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Articles 1 - 24 of 24
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Institutional Imperative: Resolving Transboundary Water Conflict In Arid Agricultire Regions Of The United States And The Commmon Wealth Of Independent States, Susan J. Buck, Gregory W. Gleason, Mitchel S. Jofuku
The Institutional Imperative: Resolving Transboundary Water Conflict In Arid Agricultire Regions Of The United States And The Commmon Wealth Of Independent States, Susan J. Buck, Gregory W. Gleason, Mitchel S. Jofuku
Natural Resources Journal
No abstract provided.
Commentary, Chad Day
Commentary, Keith A. Henry
Commentary, Frank Quinn
Commentary, Chad Day
Commentary, Gerardo Ceballos
Commentary, Carlos Nagel
Commentary, Mary E. Kelly
The International Joint Commission And Public Participation: Past Experiences, Present Challenges, Future Tasks, Mimi Larsen Becker
The International Joint Commission And Public Participation: Past Experiences, Present Challenges, Future Tasks, Mimi Larsen Becker
Natural Resources Journal
No abstract provided.
Commentary, Ulises Canchola
Commentary, Michael J. Donahue
The Matter Of Public Participation, Robert D. Hayton
The Matter Of Public Participation, Robert D. Hayton
Natural Resources Journal
No abstract provided.
Natural Rights, Natural Law, And American Constitutions, Philip A. Hamburger
Natural Rights, Natural Law, And American Constitutions, Philip A. Hamburger
Faculty Scholarship
Natural rights and natural -law are ideas that frequently seem to have something in common with the elusive shapes of a Rorschach test. They are suggestive of well-defined, recognizable images, yet they are so indeterminate that they permit us to see in them what we are inclined to see. Like Rorschach's phantasm-inducing ink blots, natural rights and natural law are not only suggestive but also indeterminate – ideas to which each of us can plausibly attribute whatever qualities we happen to associate with them. For this reason, we may reasonably fear that natural rights and natural law are ideas often …
Commentary, Neil R. Fulton
'Posterity' In The Preamble And A Positivist Pro-Life Position, Raymond B. Marcin
'Posterity' In The Preamble And A Positivist Pro-Life Position, Raymond B. Marcin
Scholarly Articles
Arguments for the overturning of the Roe decision can be grouped into two categories: (1) the positivist argument that, contrary to the assertions in the Roe decision, nothing in the Constitution protects the right to privacy in the abortion decision (thus leaving legislatures free to regulate the matter), and (2) the natural law argument that a fetus or unborn child has a fundamental and inalienable right to life (thus preventing legislatures from regulating the matter, except for compelling governmental reasons). The right-to-life movement is grounded upon the latter, natural law position. The difficulty for the pro-life movement is that, if …
Commentary, C. Richard Bath
Nature And Powers Of The Ijc And The Ibwc, The, Lucio Cabrera
Nature And Powers Of The Ijc And The Ibwc, The, Lucio Cabrera
Natural Resources Journal
No abstract provided.
Commentary, John E. Carroll
Commentary, Cliff Metzner
Commentary, Joaquin R. Bustamante
Commentary - Does The Past Record Of Action Provide A Guide To The Future, Joseph F. Friedkin
Commentary - Does The Past Record Of Action Provide A Guide To The Future, Joseph F. Friedkin
Natural Resources Journal
No abstract provided.
Commentary, Miguel Solanes
Commentary, Peg Rogers
The "Value Of Human Life" And "The Right To Death": Some Reflections On Cruzan And Ronald Dworkin, John M. Finnis
The "Value Of Human Life" And "The Right To Death": Some Reflections On Cruzan And Ronald Dworkin, John M. Finnis
Journal Articles
These reflections focus on three members (one professor and two alumni) of my Oxford college. Though University College officially bears the name The Great Hall of the University of Oxford, it is only one of that university's 30 colleges, and not a particularly large one-only about 450 students and teaching fellows like myself. My title's focus on one named law professor may already seem narrow. How then, you may wonder, can adding two more names from the same little institution in England make this lecture less parochial, and more relevant to Southern Illinois?