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The Impact Of Supreme Court Make Up On Rulings Towards Administrative Agencies, Hannah N. Cothern
The Impact Of Supreme Court Make Up On Rulings Towards Administrative Agencies, Hannah N. Cothern
Honors Undergraduate Theses
This study investigated whether or not the membership of the United States Supreme Court affects the way the institution rules in cases regarding federal administrative agencies by collecting and comparing votes from 2018-2019 and 2020-2022. It found in the first section that justices showed an anti-deferential attitude towards agencies and in the second section a deferential attitude towards agencies, despite the conservative majority being larger in the second section. The result is likely due to the types of agencies and content of cases involved.
The Evaluation Of Legal Rights Granted To Non-Citizen Detainees, Julia Oldershaw
The Evaluation Of Legal Rights Granted To Non-Citizen Detainees, Julia Oldershaw
Honors Undergraduate Theses
For over two decades, the United States imprisoned and detained hundreds of suspected terrorists at the United States Naval Base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. While many of these prisoners were suspected of being terrorists, no formal charges were ever levied against the detainees. All of the prisoners detained were considered non-citizens of the United States. They were not citizens of either Cuba or the United States. Instead, they were citizens of another country. While the legal precedent in the United States' territorial jurisdiction is that non-citizens are granted specific Constitutional rights, Guantánamo Bay was a legal black hole to which …