Search results for: "n" (4021 results)
that “[a]n accommodation is . . . necessary” to render a disposition in the case). 14. See U.S. CONST. art. I, § 3 (designating the Vice President
Id. at 11 n.11. The Court did not depend on that asymmetry in reaching its decision, however. See id. 31. Hively II, 853 F.3d at 346. hively's self
A70 942 039, 21 I. & N. Dec. 998, 1000 (B.I.A. 1997); see also In re Ismael Vasquez-Palacios, No. A27 621 985, 8 Immig. Rptr. B1-42 (Immigration Non
by denying its application in cyberspace? Consider the DOD Cyber Strategy’s pronouncement that “n a manner consistent with U.S. and international law
home? Of course not!”). 36. Id. at 351. 37. Id. at 255. 38. Id. at 426, 440 n.207; see also id. at 255 (noting that “[c]ourts routinely uphold the
515, 548-49 n.298 (2014). One commentator argues for a more-likely-than-not miscarriage of justice standard for cognizability of post-conviction
I.853.Sipe.865.docx 12/14/14 2:56 PM 853 c o m m e n t Jagged Edges Modern adverse possession doctrine appears to be in
trigger NSR. Introduced in 1981, “[n]etting allows a grandfathered pollution source to ‘bequeath’ its pollution privileges to its descendant, the new
Dennis Chong & James N. Druckman, Framing Theory, 10 ANN. REV. POL. SCI. 103, 113 (2007). 65. See Bigman et al., supra note 63; infra notes 67-76 (citing
file with author). 47. Jack B. Weinstein, Ethical Dilemmas in Mass Tort Litigation, 88 NW. U. L. REV. 469, 521 n.212 (1994). nudges and norms in