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Introduction - II. The educational benefits of student diversity - A. Grutter V. Bollinger - B. Policy arguments against race-conscious admissions schemes - III. Educational benefits of faculty diversity - A. The benefits of faculty diversity to teaching - B. The benefits of faculty diversity to legal scholarship - C. Practical problems in measuring faculty diversity - 1. How Much Diversity? The Need for a "Critical Mass" - 2. Who Counts? - IV. The importance of a broad conception of diversity to a legal education - A. Broad notions of diversity in bakke and grutter - B. Diversity in times of (racial) limits - V. Incentive systems for law schools and deans, the u.s. news rankings, and the quest for diversity - VI. Conclusion
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...: life expectancy, literacy rates, and school enrollments, and GDP. Research on the linkages bet... and variance is expressed in terms of rankings. Our methodology is appropriate as it does not req...
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Introduction - II. The economic covenant and economic, social, and cultural rights in the united states - A. Origins - B. The State’s Obligations - 1. Self-Determination (Article 1) - 2. General Provisions (Articles 2-5) - 3. Substantive Obligations (Articles 6-15) - 4. Monitoring (Articles 16-25) - 5. Ratification - C. Why the United States Should Ratify the Economic Covenant - 1. Ratification Is Practical - 2. Ratification Is the Right Thing to Do - D. Obstacles to Ratification - III. The economic covenant should be ratified as a congressional-executive agreement - A. The United States’ History Regarding Human Rights - B. Why a Congressional-Executive Agreement? - C. A National Floor for Economic Rights - D. Economic Rights Are Justiciable - IV. Conclusion
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The Supreme Court has held that an individual relinquishes any Fourth Amendment interest in information that he or she voluntarily discloses to a third party. Known as the "Third Party Doctrine," this controversial rule is increasingly problematic in an age where a large proportion of personal communications and transactions are carried out over the Internet. Internet users expose virtually all of the information they generate online-e-mails, web-surfing histories, search terms, and more-to online service providers. As such, many scholars have assumed that Internet information will be unprotected by the Fourth Amendment. Yet the information disclosed to these online third parties is generally not exposed to human beings at all; rather, it is processed entirely by automated equipment. Ne...
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... up (our) public benefits, overcrowd (our) schools and (our) prisons, drive down (our) property value... US to #11 in Newsweek's Best Countries Rankings, NEWSWEEK, Aug. 20, 2010, available at http://comm...
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... Business Economics, UCLA Anderson School of Management . COMMUNITY TRUST BANCORP INC. . Gar...20 in global MBA rankings released by the Financial Times of London. . With ...
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... are successfully representing developers, school districts and other victims of the financial meltd... Lexpert Directory, consistent with our rankings in other published legal directories. We have exte...
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... at the Canyons, Santa Clara 1951 72 Middle School; Marriott Hotel, Denver; Wal Mart; Sam's Club, Smi....5 million 24 14 million 25 13.7 million Rankings based on 2000 data. DND=Did Not Disclose. Bold lis...
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... that had inadequately completed elementary school. The group having the least aversion to tax evasio... age groups tied for first place in the rankings. The youngest group had the least opposition to ta...
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... on the board of directors of Access Schools and Edafio Technologies in Little Rock as well as ...Recent TV rankings show it as the leader in five of six time slots in...