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Full-Text Articles in Law
Second Chance Pell Experiment: How The United States Is Starting To Recognize Education As A Right, Brittany Walker
Second Chance Pell Experiment: How The United States Is Starting To Recognize Education As A Right, Brittany Walker
Human Rights Brief
For decades, education as a right has been an issue between U.S. citizens and U.S. courts. U.S. courts maintain that education is not a right, as it was not explicitly stated in the U.S. Constitution. Since the U.S. Constitution is silent about education, U.S. courts have applied the 14th Amendment to defer educational matters, such as compulsory school requirements, to each state. Currently, education in the United States is generally a right until middle school. After middle school, the American government allows parents and students to determine whether additional education is necessary in their situation. This view causes disparities for …
A Higher Power Produces Greater Problems: How Religious Honor Codes And Religious Schools Exacerbate Campus Sexual Assault, Samuel T. Jay
A Higher Power Produces Greater Problems: How Religious Honor Codes And Religious Schools Exacerbate Campus Sexual Assault, Samuel T. Jay
American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law
No abstract provided.
Evading "Residence": Undocumented Students, Higher Education, And The States, Jessica Salsbury
Evading "Residence": Undocumented Students, Higher Education, And The States, Jessica Salsbury
American University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Academic Freedom In Serbia, Barbara Cochrane