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Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 48, University Of Maine School Of Law Jan 1993

Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 48, University Of Maine School Of Law

Maine Law Magazine

Highlights:

  • 1993 Moot Court Board: Banner Year
  • Faculty News
  • Commencement 1993
  • Alumni News


Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 47, University Of Maine School Of Law Jan 1993

Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 47, University Of Maine School Of Law

Maine Law Magazine

Highlights:

  • Addition to Law Library Dedicated
  • King Day Features Fred D. Gray
  • Faculty News
  • 1992 Annual Fund Report
  • Alumni News


Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 49, University Of Maine School Of Law Jan 1993

Alumni Quarterly - Issue No. 49, University Of Maine School Of Law

Maine Law Magazine

Highlights:

  • Second Coffin Lecture to Feature Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.
  • Cumberland Legal Aid Clinic Receives Major Federal Grant
  • Alumni News


What Military Criminal Law Can Teach Us: A United States Perspective, Donald N. Zillman Jan 1993

What Military Criminal Law Can Teach Us: A United States Perspective, Donald N. Zillman

Faculty Publications

A quarter century ago, any comparative criminal law in the United States tended to treat the federal criminal justice system as the model for other systems (state, military, Indian tribal). The fifty state systems handled the vast majority of criminal cases. They were reforming both their adherence to federal constitutional protections for the accused and their administrative organization. Criminal justice had become a large volume business and old "horse and buggy'' practices could not keep up with the workload.


Child Care Enterprise, Community Development, And Work, Peter R. Pitegoff Jan 1993

Child Care Enterprise, Community Development, And Work, Peter R. Pitegoff

Faculty Publications

Child care enterprise can be a vehicle for community-based economic development. Beyond the critical goal of child care service, day care as an enterprise can help build capacity for job creation and entrepreneurship in the inner city and in disadvantaged communities. Stable child care institutions with quality jobs can sound a counterpoint to the feminization of poverty. The demand for child care services is substantial and growing. In single parent families and in households with two working parents, day care is essential to enable parents to work or go to school. Further, high quality early childhood programs can have a …