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Full-Text Articles in Law
Return Of The Campus Speech Wars, Thomas Healy
Return Of The Campus Speech Wars, Thomas Healy
Michigan Law Review
Review of Erwin Chemerinsky and Howard Gillman's Free Speech on Campus.
Books Have The Power To Shape Public Policy, Barbara Mcquade
Books Have The Power To Shape Public Policy, Barbara Mcquade
Michigan Law Review
In our digital information age, news and ideas come at us constantly and from every direction—newspapers, cable television, podcasts, online media, and more. It can be difficult to keep up with the fleeting and ephemeral news of the day.
Books, on the other hand, provide a source of enduring ideas. Books contain the researched hypotheses, the well-developed theories, and the fully formed arguments that outlast the news and analysis of the moment, preserved for the ages on the written page, to be discussed, admired, criticized, or supplanted by generations to come.
And books about the law, like the ones reviewed …
Toil Of The Firestarters, Peter A. Alces
Toil Of The Firestarters, Peter A. Alces
Michigan Law Review
A Review of In the Company of Scholars: The Struggle for the Soul of Higher Education by Julius Getman
Democratic Education, Jonathan Marks
Democratic Education, Jonathan Marks
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Democratic Education by Amy Gutmann
The Closing Of The American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy And Impoverished The Souls Of Today's Students, Maureen P. Taylor
The Closing Of The American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy And Impoverished The Souls Of Today's Students, Maureen P. Taylor
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today's Students/em by Allan Bloom
The Matrix Of Professionalization: Three Recent Interpretations, Alan Creutz
The Matrix Of Professionalization: Three Recent Interpretations, Alan Creutz
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The culture of Professionalism: The Middle Class and the Development of Higher Education in America by Buron J. Bledstein, and The Emergence of Professional Social Science: The American Social Science Association and the Nineteenth-Century Crisis of Authority by Thomas L. Haskell, and The Rise of Professionalism: A Sociological Analysis by Magali Sarfatti Larson
Civilizing University Discipline, Paul D. Carrington
Civilizing University Discipline, Paul D. Carrington
Michigan Law Review
It is the purpose of this Article to suggest that the criminal model is not the only possible system of university discipline. There are alternatives to be found in the operation of the civil courts and other administrative agencies that have received little consideration. It is a common, but mistaken, assumption that the proper way to deal with offensive conduct is by means of social punishment. The unfortunate consequences of a general tendency of legislatures to "overcriminalize" have been noted elsewhere. The trend in university discipline may be regarded as a special application of that tendency, or, at least, as …