Search results for: “Hilfsreiche Prüfungsunterlagen verwirklicht Ihren Wunsch nach der Zertifikat der Certified Implementation Specialist – Vulnerability Response 🦅 Suchen Sie jetzt auf ➽ www.itzert.com 🢪 nach ☀ CIS-VR ️☀️ und laden Sie es kostenlos herunter 🚹CIS-VR Praxisprüfung”
-
From Common Law to Affirmative Consent: Reforming Minnesota’s Criminal Sexual Conduct Laws
The time to reform Minnesota’s criminal sexual conduct (“CSC”) laws is now. Conceptions of sex, rape, and consent have evolved from paternalistic ideals and given way to modern reforms and an ever-expanding understanding of sexual relationships. One need only watch…
-
Barring Methadone Behind Bars: How Prisons Err When Denying Methadone Treatment to Inmates with Opioid Use Disorder
As the opioid epidemic continues to ravage the United States for a third decade, communities look for new solutions. For the 200,000 heroin-addicted individuals who pass through correctional facilities each year, prison may be the opportunity for change. Incarceration pauses…
-
Stop in the Name of Love: Putting an End to the Felony Prosecution of Adolescent Sexting
“I raise up my voice—not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard … We cannot succeed when half of us are held back.”—Malala Yousafzai The application of criminal sexual conduct statutes to juveniles…
-
Introduction: Exploring the Lawyer as Business Leader
On March 22, 2017, business people, lawyers, and law students joined the Mitchell Hamline Law Review for its symposium entitled “Lawyers as Business Leaders: The Unique Skills, Knowledge, and Perspective of a Legal Education” at Able Seedhouse + Brewery in…
-
Barriers to Due Process for Indigent Asylum Seekers in Immigration Detention
“Under my administration, anyone who illegally crosses the border will be detained until they are removed out of our country and back to the country from which they came.” “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country.…
-
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 Simultaneous Pursuit of Cost Recovery and Contribution under CERCLA: Making Sense of CERCLA’s Private Party Remedies in the Aftermath of Atlantic Research
Those who follow Supreme Court litigation know that the Court is prone to let issues percolate in state and lower federal courts before granting certiorari. Environmental litigation is no exception. Knowing this, it seems only a matter of time before…
-
Work Drive Matters: An Assessment of the Relationship Between Law Students’ Work-Related Preferences and Academic Performance
I have been fortunate to work with a number of law students who have substantially outperformed traditional predictors of academic success and bar passage, including the students’ scores on the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) and their undergraduate grade point…
-
Constitutional Law: If These Walls Could Talk: Giving Undue Deference to Religious Actors by Expanding the Ecclesiastical Abstention Doctrine—Pfeil v. St. Matthews Evangelical Lutheran Church of Unaltered Augsburg Confession
Good name in man and woman, dear my lord,Is the immediate jewel of their souls.Who steals my purse steals trash; ‘tis something, nothing;‘Twas mine, ‘tis his, and has been slave to thousands;But he that filches from me my good nameRobs me of…
-
The $2 Billion-Plus Price of Injustice: A Methodological Map for Police Reform in the George Floyd Era
The death of George Floyd on May 25, 2020 under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer forced America again to confront the connection between racism and law enforcement. It also compelled the City of Minneapolis to act. Merely a…
-
Designing Children: Tort Liability for Medical Providers in the Era of CRISPR/CAS-9 Geneticc Editing
Once only thought possible in the realm of science fiction, today, scientists are able to edit genes in human embryos using a technique that employs a Clustered, Regularly Interspaced, Short Palindromic Repeat (CRISPR) and a CRISPR associated protein (Cas)—typically Cas-9.…
-
Congress Strikes Back: The Institutionalization of the Congressional Review Act
“Right now, I feel like I could take on the whole empire myself,” Dak declared shortly before the Battle of Hoth. Though Luke Skywalker’s co-pilot did not mean American federal bureaucracy, the United States Congress shared a similar disdain for…
-
The Winter of Discontent: A Circumscribed Chevron
Now is the winter of our discontentMade glorious summer by this sun of York;And all the clouds that lour’d upon our houseIn the deep bosom of the ocean buried. Anti-administrativists are poised for a coup d’état. For the last thirty…
-
Foreword
On December 10, 2015, Hamline University School of Law and William Mitchell College of Law combined to create the largest law school in Minnesota. This was a historic step in the history of legal education in America, and it elevated…
-
Some Reflections of a Métis Law Student and Assistant Professor on Indigenous Legal Education in Canada
I am a citizen of the Manitoba Métis Federation. My mother’s and father’s families are originally from the area surrounding the Red River in Manitoba. Sometime after the Red River Resistance in 1870, my family went west into Saskatchewan, where…
-
Levels of Generality & Originalism: Proposing a New Way Forward as Originalism Continues to Expand
New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen, marks the next evolution in U.S. gun laws as the judiciary continues to define the limits state actors can place on law-abiding citizens. Underlying the case’s merits is the revival…
-
A Change in Military Pension Division: The End of Court-Adjudicated Indemnification – Howell v. Howell
Howell v. Howell is a statutory interpretation case in which the United States Supreme Court held that the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act (USFSPA) preempts a state court from ordering a retired servicemember to indemnify a former spouse for…
-
Creating the Lawyer as Business Leader
The roles for lawyers as leaders in business are growing exponentially. From traditional roles at law firms and in-house legal departments to roles in management, compliance, human resources, entrepreneurship, and more, opportunities abound for lawyers interested in taking on leadership…
-
Wisconsin’s 3/5 Compromise: Prison Gerrymandering in Wisconsin Dilutes Minority Votes to Inflate White Districts’ Population
“‘If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.’ Unless you’re losing your children, or your home, or your healthcare . . . .”– National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel Let the case of the…
-
An Exacerbated Power Imbalance: The Danger in Allowing AI to Render Arbitral Awards in Employment Arbitration
Like all types of alternative dispute resolution (ADR), arbitration has continually increased in popularity in recent years. Arbitration is highly favored in the employment law realm, with employers’ use of mandatory arbitration clauses in employee contracts skyrocketing from only 2%…
-
Traditional Problems: How Tribal Same-Sex Marriage Bans Threaten Tribal Sovereignty
In another time he would have been honored. Instead he was murdered. The above statement is from the PBS documentary Two Spirits, a film examining the life and tragic death of Fred Martinez, a sixteen- year-old Navajo Indian, born physically…
-
Putting Family First: The Need for Reform in Minnesota’s Foster Care Licensing Statutes and Processes to Support Relative Placement
Like many states, Minnesota’s child protection system faces serious challenges in its mission to protect children and support families. The balance between child safety and family preservation is elusive. Minnesota has swung the pendulum significantly to the side that prioritizes…
-
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…
-
Legacies of a Pandemic: Remote Attestation and Electronic Wills
With COVID-19 and its variants now a leading cause of death in the United States and around the world, many feel a new urgency to finalize their estate plans. At the same time, health officials, in their effort to curb…
-
Witnessed From the Justice Bus: Covid Drove Equal Justice Off the Road, But Technology Grabbed the Wheel and Is Steering Us Into the Future
Thirty feet above the marble entrance to the Supreme Court looms the Great American Promise: “Equal Justice Under Law.” Chiseled by hand before the building was completed in 1935, the bold pledge—though etched in stone—remains distant and unfulfilled in neighborhoods…