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”
-
Fifty Years After the Consumer Credit Protection Act: The High Price of Wage Garnishment
Judicially enforced debt collection in Minnesota is almost as old as the state. In 1872, just twelve years after Minnesota entered the union, a creditor sought to collect a debt by using the then-common practice of attaching personal property. The…
-
Why Are the Twin Cities So Segregated?
Why are the Twin Cities so segregated? The Minneapolis-Saint Paul metropolitan area is known for its progressive politics and forward-thinking approach to regional planning, but these features have not prevented the formation of some of the nation’s widest racial disparities…
-
The Application of Mercy: Equal Treatment for All Youth Who Commit Sex Offenses
Both adults and youth who commit sex crimes may be mandated to register in their community as sex offenders. Depending on the laws governing the jurisdiction and the type of crime committed, a youth who commits a sex crime could…
-
Drug Pricing—The Next Compliance Waterloo
“Drug prices are too high.” With these five simple words, Alex Azar II, former president of Lilly USA LLC, and now the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary, captured the essence of the drug pricing war. It is…
-
Refunding the Community: What Defunding MPD Means and Why It Is Urgent and Realistic
“(The police) are a very real menace to every black cat alive in this country. And no matter how many people say, ‘You’re being paranoid when you talk about police brutality’—I know what I’m talking about. I survived those streets…
-
MyPillow Lands Hard in Judge Wright’s Court
By Mike Steenson In Smartmatic USA Corp. v. Lindell,1 Smartmatic sued Michael Lindell and MyPillow, Inc. in Minnesota federal district court, alleging defamation and violation of Minnesota’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act based on Lindell’s claims of fraud in the 2020…
-
Pasture to Package: Ensuring Food Safety Compliance and Animal Welfare Integrity in Grass-Fed Beef Production
Consumer demand for grass-fed beef is on the rise, and some of the drivers of the grass-fed beef trend are consumer perceptions that, first, the practices of the grass-fed industry mean that the meat poses fewer health and safety risks…
-
High Stakes for High-Skilled Immigrants: An Analysis of Changes Made to High-Skilled Immigration Policy in the First Year of the Trump Administration in Comparison to Changes Made During the First Year of Previous Presidential Administrations
“Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.” -Groucho Marx Immigration policy in the United States is one of the most divisive issues facing our country. Some groups, such…
-
The Performance Right—A World in Transition
17 U.S.C. § 106 states: [T]he owner of [a] copyright . . . has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following: (4) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion…
-
Mitchell Hamline: Two Histories, A Common Future
It is a distinct pleasure and a true honor to help introduce the first-ever joint law review issue of the Mitchell Hamline School of Law. As readers should well know, Mitchell Hamline School of Law is the result of the…
-
The Minnesota Stand Down Model: Bringing Stand Down Courts to Rural Communities
Melvin, a Vietnam War veteran, approached the small room tucked at the back of the Army National Guard Armory in Fergus Falls, Minnesota, a town of 13,000 in the northwest of the state. Melvin’s social worker at the Department of…
-
A New Beginning
What did it take to start a new law review and, more to the point, what did it take when the law school itself was brand new? The circumstances surrounding the launch of the Hamline Law Review in 1978 were…
-
The Prince Estate: How Intestacy Works, How It Could Work, and How It Fails as an Estate Plan
Prince Rogers Nelson (the musician known as “Prince”) died on April 21, 2016, in Minnesota. It is estimated that the beloved pop star left an estate worth $100–$300 million. He apparently left no will or trust to direct the disposition…
-
From Langdell to Lab: The Opportunities and Challenges of Experiential Learning in the First Semester
Time is the friend of learning and the enemy of teaching. Learners learn best when they have ample time to explore, experiment, fail, and reflect. Teaching, at least teaching in a graduate professional program like law school, is time-limited: a…
-
The Forensic Interviewer at Trial: Guidelines for the Admission and Scope of Expert Testimony Concerning a Forensic Interview in a Case of Child Abuse (Revised and Expanded)
“If we could first know where we are, and whither we are tending, we could then better judge what to do, and how to do it.” –Abraham Lincoln The field of forensic interviewing is approaching five decades and is an…
-
A Little Less Regulation: Why Federal Pain Management Laws Are Hurting State Efforts to Combat the Opioid Epidemic
Dan Baker was a healthy, athletic, young man when he first enrolled at the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Instead of drinking or partying, Dan spent his time playing baseball and hockey. While enrolled, he suffered a…
-
Foreword
For more than 150 combined years, Hamline University School of Law and William Mitchell College of Law have left an indelible mark on Minnesota’s legal community. Graduates of these institutions reached the highest halls of power, litigated the most complex…
-
“Animals May Take Pity on Us”: Using Traditional Tribal Beliefs to Address Animal Abuse and Family Violence Within Tribal Nations
The relationship between Native people and animals has a rich, complex history. For tens of thousands of years, Native people have cultivated their symbiotic relationship with the animal world, and these relationships demonstrate a unique centralized status that animals have…
-
Nonmoral Theoretical Disagreement in Law
Many legal positivists no longer deny that there is a necessary connection between law and morality. This concession, however, leaves positivism’s other theses intact. Positivism’s central thesis is that, whether always the case, typically the case, or the case in…
-
Damages for Tortious Harm to Pets: Minnesota’s Market Value Approach Severely Undercompensates Plaintiffs
Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the world has experienced immense loss: loss of normalcy, loss of human interaction, and loss of good health to name a few. For an estimated twenty-three million American households, however, it was also…
-
School Finance Litigation and the Separation of Powers
Providing and maintaining an education system is one of the most important functions of state and local governments. Few would dispute that fact. Educational attainment is linked to students’ long-term economic success and to the social mobility that has marked…
-
Now the Border is Everywhere: Why a Border Search Exception Based on Race Can No Longer Stand
The faster we deport undocumented immigrants, the safer our country will be. This belief has become a foundational tenant of the Trump administration’s immigration regime and its increased use of the expedited removal program. Expedited removal was originally introduced in…
-
Minnesota Supreme Court Misses the Mark on Abandoned Property Rights—Hall v. State, 908 N.W.2D 345 (Minn. 2018)
In its recent holding in Hall v. State, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled on two separate issues related to the Minnesota Unclaimed Property Act (MUPA). The first issue was whether owners of unclaimed property taken into the custody of the…
-
Previous Events
2023 Mitchell Hamline Law Review Symposium The Mitchell Hamline Law Review in coordination with the Center for the Study of Black Life and the Law highlighted and explored Furtive Blackness & The Afterlives of Slavery as part of the spring…
-
Square Pegs and Round Holes: Differentiated Instruction and the Law Classroom
As the academic semester begins, law students enter the classroom with sharpened pencils and charged laptops. Law professors enter the classroom with prepared notes and tabbed casebooks. But how will law professors ensure that the learning of each individual student…