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Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Temple University's program with Tsinghua University, now in its 10th year, is the oldest of its kind in China. It may take years to understand how a program that trains a few dozen legal professionals a year may affect the legal rights of 1.3 billion Chinese. But there is no question about the benefits that this program has produced for Temple's…
Descriptors: Judges, Law Schools, Masters Programs, Foreign Countries
Lewis, Roger K. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
A well-publicized design competition is especially beneficial for universities. It allows them to enhance fund raising and stimulate design consciousness among students, the faculty, and even members of the surrounding community. Yet universities rarely conduct competitions, and instead select architects for major projects through a multistep,…
Descriptors: Architecture, Competition, Design Requirements, Competitive Selection
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article describes how a New York institution gives its students a hands-on education in courtroom wrangling. Unlike medical students, who work in teaching hospitals and clinics as they learn, most law students don't set foot in a courtroom until their third and final year, when they have the option of participating in legal clinics. The Touro…
Descriptors: Legal Education (Professions), Experiential Learning, Law Students, Law Schools
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
When New Hampshire's 13 newest lawyers were sworn in to the state bar in May, the ceremony took place a day before they actually graduated from law school. This speedy swearing-in as officers of the court was part of an unorthodox program at the state's only law school, Franklin Pierce Law Center. And while their classmates and thousands of other…
Descriptors: Judges, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Law Schools
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Judge Claude M. Hilton, of the U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Virginia, in March found that scanning the student papers for the purpose of detecting plagiarism is a "highly transformative" use that falls under the fair-use provision of copyright law. He ruled that the company "makes no use of any work's particular expressive or creative…
Descriptors: Judges, Plagiarism, Copyrights, Laws
Chronicle of Higher Education, 1995
Excerpts from Supreme Court opinions on legal standards for federal affirmative action programs include those from the majority opinion by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, a concurring opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia, and a dissenting opinion by Justice John Paul Stevens. (MSE)
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Higher Education
Jaschik, Scott – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1991
A federal appeals court ruled that judges may not dismiss handicapped-discrimination lawsuits against universities solely on the basis of official university statements that allegedly discriminatory practices are appropriate for the academic programs involved. The decision keeps alive a case in which a dyslexic student could not take a…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Decision Making, Disabilities, Educational Discrimination