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Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in Law
Equal Protection For Foreign And Alien Corporations: Towards Intermediate Scrutiny For A Quasi-Suspect Classification, Hartwin Bungert
Equal Protection For Foreign And Alien Corporations: Towards Intermediate Scrutiny For A Quasi-Suspect Classification, Hartwin Bungert
Missouri Law Review
State statutory legislation and, to a lesser extent, federal statutory legislation often discriminates against foreign and alien corporations.' So far, this kind of discrimination against corporations is not accorded much attention in U.S. equal protection doctrine, although the discrimination of alien, natural persons has been topic of much debate and of some well-known Supreme Court cases. This article argues for application of at least an intermediate level of scrutiny, if not strict scrutiny, for classifications on the ground of "corporate nationality" under the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Equal Protection: Mackston V. State Of New York
Equal Protection: Mackston V. State Of New York
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Equal Protection: People V. Rodney
Equal Protection: New York State Clinical Laboratory Ass'n Inc. V. Kaladjian
Equal Protection: New York State Clinical Laboratory Ass'n Inc. V. Kaladjian
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Equal Protection: Chin V. Board Of Elections
Equal Protection: Mcdermott V. Forsythe
Retroactivity, Equal Protection And Standing, Leon Friedman
Retroactivity, Equal Protection And Standing, Leon Friedman
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Equal Protection: Barth V. Crosson
Equal Protection: People V. Peart
Equal Protection: People V. Childress
Equal Protection: People V. Walker
Roulette V. City Of Seattle: A City Lives With Its Homeless, William M. Berg
Roulette V. City Of Seattle: A City Lives With Its Homeless, William M. Berg
Seattle University Law Review
This Note analyzes the Roulette holding with respect to prior decisions on begging and vagrancy. In addition, this Note discusses the sidewalk ordinance with respect to the efforts of other communities to control the detrimental effects of a growing homeless population. This Note concludes that the Roulette holding strikes a constitutionally valid doctrinal and jurisprudential middle ground between abandoning the streets to the homeless and driving them from the community. It is argued that the sidewalk ordinance is normatively valid, in that it sets a reasonable standard of conduct that meets commonly accepted norms of civility, serving to benefit the …