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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
Dead Document Walking, Gary S. Lawson
Dead Document Walking, Gary S. Lawson
Faculty Scholarship
As this symposium commences, originalism is a hot topic to discuss and a cool position to advocate. Either portion of that statement would have been nearly inconceivable two decades ago when I started in academia. Originalism at that time was something of an intellectual backwater, with a very limited set of adherents and an even more limited set of critics who were willing to take originalist ideas seriously.1
The Aals Section On Women In Legal Education: The Past And The Future, Elizabeth M. Schneider
The Aals Section On Women In Legal Education: The Past And The Future, Elizabeth M. Schneider
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Development Of Domestic Violence As A Field: Honoring Clare Dalton, Elizabeth Schneider, Cheryl Hanna
The Development Of Domestic Violence As A Field: Honoring Clare Dalton, Elizabeth Schneider, Cheryl Hanna
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Illich, Education, And The Wire, Erin E. Buzuvis
Illich, Education, And The Wire, Erin E. Buzuvis
Faculty Scholarship
This Article focuses on two texts—first, Illich’s 1971 "Deschooling Society," which calls for abolishing institutionalized education in favor of decentralized, personalized relationships that promote intentional learning; and second, The Wire’s fourth season, which is particularly focused on the exercise in futility that is the Baltimore public school system. Read together, these texts explore the problem of institutionalized education and the solution Illich proposes of intentional learning communities. But while both texts help us understand the shortfalls of institutionalized education, neither is particularly prescriptive when it comes to undoing the current state of affairs and weaning our society off of institutions, …
Affirmative Action In Higher Education Symposium: Comment, Lee C. Bollinger
Affirmative Action In Higher Education Symposium: Comment, Lee C. Bollinger
Faculty Scholarship
This issue – affirmative action in higher education – is an issue of enormous significance for the country. So I don't for a second treat this as just another conversation about an important legal question. I think this is one of those issues that define the country.
I'll tell you what I did as President of the University of Michigan, and in the course of that I'll try to explain the ways in which we formulated the cases that went to the Supreme Court and resulted in very important clarifications to the Fourteenth Amendment and affirmative action. Then I want …
Changing The Conversation In Education Law: Political Geography And Virtual Schooling Book Review Essay, Aaron J. Saiger
Changing The Conversation In Education Law: Political Geography And Virtual Schooling Book Review Essay, Aaron J. Saiger
Faculty Scholarship
In Five Miles Away, A World Apart, James E. Ryan concludes that the educational reforms of the hour, school accountability and school choice, will exacerbate rather than undermine the systematic educational advantages enjoyed by wealthier Americans. Paul Peterson, in his Saving Schools, argues that increasingly centralizing American schools have become sufficiently centralized that, as a labor-intensive industry, few productivity gains are available from governance reform, even as demand escalates for the customization of education to individual needs. Both volumes therefore pin their hopes for change upon political geography-the relationship between people and educational institutions in space. Ryan argues that changing …
Religious Consumers And Institutional Challenges To American Public Schools, Aaron J. Saiger
Religious Consumers And Institutional Challenges To American Public Schools, Aaron J. Saiger
Faculty Scholarship
The paradigm of American K–12 education is shifting as the institution of local educational polities, each responsible for own its 'common schools,' faces competition from programs of school choice. Although charter schools and related reforms are generally studied in terms of quality and equity, the rise of consumer sovereignty as an alternative to political sovereignty as an organizing principle for educational governance has much wider ramifications. Paradigms of choice have already begun dramatically to alter religious education and its relationship to public schooling. Moreover, because these paradigms rely upon consumer preferences and the aggregation of those preferences by markets, the …