Search results for: "match" (701 results)
’ provision of a platform to “match . . . underused labor” to others who “want[] to pay for” it. Oranburg, supra note 8, at 19. The “platform” distinction
by any stretch of the imagination match their hyperbole. This point is illustrated by the case of David Hicks, often referred to as the “Australian
2003 4:56 PM 2598 The Yale Law Journal [Vol. 112: 2591 DNA evidence at the crime scene, the fact that my DNA does not match the evidence does not
prevailing set of regulatory norms that simply do not match the realities of the world in which they live.3 3. An excellent example of the inconsistency in
confidently, we assert that districts should be designed for congruence with media markets, so that district lines match the distribution area of a
necessarily match actual ‘incidence’ inside families, any more than an employer paying a payroll tax rather than an employee means that the employer
M.D. Pa. 2008). protecting the fourth amendment in the information age 115 involved if the computer came up with a match.40 Similarly, in
being. Rules that assume a traditional two-parent family structure are a poor match for reality and can end up excluding many of the children who
match the broadest possible formation: ‘No person shall be imprisoned for debt.’” Id. at 47. We, however, propose that reformers not only pursue these
not match children with same-sex couples—a policy that violated the antidiscrimination provision in the city’s contract.45 The agency argued that