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Academic Journals
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- 1From:Suffolk Journal of Trial & Appellate Advocacy (Vol. 26, Issue 1)No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual...
- 2From:Natural Resources & Environment (Vol. 35, Issue 6)One of our most critical environmental, social, and economic challenges is how to manage and respond to the effects of climate change. An approach that has gained prominence in recent years as an effective solution to...
- 3From:Washington Law Review (Vol. 97, Issue 4)The U.S. government is one of the largest polluters on the planet. With over 700 domestic military bases and countless more federal facilities and vessels operating within state borders, there exists an enormous...
- 4From:EurAmerica (Vol. 52, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis article discusses party-government relationships between the CDU, CSU and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) during Merkel's third grand coalition between March 2018 and 2021, through the lenses of theories of...
- 5From:EurAmerica (Vol. 52, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThere are four main legislative models governing the insanity defense in the United States: the M'Naghten rule, M'Naghten plus volitional incapacity, Moral incapacity, and Model Penal Code. Recently, Kansas adopted a...
- 6From:Journal of Southern History (Vol. 88, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIN 1853, A RUNAWAY SLAVE FROM MARYLAND NAMED GEORGE SMITH was caught in Pennsylvania. (1) Under the terms of the new Fugitive Slave Act that Congress had passed three years earlier, Smith was not entitled to a jury...
- 7From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 135, Issue 7)STATE COURTS--STATE STANDING DOCTRINE--IDAHO SUPREME COURT RETAINS FEDERAL FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING STANDING TO SUE IN STATE COURT.--Reclaim Idaho v. Denney, 497 P.3d 160 (Idaho 2021). From the earliest days of...
- 8From:Polish Political Science Yearbook (Vol. 51, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe primary burden of tackling the pandemic COVID-19 lies with the state as the entity responsible for protecting the health and life of its citizens. Hence, it can be argued that the focus of the pandemic-induced...
- 9From:Natural Resources & Environment (Vol. 37, Issue 3)Although comprehensive federal legislation targeting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions continues to appear unlikely in the near term, a growing number of states are taking legislative and regulatory action on carbon...
- 10From:Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe founding generation was broadly originalist in constitutional interpretation. As Judge Pryor has suggested, the Founders believed the meaning of the Constitution was fixed at the time of enactment and was not subject...
- 11From:Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION I'd like to begin with a comment on Professor John Mikhail being here, because I think many of you in the room probably don't know him. He's not one of us--I think that's fair to say--but he is one of the...
- 12From:Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Vol. 46, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedMarch 5, 2022 Thank you, Judge Rao, for the introduction, and thank you to UVA for hosting. My son graduated from the University of Virginia School of Law last year and was a member of the Federalist Society, so it's...
- 13From:Albany Law Review (Vol. 85, Issue 4)INTRODUCTION The Supreme Court of the United States is the "nation's highest court," and the Constitution--including the Supreme Court's rulings--is the "Law of the Land." In a narrow, technical, and formalistic sense,...
- 14From:Acta Historica Tallinnensia (Vol. 28, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis afterword outlines the current state of research of self-determination and recognition in the Baltic region during the First World War and its aftermath. Examining the subtle transformations in the meaning of the...
- 15From:Notre Dame Law Review (Vol. 98, Issue 2)Studies of federalism, especially in the United States, have mostly centered on state autonomy and the vertical relationship between the states and the federal government. This Article approaches federalism from a...
- 16From:Notre Dame Law Review (Vol. 98, Issue 2)The current debate over constitutional interpretation often proceeds on the assumption that the Constitution does not provide rules for its own interpretation. Accordingly, several scholars have attempted to identify...
- 17From:Review of Constitutional Studies (Vol. 26, Issue 2)Canadian federalism and rights are frequently portrayed as being in tension with one another. The entrenchment of rights in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms is often understood as affirming pan-Canadian uniform values...
- 18From:Michigan Law Review (Vol. 121, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis Article uncovers a critical disjuncture in our system of providing affordable rental housing. At the federal level, the oldest, fiercest debate in low-income housing policy is between project-based and tenant-based...
- 19From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 136, Issue 1)In the words of Justice Kagan, the Supreme Court's state "sovereign immunity decisions have not followed a straight line." (1) The Court's first foray into state sovereign immunity was the 1793 case Chisholm v. Georgia,...
- 20From:Washington University Journal of Law & Policy (Vol. 69)Two individuals enter the United States--one as a refugee, the other as a visitor, and later, as a graduate student. Several years later, each adjusts his status, (1) becoming a lawful permanent resident. (2) Before...