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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Other Government, Daniel D. Polsby Nov 1975

The Other Government, Daniel D. Polsby

Michigan Law Review

A Review of The Other Government by Mark J. Green


Government Information And The Rights Of Citizens, Michigan Law Review Jun 1975

Government Information And The Rights Of Citizens, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

This Project delineates the federal and state responses to these two fundamental societal concerns. The course of the discussion suggests the vitality of these concerns, and the flexibility and continuing development of the governmental responses. Clearly, the interests in maximizing disclosure of government-held information and minimizing the handling and dissemination of unnecessary or inaccurate personal information can conflict. The contours of this conflict, only intimated herein, will doubtless become more bold with the maturation of the opposing statutory schemes.


Program From The Twenty-Fourth Thomas M. Cooley Lectures, University Of Michigan Law School Jan 1975

Program From The Twenty-Fourth Thomas M. Cooley Lectures, University Of Michigan Law School

Cooley Lecture Materials

The program from the twenty-fourth Thomas M. Cooley lectures, held April 7-9, 1975, at the University of Michigan Law School. The lecture series was "Biology, Ethics and Law: Can They Help Each Other?" by Robert S. Morison.


Program From The Twenty-Fifth Thomas M. Cooley Lectures, University Of Michigan Law School Jan 1975

Program From The Twenty-Fifth Thomas M. Cooley Lectures, University Of Michigan Law School

Cooley Lecture Materials

The program from the twenty-fifth Thomas M. Cooley lectures, held November 3-5, 1975, at the University of Michigan Law School. The lecture series was "The Emergence of an American Theory of Law" by Stanley M. Katz, Morton J. Horwitz, and William E. Nelson.


Whose Needy Children?, David L. Bazelon Jan 1975

Whose Needy Children?, David L. Bazelon

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

As an appellate judge for twenty-five years, the author has been confronted daily with cases involving what we call "behavior problems." As a judge, he can tell you it is a distressing task to sift daily through the records detailing the wreckage of human lives. He does not speak only of criminal cases. He also refers to child abuse and neglect cases, welfare eligibility cases, civil commitment cases, and many others.