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Monday, March 3

All Paper Chase, all the time!  
Bernard Hibbitts at 3/3/2003 04:02:54 PM

JURIST's Paper Chase has outgrown the confines of JURIST's front page, and is about to move to a new webpage all its own. Paper Chase updates will be very intermittent over the next couple of days as we make the transition, and our front page is adjusted accordingly. Paper Chase will still be accessible from here, but what you will see will be rolling highlights of Paper Chase's RSS feed (the URL of which, by the way, will not change) rather than the weblog itself. Stay tuned!



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Law school briefs  
Bernard Hibbitts at 3/3/2003 10:07:31 AM

As previously noted in JURIST's Paper Chase, UC Berkeley School of Law and Stanford Law School both hosted major IP and technology law conferences over the weekend. The New York Times reports in its Monday edition.

Harold Koh and Amy Chua joined other professors and human rights experts over the weekend for a symposium at Yale Law School on the relationship between local and international actors in rebuilding war-torn nations. The Yale Daily News has more.

Jan Schlichtmann, the crusading attorney played by John Travolta in the 1998 film “A Civil Action” about Schlichtmann's representation of Massachusetts families whose children were diagnosed with leukemia after drinking contaminated tap water spoke at the University of Florida Levin College of Law Saturday. The University of Florida Alligator reports.

Kim Ford-Mazrui of the University of Virginia School of Law warned an audience celebrating Black History Month there February 20 that the US Supreme Court is likely to strike the University of Michigan's affirmative action policy, a move that may end possibly end university affirmative action nationwide. UVa Law has more.



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New scholarship  
Bernard Hibbitts at 3/3/2003 08:58:14 AM

Monday on SSRN:

Law, Rules and Presidential Selection
by Samuel Issacharoff of Columbia Law School
From the Abstract: "Robert Dahl, in 'How Democratic is the American Constitution?' criticizes the institution of the Electoral College as 'morally, politically, and constitutionally wrong.' This Article addresses the third of those claims. Dahl's critique, like many directed against the Electoral College, presumes a constitutional commitment to majoritarianism. This Article examines the rather commonplace departures from strict majoritarian rule in the Constitution, and concludes that the distortions from majoritarian preferences created by the Electoral College are actually much smaller in scope than those created by the U.S. Senate, the Article V amendment process and, to some extent, the House of Representatives. Moreover, subsequent constitutional developments - namely the 'Reapportionment Revolution' of Baker v. Carr and later cases - have not enshrined a constitutional principle of simple majoritarianism that might undermine the constitutional foundation of the Electoral College."



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Today's US Supreme Court docket  
Bernard Hibbitts at 3/3/2003 06:45:38 AM

The US Supreme Court hears arguments Monday in Sell v. US (forced medication, competency to stand trial - read backgrounders from DC appellate litigators Goldstein & Howe and Sam Heldman) and Ryan v. Telemarketing Associates (First Amendment, telemarketing fraud - more from Goldstein & Howe and Sam Heldman).



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March 3 - This day at law  
Bernard Hibbitts at 3/3/2003 06:30:16 AM

On March 3, 1879, Belva Lockwood became the first woman admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court. Learn more about women at the Supreme Court bar from the Supreme Court Historical Society.



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