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Commentary Meet the New Boss: The New/Old Supreme Court
Meet the New Boss: The New/Old Supreme Court
JURIST Staff
October 2, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Adam Samaha of the University of Chicago Law School says that this Term's US Supreme Court cases will likely reveal whether we have a new boss on the Court who can push its decisions in new directions,...

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Commentary Disillusioned with Democracy: The Tale of the Thailand Coup
Disillusioned with Democracy: The Tale of the Thailand Coup
JURIST Staff
September 29, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Robert Albritton of the University of Mississippi says the recent overthrow of Thailand's elected government by unconstitutional means reflects a disconcerting failure of mass democracy in the country in the face of opposition from critical elites... For...

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Commentary Helping Americans and Fixing FEMA
Helping Americans and Fixing FEMA
JURIST Staff
September 28, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor David Crane of Syracuse University College of Law says that the experience of hurricanes Katrina and Rita highlights the need for a new national corps of trained citizen responders under the direction of an independent and revitalized...

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Commentary Don't Outsource Your Conscience: Lessons in Corporate Truth
Don't Outsource Your Conscience: Lessons in Corporate Truth
JURIST Staff
September 27, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Nancy Rapoport of the University of Houston Law Center says that the recent spate of guilty verdicts and stiff sentences handed out for corporate fraud committed by the erstwhile leaders of Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia and other...

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Commentary The Arar Report: The US Should Follow Canada's Lead
The Arar Report: The US Should Follow Canada's Lead
JURIST Staff
September 27, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Jules Lobel, a lawyer for Maher Arar and a professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, says that the US government and federal courts should follow the lead of a recently-completed Canadian inquiry by acknowledging...

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Commentary A Case for Delaying Military Commissions Legislation
A Case for Delaying Military Commissions Legislation
JURIST Staff
September 27, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Carl Tobias of the University of Richmond School of Law says although leading Republican senators are to be praised for advancing legislation to protect detainees and give them a fair trial before military commissions, there are still...

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Commentary History Starts Today: The Perils of Habeas-Stripping
History Starts Today: The Perils of Habeas-Stripping
JURIST Staff
September 26, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Alison Nathan of Fordham University School of Law says that the provision in the military commissions bill stripping the federal courts of habeas jurisdiction over detainees threatens a fundamental element of our constitutional heritage ... Following a...

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Commentary 'All the Laws But One': Parsing the Military Commissions Bill
'All the Laws But One': Parsing the Military Commissions Bill
JURIST Staff
September 25, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Benjamin Davis of the University of Toledo College of Law says that the overall theme of the "compromise" military commissions bill seems to be the highly-problematic creation of a unique legal regime for a specific group of...

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Commentary How the Compromise Detainee Legislation Guts Common Article 3
How the Compromise Detainee Legislation Guts Common Article 3
JURIST Staff
September 25, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist David Scheffer, former US Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues (1997-2001), now at Northwestern University School of Law, says that the new "compromise" language on detainee treatment included in the latest version of the military commissions...

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Commentary Unsafe Harbor: The GOP 'Compromise' on Detainee Treatment
Unsafe Harbor: The GOP 'Compromise' on Detainee Treatment
JURIST Staff
September 22, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Jordan Paust of the University of Houston Law Center says that the "compromise" between senior Republican lawmakers and the White House on the terms of military commission legislation governing detainee interrogation and trial provides US interrogators with...

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THIS DAY @ LAW

Starr Report accused Clinton of impeachable offenses

On September 9, 1998, Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr filed a report to Congress accusing President Bill Clinton of 11 impeachable offenses relating to his association with White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

PLO recognizes Israel

On September 9, 1993, the Palestinian Liberation Organization recognized Israel after decades of conflict and terror attacks.

Abraham Lincoln admitted to the bar

On September 9, 1836, future US president Abraham Lincoln received a license to practice law from the Illinois Supreme Court. Setting up office in Springfield, he filed his first lawsuit less than a month later, on October 5. Learn more about the law practice of Abraham Lincoln, from the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency.

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