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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Social Welfare Law
Provider Liability Under Public Law 98-21: The Medicare Prospective Payment System In Light Of Wickline V. State, Ross P. Lanzafame
Provider Liability Under Public Law 98-21: The Medicare Prospective Payment System In Light Of Wickline V. State, Ross P. Lanzafame
Buffalo Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Nonprofit Corporation And Community Development In Bedford- Stuyvesant
The Nonprofit Corporation And Community Development In Bedford- Stuyvesant
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Uncertain Quest For Welfare Rights, Richard A. Epstein
The Uncertain Quest For Welfare Rights, Richard A. Epstein
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
Selective Persecution: An Examination Of The Social Security Administration Continuing Disability Investigation Process Of The Mentally Disabled, Noel Martlock
In the Public Interest
No abstract provided.
Equal Protection For Illegitimate Children: The Supreme Court's Standard For Discrimination, Martha T. Zingo
Equal Protection For Illegitimate Children: The Supreme Court's Standard For Discrimination, Martha T. Zingo
Antioch Law Journal
Between 1968 and 1980 the Supreme Court decided twenty cases' involving statutory classifications based on illegitimacy. The Court's decisions have determined whether discrimination against those individuals deemed illegitimate by law2 constitutes a denial of equal protection. When these decisions are analyzed it seems apparent that the Court was experiencing some difficulty in determining the appropriate constitutional test to apply to illegitimacy statutes. It is not surprising that the Court's various rulings appear inconsistent. The purpose of this article is to examine the Supreme Court's inconsistent decisions in its equal protection analysis of laws affecting illegitimate children. To accomplish this goal, …
Confronting Uncertainty In Child Abuse Adjudication: A Contextual Analysis Of Theories Of The Judical Role In A Changing Society, Lawrence W. Cohen
Confronting Uncertainty In Child Abuse Adjudication: A Contextual Analysis Of Theories Of The Judical Role In A Changing Society, Lawrence W. Cohen
Antioch Law Journal
Throughout history scholars have attempted to defend myriad conceptions of the judicial role. For instance, Corwin believed that law, embodied in nature, was to be discovered by judges.1 Cardozo also envisioned an active judiciary, responsible for keeping law consistent with the mores of the day.2 Wigmore, on the other hand, felt that personalizing justice through judicial discretion is the "antithesis of the Anglo-Saxon conception of justice."' 3 Rather, justice, if attainable at all, must be achieved through strict rule application. 4 Whereas 19th-century scholarship focused on formal rules, recent authorities have turned to contemplating how legal decisions are made and …