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Full-Text Articles in Law
No Teacher Left Behind: Reforming The Educators Expense Deduction, Mary Morris
No Teacher Left Behind: Reforming The Educators Expense Deduction, Mary Morris
Indiana Law Journal
American educators are notoriously overworked and underpaid. With high performance demands and near-stagnant pay, teachers tend to burn out quickly, which in turn negatively affects the quality of education that their students receive. This effect is most evident in Title I schools, public schools with low funding allocation and high concentrations of low-income students.
One of the benefits that teachers do receive is the Educators Expense Deduction, a federal income tax deduction permitting teachers to write off up to $250 of unreimbursed supplies purchased for the classroom. This deduction was codified in 2002 and has not been amended since, in …
Consumer Perceptions Of The Right To Repair, Aaron Perzanowski
Consumer Perceptions Of The Right To Repair, Aaron Perzanowski
Indiana Law Journal
Part I of this Article details the strategies upon which device makers rely to frustrate repair. Part II considers legislative interventions intended to push back on existing barriers to repair, with a particular focus on the set of bills introduced in state legislatures across the United States. Part III describes the results of a survey of more than 800 U.S. consumers, focusing on their expectations of and experiences with the repair of electronic devices. The legal and policy implications of those results are discussed in Part IV.