysis of such great thinkers as Aristotle and...
Public education is “the most important function of state and local government” and yet not a “funda...
While litigation continues in an effort to establish a fundamental right to education under the U.S....
Benjamin Franklin once wrote “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”[1] However, nearly...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
In the past seventy years, the idea of education as a fundamental right has spread in democratic cou...
This manuscript recognizes the importance of rights-talk in the law of education, but encourages sup...
In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez h...