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December 6, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
December 6, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
November 1, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
November 1, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
October 4, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
October 4, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
September 5, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
September 5, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
June 27, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
June 27, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
April 27, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
April 27, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
April 5, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
April 5, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
Reflections - Spring 2000, University Libraries--University Of South Carolina
Reflections - Spring 2000, University Libraries--University Of South Carolina
Reflections
Contents:
Valuable Research Materials Are Located in Thomas Cooper Library’s Government Information, Microform, and Newspaper Collections..... p.1
Bill Sudduth, Head of Government Information, Microform, and Newspaper Collections..... p.2
University Libraries Establish Ex Libris Society..... p.3
Y2K: A Cause for Celebration and Thanks..... p.3
Libraries Receive Endowment for Reference and Information Resources..... p.3
USC Secures State Funding for Distance Education..... p.4
New Faces: Marna Hostetler..... p.4
News from Thomas Cooper Library’s Special Collections..... p.5
IRIS Provides Computer Support Via the Web..... p.6
Exhibit Features South Carolina Writers..... p.6
Payne Endowment Established..... p.7
South Caroliniana Library Receives Hennig Family Library..... p.7
TCL …
Strategic Auditing In A Political Hierarchy: An Informational Model Of The Supreme Court's Certiorari Decisions, Charles M. Cameron, Jeffrey A. Segal, Donald Songer
Strategic Auditing In A Political Hierarchy: An Informational Model Of The Supreme Court's Certiorari Decisions, Charles M. Cameron, Jeffrey A. Segal, Donald Songer
Faculty Publications
We examine how the Supreme Court uses signals and indices from lower courts to determine which cases to review. In our game theoretic model, a higher court cues from publicly observable case facts, the known preferences of a lower court and its derision. The lower court attempts to enforce its own preferences, exploiting ambiguity in cases' fact patterns. In equilibrium, a conservative higher court declines to review conservative decisions from lower courts regardless of the facts of die case or the relative ideology of the judges. But a conservative higher court probabilistically reviews liberal decisions, with the "audit rate" tied …
March 1, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
March 1, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
February 2, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
February 2, 2000 Faculty Senate Minutes, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
No abstract provided.
1999-2000 Faculty Senate Annual Report, University Of South Carolina
1999-2000 Faculty Senate Annual Report, University Of South Carolina
Faculty Senate
The primary file includes the 1999-2000 Committee on Academic Responsibility Annual Report. Additional annual reports are attached.
Public Opinion About Punishment And Corrections, Francis T. Cullen, Bonnie S. Fisher, Brandon K. Applegate
Public Opinion About Punishment And Corrections, Francis T. Cullen, Bonnie S. Fisher, Brandon K. Applegate
Faculty Publications
"Get tough" control policies in the United States are often portrayed as the reflection of the public's will: Americans are punitive and want offenders locked up. Research from the past decade both reinforces and challenges this assessment. The public clearly accepts, if not prefers, a range of punitive policies (e.g., capital punishment, three-strikes-and-you're-out laws, imprisonment). But support for get-tough policies is "mushy." Thus citizens may be willing to substitute a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for the death penalty. Especially when nonviolent offenders are involved, there is substantial support for intermediate sanctions and for restorative justice. Despite three decades …
A Little Privacy, Please: Should We Punish Parents For Teenage Sex, Susan S. Kuo
A Little Privacy, Please: Should We Punish Parents For Teenage Sex, Susan S. Kuo
Faculty Publications
This article addresses an alarming new development in the recent trend toward blaming parents for their children's unlawful acts: an Illinois criminal statute that holds parents accountable for the consensual sexual activities of their children. Although laws creating criminal parental responsibility are not new, teenage sexuality is not part of the usual repertoire of juvenile acts that parental responsibility laws have previously sought to deter. The State of Illinois is the sole pioneer in this yet uncharted territory, breaking new ground for the parental responsibility movement and transporting parental liability to new heights.
Other states may view the Illinois statute …