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Judicial review

Constitutional Law

West Virginia Law Review

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Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Judicial Review--Professional Association--Inquiry Into Exclusion From Membership, Charles Blaine Myers Jr. Sep 1970

Judicial Review--Professional Association--Inquiry Into Exclusion From Membership, Charles Blaine Myers Jr.

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Constitutional Law--Judicial Review Of Congressional Membership Exclusion, Diana Everett Sep 1970

Constitutional Law--Judicial Review Of Congressional Membership Exclusion, Diana Everett

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


Judicial Review: A Tri-Dimensional Concept Of Administrative-Constitutional Law, Frank R. Strong Apr 1967

Judicial Review: A Tri-Dimensional Concept Of Administrative-Constitutional Law, Frank R. Strong

West Virginia Law Review

In an earlier issue of the present volume of the Review, an effort was made to dispel the seeming absurdity that "Separation of Powers, the cardinal principle upon which the federal and all state governments are founded, a great American contribution to the science of government, violates the due process clause!" The quotation is from an able and exhaustive article on Judicial Review of Administrative Action in West Virginia, written by Kenneth Gulp Davis at the beginning of a teaching and writing career which has brought him preminence in the field of Administrative Law. The article appeared in Volume 44 …


Judicial Review: A Tri-Dimensional Concept Of Administrative-Constitutional Law, Frank R. Strong Feb 1967

Judicial Review: A Tri-Dimensional Concept Of Administrative-Constitutional Law, Frank R. Strong

West Virginia Law Review

In the pages of Volume 44 of the West Virginia Law Quarterly, Professor Kenneth Culp Davis, then a young law teacher in this College of Law, found in certain decisions of the supreme court of this State and of the Supreme Court of the United States the paradox that "Separation of powers, the cardinal principle upon which the federal and all the state governments are founded, a great American contribution to the science of government, violates the due process clause!" To Professor Davis this result seemed exceedingly absurd, and in this adverse judgment he has had with him the great …