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Ariana M. Traub; Kellen Mermin-Bunnell; Kelly Wang; Bryan Aaron; Louise P. King; Jennifer F. Kawwass – Health Education & Behavior, 2025
Third- and fourth-year U.S. medical students applying to residency were surveyed between August 6 and October 22, 2022, to assess the impact of "Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (Dobbs)" on medical student residency application location choices. Across all medical specialties, most respondents were unlikely or very unlikely…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Court Litigation, Graduate Medical Education, Pregnancy
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Thomas H. Sawyer; Tonya L. Sawyer – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2025
After participating in an amateur hockey game, the plaintiff sued Midwest Training in Lake Superior Court, alleging Midwest Training committed negligence in failing to provide him with protection against third-party criminal attacks while he was on its premises.
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Team Sports, Athletics, Victims of Crime
Robert Kim – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Social media companies are increasingly being called to account for how their apps are affecting young people. Robert Kim explores "In re: Social Media Addiction," a lawsuit that combines multiple cases that have been brought against social media companies for their addictive effects. The cases illustrate the tension between product…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Social Media, Addictive Behavior, Freedom of Speech
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Dwedor W. Ford – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
This defamation case between a youth tennis player, through his parents, against the parent of another young tennis player spotlights the intricate balance between safeguarding participants' rights and ensuring a harassment-free sporting environment.
Descriptors: Racquet Sports, Youth, Bullying, Court Litigation
Robert Kim – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
In June 2023, the Supreme Court held that the admissions systems at the University of North Carolina (UNC) and Harvard University were racially discriminatory, effectively ending affirmative action. Are race-neutral admissions policies at selective K-12 schools next? Bob Kim considers two circuit court cases -- "Coalition for TJ v. Fairfax…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Race, Diversity, Court Litigation
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Karen Grabowski; Robert Morgan; Faith Scanlon – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Intellectual functioning impacts defendants' competence to stand trial, though research on this population remains limited. This study replicated and advanced prior work, focusing on defendants' demographic, clinical, cognitive, and criminal justice variables and their association with length of hospitalization and restoration determinations.…
Descriptors: Intelligence Quotient, Intelligence Differences, Intellectual Disability, Court Litigation
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Tasminda K. Dhaliwal; Jerome Graham; Yi-Chih Chiang; Andrew S. Johnson – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2024
Corporal punishment (CP), or inflicting pain through spanking, hitting, and paddling, is still legally sanctioned and exercised in U.S. schools. We use critical discourse analysis and draw on state policy documents and data from the Office of Civil Rights to investigate which discourses pervade policy texts and how CP is practiced. These sources…
Descriptors: Punishment, Discipline, Discipline Policy, Discourse Analysis
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Thomas H. Sawyer; Tonya L. Sawyer – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2024
In this case the Court upheld the age-old doctrine of assumption of risk, affirming the inherent dangers of teeing off in golf. Despite a nasty trip on a tree root, the golfer was not entitled to recover for his injuries due to the primary assumption of the risk doctrine. This case sets a precedent for understanding the potential hazards of the…
Descriptors: Athletics, Recreational Activities, Negligence, Court Litigation
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Dennis D. Long; Carolyn J. Tice – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2024
The 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization overturned reproductive, health, and abortion rights for women. Using the NASW Code of Ethics, a course assignment is offered for students to examine the professional, ethical commitment and responsibility of social workers to advocate for these rights and…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Pregnancy, Personal Autonomy, Social Work
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Kevin Daniel Goldstein – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
This article takes as its point of departure an incident in which Helen Keller was accused of plagiarising a short story while residing at the Perkins Institution for the Blind: the so-called "Frost King" incident. Keller's guilt or innocence is not the subject of my inquiry. Rather, how did the culture of Perkins -- as fostered by its…
Descriptors: Blindness, Students with Disabilities, Special Schools, School Culture
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Alice Kirsten Bosma – Field Methods, 2024
Emotions are omnipresent in any court of law. In this short take, I suggest applying the Articulated Thought in Simulated Situations (ATSS) paradigm as a useful addition to supplement methodologies like interviewing and observations. ATSS, which originated in social sciences to study cognitive--behavioral topics, can be easily adapted for use in…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Simulated Environment, Psychological Patterns, Interviews
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Edmund Hamann; Theresa Catalano; Jessica Mitchell-McCollough – Bilingual Research Journal, 2024
"Lau" transformed schooling for millions of students, but we should examine what its "equal protection" and assimilationist logic did not entail and thereby illuminate prospective academic and social good that it did not generate. This paper does just that by examining Nebraska's well-resourced second-largest district and how…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, English Learners, Bilingual Education, School Districts
Collins, Jonathan E. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2023
Book banning and censorship is appearing again in states and school districts. The history of book banning goes back as far as recorded time. Columnist Jonathan E. Collins discusses the U.S. court system's history support of the First Amendment and against censorship. He outlines the implications of the most recent book banning incidents and the…
Descriptors: Books, Censorship, Psychological Patterns, Educational Legislation
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Cantrell, Tom – Research in Drama Education, 2023
This article analyses approaches to listening when creating theatre using the words of real people via a recent tribunal play by Richard Norton-Taylor and Nicolas Kent, "Value Engineering: Scenes from the Grenfell Inquiry" (2021). The article considers the play in relation to transitional justice practices to reveal how listening…
Descriptors: Drama, Listening, Foreign Countries, Justice
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Mitchell, Matthew – Qualitative Research Journal, 2023
Purpose: This article develops a methodological framework to support qualitative analyses of legal texts. Scholars across the social sciences and humanities use qualitative methods to study legal phenomena but often overlook formal legal texts as productive sites for analysis. Moreover, when qualitative researchers do analyze legal texts, they…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Content Analysis, Research Methodology, Laws
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