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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Changing Landscape Of Asylum And Refugee Laws And Human Rights: The Diminishing Role Of The United States, Florence Shu-Acquaye Oct 2021

The Changing Landscape Of Asylum And Refugee Laws And Human Rights: The Diminishing Role Of The United States, Florence Shu-Acquaye

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


How The Covid-19 Crisis Has Reshaped Legal Education, Debra Vollweiler Sep 2021

How The Covid-19 Crisis Has Reshaped Legal Education, Debra Vollweiler

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Our Brains Beguil'd: Copyright Protection For Ai Created Works, Vicenc Feliu Apr 2021

Our Brains Beguil'd: Copyright Protection For Ai Created Works, Vicenc Feliu

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Gambling And The U.S. Immigration Laws, Robert Jarvis Feb 2021

Gambling And The U.S. Immigration Laws, Robert Jarvis

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Social Justice, Civil Rights, And Bioethics, Kathy Cerminara Jan 2021

Social Justice, Civil Rights, And Bioethics, Kathy Cerminara

Faculty Scholarship

A stunning confluence of events in the United States in the first few months of 2020 have illustrated pervasive systemic prejudice against vulnerable people resulting in increased risk of death. Combined and situated among other, similar incidents too numerous to mention here, they present an opportunity for bioethicists to help change the impact of implicit bias, white privilege, and prejudice in shaping the very ability to live a healthy life in America. The current lack of care and even outright cruelty rendering a variety of vulnerable populations susceptible to early death illustrate why there must be more attention paid to …


Dysregulating The Media: Digital Redlining, Privacy Erosion, And The Unintentional Deregulation Of American Media, Jon M. Garon Jan 2021

Dysregulating The Media: Digital Redlining, Privacy Erosion, And The Unintentional Deregulation Of American Media, Jon M. Garon

Faculty Scholarship

Netflix, Amazon, YouTube, and Apple have been joined by Disney+, Twitch, Facebook, and others to supplant the broadcast industry. As the FCC, FTC, and other regulators struggle, a new digital divide has emerged. The current regulatory regime for television is built upon the government’s right to manage over-the-air broadcasting. As content producers shift away from broadcast and cable, much of the government’s regulatory control will end, resulting in new consequences for public policy and new challenges involving privacy, advertising, and antitrust law. Despite the technological change, there are compelling government interests in a healthy media environment. This article explores the …


The Use Of Expert Witnesses In Gambling Cases, Robert Jarvis Jan 2021

The Use Of Expert Witnesses In Gambling Cases, Robert Jarvis

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.