It's surprising that more than a quarter century after its adoption, notorious Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934, enacted in 1996 as part of the Communications Decency Act, has never been ...
Should the parties to the litigation challenging the reasonableness standard law agree to a split in the application of the standard of review of reasonableness? If not, should the court impose one?
Critics of the law argue that it is a highly subjective tool for judicial activism that allows the court to subvert government policy with its own views. The reasonableness standard bill, which was ...
Administrative law is meant to protect the country’s residents against arbitrary government actions and to require the executive branch to function as the public’s trustee. In Israel, the principles ...
A clear, disinterested look at the state of higher education is not for the faint of heart. Jonathan Marks, a politics professor at Ursinus College, relates the following story in Let’s Be Reasonable: ...
Here’s a subject new to this column: The Fourth Amendment. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures.” Before the U.S. Supreme Court in Barnes v.
Canada yet again has come up with an innovative and/or excessively polite solution to a current problem. In case you missed it, the Canadian government last week issued a press release announcing that ...
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