Search results for: “SMRP CMRPを習う:100%の合格率を持つCertified Maintenance & Reliability Professional Exam 試験 CMRP 資格講座 🐠 ▛ CMRP ▟を無料でダウンロード➠ www.goshiken.com 🠰ウェブサイトを入力するだけCMRP的中率”
-
Lacking Evidence: A Response to Jeffrey Bellin’s The Evidence Rules That Convict the Innocent
Michael Conklin* In sum, while the numbers we have may be misleading, as of now, they point dramatically in a single direction. —Jeffrey Bellin1 Introduction The preceding quote embodies much of the problem with Jeffrey Bellin’s article The Evidence Rules…
-
Public Official, Figures, and Controversies in Minnesota Defamation Law
By Mike Steenson* Introduction In Minnesota, the plaintiff in a common law defamation claim is entitled to recover presumed damages in libel and slander per se cases.1 Those rules change when the First Amendment is injected into defamation cases when…
-
The Enforceability of Step-Down Provisions in Automobile Insurance Policies
On July 11, 2008, Sharmin Walls allowed Korey Mayfield to drive her Chevrolet Lumina. Walls, Randi Harper, and Christopher Timms were passengers in the vehicle. During the ride, a South Carolina Highway Patrol trooper activated his blue light, signaling for…
-
Minor Advances, Major Consequences: Hatch-Waxman Administers Exclusivity for Drug Delivery Devices
When pharmaceutical companies create a new drug, they can usually receive a patent, which allows them to operate with patent exclusivity for the life of the patent. This exclusive period allows drug companies to recoup their massive research and development…
-
Privacy Policy
Who we are Our website address is: https://mhlawreview.org. Contact Mitchell Hamline Law Review:875 Summit Avenue, Room 159Saint Paul, MN 55105-3076651.290.6450EIC@MitchellHamline.edu Permitted Use All articles and information on this website are the property of the Mitchell Hamline Law Review and its…
-
Improving Police Officer Accountability in Minnesota: Three Proposed Legislative Reforms
The killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers in May 2020 put the issue of police reform back into the national discussion and made Minnesota, at least during a brief window of time, confront its past on issues of…
-
Virtual Hearings and Blockchain Technology Solutions in Criminal Law
Technology has evolved and raided our personal and professional lives. Although the courts are not immune to the advancement and integration of technology, the courts are not keeping up with relevant technological advancements. Historically, courts have been hesitant to embrace…
-
Volume 51 Write-On Process
Registration is open! You may register by clicking here for the registration form. Registration ensures you receive all necessary MHLR Write-On materials via email in order to write-on to Volume 51 of Mitchell Hamline’s Law Review. You can withdraw at…
-
An Expansive Leap: The Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration’s Unjustified Attempt to Grow the Packers and Stockyards Act
Throughout American history, farmers have played a vital role in American society and the construction of its economy. This fundamental fact remains true today. In 2013, the meat and poultry packing industry in the United States employed more than 482,100…
-
Creative Equity: A Practical Approach to the Actor’s Copyright
In its haste to take Internet service providers off the hook for infringement, the [Garcia] court . . . rob[bed] performers and other creative talent of rights Congress gave them. I won’t be a party to it – Judge Alex…
-
The Reconstruction of Mediation: A Shift Toward Cultural Competency and Social Sophistication
In January 2019, pop culture icon Jay-Z brought attention to a critical issue that has existed for decades but has rarely been addressed—that is, the lack of diverse arbitrators and the effect this has on fundamental fairness. While Jay-Z was…
-
Civil Procedure: Statutory Interpretation: Compensating for Ambiguities in the Workers’ Compensation Act—Schmitz v. U.S. Steel Corp.
