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Articles 61 - 81 of 81
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Connecting, Helen Walker, Louise Morgan, Amy Wink, Marcia Nell, Gergana Vitanova, Judy Huddleston
Connecting, Helen Walker, Louise Morgan, Amy Wink, Marcia Nell, Gergana Vitanova, Judy Huddleston
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
Louise Morgan—Street Science: An English Teacher’s Introduction to Street Life.
Amy Wink—'In the Middle of Difficulty Lies Opportunity'— Albert Einstein
Marcia Nell—The New Partnership
Gergana Vitanova—Negotiating an Identity in Graduate School as a Second Language Speaker.
Judy Huddleston—A Cat in the Sun: Reflections on Teaching.
The Mind Of The South, Ellen Bragdon
Countering Kulturkampf Politics Through Critique And Justice Pedagogy: Race, Kulturkampf, And Immigration, Charles R. Venator Santiago
Countering Kulturkampf Politics Through Critique And Justice Pedagogy: Race, Kulturkampf, And Immigration, Charles R. Venator Santiago
Seton Hall Law Review
No abstract provided.
Law And War: Individual Rights, Executive Authority, And Judicial Power In England During World War I, Rachel Vorspan
Law And War: Individual Rights, Executive Authority, And Judicial Power In England During World War I, Rachel Vorspan
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
In this-Article Professor Vorspan examines the role of the English courts during World War I, particularly the judicial response to executive infringements on individual liberty. Focusing on detention, deportation, conscription, and confiscation of property, the Author revises the conventional depiction of the English judiciary during World War I as passive and peripheral. She argues that in four ways the judges were activist and energetic, both in advancing the government's war effort and in promoting their own policies and powers. First, they were judicial warriors, developing innovative legal strategies to legitimize detention and other governmental restrictions on personal freedom. Second, they …
How We Say Good-Bye, Joan Connor
Ignorance Was Bliss: Lynne Truss, You Opened Our Eyes ... And May Have Ruined Our Lives, Jan Miller, Bryce Cameron, Andrea Gottschalk, Brandy Stone, Melanie Yard
Ignorance Was Bliss: Lynne Truss, You Opened Our Eyes ... And May Have Ruined Our Lives, Jan Miller, Bryce Cameron, Andrea Gottschalk, Brandy Stone, Melanie Yard
Language Arts Journal of Michigan
No abstract provided.
Garda Diversion Of Young Offenders: An Unreasonable Threat To Due Process Rights?, Liz Cambell
Garda Diversion Of Young Offenders: An Unreasonable Threat To Due Process Rights?, Liz Cambell
Irish Journal of Applied Social Studies
Diversion programmes play a significant role in the field of youth justice, as an alternative to the conventional court process, which aim to prevent the entry of the child into the formal justice system. The long-established practice of diverting certain young offenders from prosecution ensures that children are not drawn into the criminal justice system and are not given a criminal record (Goldson, 2000: 35). A non-statutory diversion programme entitled the Garda Liaison Scheme was established in Ireland in 1963, which diverted less serious young offenders from prosecution (Report of the Committee Appointed to Monitor the Effectiveness of the Diversion …
Perceptions Regarding Male Suicide And Preventative Services In Co. Kilkenny, Louise Butler, Jim Phelan
Perceptions Regarding Male Suicide And Preventative Services In Co. Kilkenny, Louise Butler, Jim Phelan
Irish Journal of Applied Social Studies
This paper examines perceptions regarding rural male suicide and the preventative services available in Co. Kilkenny to combat the problem. For every four male suicides, there is one female suicide. The problem is becoming a rural rather than an urban one. The research set out to identify gaps in services and existing policies in addressing suicide among young rural men. Data were obtained from interview with the service providers and also from focus group discussions with young rural Kilkenny men. Total participants in the focus groups were 15 young men. Limitations to this study centred around the difficulty of organising …
The Need For Mareva Injunctions Reconsidered , David Capper
The Need For Mareva Injunctions Reconsidered , David Capper
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Size Matters (Or Should) In Copyright Law , Justin Hughes
Size Matters (Or Should) In Copyright Law , Justin Hughes
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
Forum Non Conveniens And The Warsaw Convention: Leaving The Turbulence Behind?, Katherine R. Dieterich
Forum Non Conveniens And The Warsaw Convention: Leaving The Turbulence Behind?, Katherine R. Dieterich
Hofstra Law Review
No abstract provided.
