Search results for: "ES" (1594 results)
government shifted to defending it principally as a means of securing “higher conviction rates and longer sentenc- es.”252 So the case is essentially Regents
ing of Article II.”); id. at 657 n.33 (collecting examples of originalist scholarship drawing on beyond the indian commerce clause 1019 es
events or decisions can es- tablish paths that are ‘locked-in’ or resistant to change.”). 4. See, e.g., Singel, supra note 3, at 494-95 (describing path
claims and defens- es, including claims and defenses that might have convinced the court to rule in their client’s favor. And all these concessions and
has long served as a vessel for LGBTQ reform, es- pecially in states where public acceptance is low.332 In Oliari and Others v. Italy in 2015, the
upon “an identity of interest between the debtor and the third party . . . such that a suit against the non-debtor is, in es- sence, a suit against
upon “an identity of interest between the debtor and the third party . . . such that a suit against the non-debtor is, in es- sence, a suit against the
of state officials “denigrat[es] state autonomy,”129 undermines political accountability,130 and may even be a form of compelled speech.131 The
of Housing-Related Tax Benefits in the United States 1 (July 2001), at http://www.brookings.org/dybdocroot/es/urban/ publications/gyourko.pdf
the liberal val- ues of personal freedom and state neutrality. Nonetheless, their genealogy is es- sentially one of economics-informed legal theory