In Schmitz v. U.S. Steel Corp., a divided Minnesota Supreme Court held that the state constitutional right to a jury trial applied to individuals bringing suit under the retaliatory discharge provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act (WCA). The court determined,…
-
The Crimes of Digital Capitalism
The European Union (“EU”), among other polities, has illuminated the ways in which hegemonic digital platforms like Amazon, Facebook, Google, and Uber have disrupted the way the public understands competition, democracy, information, and data privacy. As detailed in a recent…
-
The Structural Underpinnings of Access to Justice: Building A Solid Pro Bono Infrastructure
When individuals in the United States face civil legal issues, they do not have a constitutional right to legal counsel and therefore must secure paid counsel, proceed pro se, or qualify for free or pro bono legal assistance. The number…
-
Online Dispute Resolution: Mediating in the Time of COVID-19
By Adrienne Baker It has been one year since our law school transitioned entirely online. The phrases “novel coronavirus” and “social distancing,” once peculiar word pairings, quickly became ubiquitous, upending our expectations for the foreseeable future. However, it’s clear that…
-
Unburdening the Farm: A Dormant Commerce Clause Challenge to Conflicting Standards in Agricultural Production
Under the guise of a health and safety rationale, a recent trend has seen individual states regulating aspects of agricultural production in a way that applies equally to products produced in state and out of state. These regulations, such as…
-
Invisible Among Us: The Epidemic of Homeless Teen Parents
Kia” was fifteen years old when she met her boyfriend. At sixteen years old, she found out she was pregnant, and her parents kicked her out as a result. Now, she is pregnant, homeless, and at just sixteen years old,…
-
Torts: Just Walk Away: How an Overbroad Foreseeability of Harm Standard Could Kill “Curbside Consultations” — Warren v. Dinter, 926 N.W.2d 370 (Minn. 2019)
In Warren v. Dinter, the Minnesota Supreme Court held that a physician who consulted with a nurse practitioner regarding the nurse practitioner’s patient had a duty to the patient. The court reasoned that this duty existed because it was foreseeable…
-
Shared Goals: How the HHS Office of Inspector General Supports Health Care Industry Compliance Efforts
Health care providers in the United States operate in a complex regulatory and business environment that presents many risks. Providers need to manage compliance risks inherent in operating in this environment. The United States Department of Health and Human Services…
-
Legal Strategies for Defending the Combat Veteran in Criminal Court
In early November 2015, we stood in a Mankato, Minnesota, courtroom and held our breaths as a jury announced the fate of our client, a man we had come to love. Levi Minissale is a former Marine who never should…
-
How The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 Continues to Fail the Deaf and Hard Of Hearing
Over 30 years have gone by since President George H.W. Bush signed the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990. Since its passage, many Americans might find it difficult to imagine a world in which an individual with a disability…
-
Storytelling and Truth-Telling: Personal Reflections on the Native American Experience in Law Schools
In January of 2021, the American Association of Law Schools (“AALS”) theme was Freedom, Equality and the Common Good. The Indian Nations and Indigenous Peoples Section of the AALS embraced the theme and announced a call for personal reflections incorporating…
-
Minnesota’s Education System Is Unconstitutional:Will Someone Bring a Compelling Case?
For several decades, Minnesota commissions, task forces, and advocacy groups have warned that our education system has been failing to meet twenty-first century challenges for students who come to school with educational disadvantages. Three constitutional challenges have been made to…
-
Entrenched Racial Hierarchy: Educational Inequality from the Cradle to the LSAT
For my contribution to this special issue of the Minnesota Law Review, I will attempt to situate the problem of black underrepresentation at America’s law schools within the broader context of racial hierarchy in American society. The former has generated…
-
This is Minnesota: An Analysis of Disparities in Black Student Enrollment at the University of Minnesota Law School and the Effects of Systemic Barriers to Black Representation in the Law
Lawyers often occupy powerful positions in the highest levels of our government and economy. Whether drafting legislation, prosecuting, or defending crimes, representing indigent clients in housing court, or finalizing corporate mergers, attorneys influence and operate within one of the most…