Is Poetry A War Crime? Reckoning For Radovan Karadzic The Poet-Warrior, Jay Surdukowski
Is Poetry A War Crime? Reckoning For Radovan Karadzic The Poet-Warrior, Jay Surdukowski
Michigan Journal of International Law
This Note will suggest that the Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) can use Karadzic's texts and affectations to warrior poetry in the pretrial brief and in admitted evidence, if and when Karadzic ultimately appears for trial. The violent nationalism of radio broadcasts, political journals, speeches, interviews, and manifestos have been fair game for the Office of the Prosecutor to make their cases in the last decade in both the Yugoslavia and Rwanda Tribunals. Why should poetry, perhaps the most powerful maker of myth and in the Yugoslavia context, a great mover …
Maine Gov. James B. Longley: Don Quixote And Sir Thomas More, With A Dash Of Machiavelli—An Appropriate Political Dna For The Day?, Jim Mcgregor
Maine Policy Review
Jim McGregor, Governor James B. Longley’s executive assistant during his term of office from 1975 to 1979, provides his reflections about Longley the man and the era in which he won election against all political odds to become Maine’s first independent governor. While many historians and State House observers concentrate on the “confrontational Longley,” McGregor sheds new and hitherto private light on the multifaceted Governor Longley and suggests he may have been a man ideal for the time during which he served.
Genocide And Ethnic Cleansing: Why The Distinction? A Discussion In The Context Of Atrocities Occurring In Sudan, Linnea D. Manashaw
Genocide And Ethnic Cleansing: Why The Distinction? A Discussion In The Context Of Atrocities Occurring In Sudan, Linnea D. Manashaw
California Western International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Foreign Bank Exemption To The Sarbanes-Oxley Prohibition On Loans To Directors And Officers, Dina Colon
The Foreign Bank Exemption To The Sarbanes-Oxley Prohibition On Loans To Directors And Officers, Dina Colon
Journal of International Business and Law
No abstract provided.
Book Review: Gimme That Ol’ Time Separation: A Review Essay, Francis J. Beckwith
Book Review: Gimme That Ol’ Time Separation: A Review Essay, Francis J. Beckwith
Chapman Law Review
No abstract provided.
Of Desi, J. Lo And Color Matters: Law, Critical Race Theory The Architecture Of Race, Imani Perry
Of Desi, J. Lo And Color Matters: Law, Critical Race Theory The Architecture Of Race, Imani Perry
Cleveland State Law Review
In this article I want to posit two ways in which a critique of the black white binary leads us to understandings of race and racism that are useful for the struggles of all peoples of color. The first is, the critique should lead us to advocate for an understanding of race as an architecture rather than categorical. The second argument is that when we focus upon race as an architecture it leads us away from a linear notion of racial hierarchy with white at the top and black at the bottom, and towards a sense that the distribution of …
The Bridge, Volume 2, 2005, Bridgewater State College
The Bridge, Volume 2, 2005, Bridgewater State College
the bridge
Volume 2 Staff
Stacy Cohen
David George
Beth Horka
David Mitchell
Elizabeth Redmond
Nicole Roy
Kimberly Silva
Cheryllynn Silvia
Janine Woodward
Mary Dondero, Faculty Advisor
Jerald Walker, Faculty Advisor
Linda Hall, Alumni Consultant
Rosann Kozlowski, Alumni Consultant
Democratic Policing Confronts Terror An Protest, Jerome H. Skolnick
Democratic Policing Confronts Terror An Protest, Jerome H. Skolnick
Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce
The idea of legal evolution to a rule of law necessarily implies restraints upon the coercive power of the state. Whatever we might mean by coercive state power, surely the institution of the police embodies the essence of such power. Democratic policing has long been a guiding concern in studies of American policing; and it is a major goal of nations in transition to democracy, especially those in Eastern Europe.2 By those seeking change, democratic policing must be concerned with the rule of law as well as with crime and public order and terrorism. In this article, I intend to …
Civil And Human Rights Violations In Northern Ireland: Effects And Shortcomings Of The Good Friday Agreement In Guaranteeing Protections, Lynn Wartchow
Northwestern Journal of Human Rights
No abstract provided.
Open Season On The Journalist's Privilege: Do Recent Rulings Represent A Trend Against Assertions Of The Privilege Or Proper Applications Of Existing Law?, Will E. Messer
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.