This article in The Conversation on March 21, 2016 and moves beyond the conventional wisdom espoused by Biden, Kagan and others, and presents a strong case for an alternative view of the hearings. Examining every statement made at confirmation hearings from 1939 to 2010, we conclude the hearings are important to the health of American democracy. Based on this, we’d like to see partisan politics pushed aside and Judge Merrick Garland to get a hearing
Fifty years after racially-based segregation was outlawed in Brown v. Board of Education, segregatio...
Words are fascinating. The frequency with which we use in conversation words of varied meanings with...
Among the many burning issues of concern to educators and educational ethicists during the past few ...
COURTIERS OF THE MARBLE PALACE is a compelling, informative book. As much as anything, it is a treme...
In the months before the 2000 election, full of tenured radical smugness, I had argued that the best...
How do you turn the voters of the world’s lighthouse democracy against their elected government? How...
This paper examines the consequences of Saxe v. State College Area School District as it affects sch...
The Great Writ of Habeas Corpus, the only writ mentioned by name in the U.S. Constitution, is the gl...
The normal rule dictating the priority of rival claims generally depends on which party got its judg...
Meet Dr. Matthew Griffis, newest faculty member of the School of Library and Information Science, an...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
Because it does not conform to the standard conception of a profession, motherhood might seem to hav...
Much like race, religiosity, sex, and a whole host of contrived privilege points in the U.S., povert...
This is the archived record of the November 16, 2011 faculty senate meeting minutes
Are you keeping pace? In 2010, the number of law schools with Institutional Repositories (IRs) more ...
Fifty years after racially-based segregation was outlawed in Brown v. Board of Education, segregatio...
Words are fascinating. The frequency with which we use in conversation words of varied meanings with...
Among the many burning issues of concern to educators and educational ethicists during the past few ...
COURTIERS OF THE MARBLE PALACE is a compelling, informative book. As much as anything, it is a treme...
In the months before the 2000 election, full of tenured radical smugness, I had argued that the best...
How do you turn the voters of the world’s lighthouse democracy against their elected government? How...
This paper examines the consequences of Saxe v. State College Area School District as it affects sch...
The Great Writ of Habeas Corpus, the only writ mentioned by name in the U.S. Constitution, is the gl...
The normal rule dictating the priority of rival claims generally depends on which party got its judg...
Meet Dr. Matthew Griffis, newest faculty member of the School of Library and Information Science, an...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
Because it does not conform to the standard conception of a profession, motherhood might seem to hav...
Much like race, religiosity, sex, and a whole host of contrived privilege points in the U.S., povert...
This is the archived record of the November 16, 2011 faculty senate meeting minutes
Are you keeping pace? In 2010, the number of law schools with Institutional Repositories (IRs) more ...
Fifty years after racially-based segregation was outlawed in Brown v. Board of Education, segregatio...
Words are fascinating. The frequency with which we use in conversation words of varied meanings with...
Among the many burning issues of concern to educators and educational ethicists during the past few ...