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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Administrative Tribunal, Theodore J. St. Antoine
The Administrative Tribunal, Theodore J. St. Antoine
Book Chapters
During the past summer I have had the good fortune to join with colleagues of the university community from the administration and from the student body in two separate but related endeavors: first, to draw up a body of substantive rules for nonacademic conduct on the campus and, second, to establish a judicial body to enforce those rules. The latter problem, the composition of a university judiciary, is the subject of this discussion. The views I shall present about structuring a university judiciary are drawn in large part from the discussions of the committees to which I belong. In addition, …
Governmental Response To Campus Unrest, Bruce R. Hopkins, John H. Myers
Governmental Response To Campus Unrest, Bruce R. Hopkins, John H. Myers
Case Western Reserve Law Review
No abstract provided.
"Constitutional Tenure:" Toward A Realization Of Academic Freedom, Harry W. Pettigrew
"Constitutional Tenure:" Toward A Realization Of Academic Freedom, Harry W. Pettigrew
Case Western Reserve Law Review
No abstract provided.
Fairness In University Disciplinary Proceedings, William M. Beaney, Jonathan C. S. Cox
Fairness In University Disciplinary Proceedings, William M. Beaney, Jonathan C. S. Cox
Case Western Reserve Law Review
No abstract provided.
Civilizing University Discipline, Paul D. Carrington
Civilizing University Discipline, Paul D. Carrington
Michigan Law Review
It is the purpose of this Article to suggest that the criminal model is not the only possible system of university discipline. There are alternatives to be found in the operation of the civil courts and other administrative agencies that have received little consideration. It is a common, but mistaken, assumption that the proper way to deal with offensive conduct is by means of social punishment. The unfortunate consequences of a general tendency of legislatures to "overcriminalize" have been noted elsewhere. The trend in university discipline may be regarded as a special application of that tendency, or, at least, as …