Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.
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26 results
for "North Carolina Law Review"
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Abstract:
The potential exists for the judicial advisory authority to jeopardize the balance of power between the three branches of government.
Abstract:
The North Carolina Constitution's Declaration of Rights offers individuals shelter from state encroachment on certain fundamental civil liberties.
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Alfred Yen, professor of law, argues that consumer confusion plays a major role in the United States trademark system, which challenges previous Supreme Court and academic beliefs.
Abstract:
After detailing the factual background of the case, Rand holds that arguments based on the \"commonality\" and \"personality\" of a congressional district can provide that district with a legitimacy beyond racial composition.
Abstract:
During the 1994-95 school year, over 11,000 children were home schooled in the state. This method cannot offer all classes. Requests to public schools for special classes like chemistry challenge the schools in fitting these students in.
Abstract:
Compromise between employer and insurance interests' desire to curtail benefits and workers' desire to keep them resulted in the N.C. Workers' Reform Act of 1994, which benefitted both groups, for example, in cost containment.
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Associate Justice of the NC Supreme Court Harry C. Martin advances the argument that state courts should champion the protection of constitutional rights in the wake of the federal courts' full-scale retreat from the battleground.
Abstract:
The issue is whether or not the court case STATE VS. MITCHELL allowed room for the admissibility of polygraph tests in the courtroom.
Abstract:
The University of North Carolina School of Law is marking its 150th anniversary by remembering its beginnings and milestones along the way, including deanships, major eras in the school's development, and academic programs.
Abstract:
Kenan Professor of Law John V. Orth edits a transcript of the proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of 1868 on the day delegates decided voters should have the right to elect their judges.
Abstract:
North Carolina's usury statutes are designed in part to protect borrowers from unscrupulous lenders' exorbitant penalty fees. A recent court decision, though, has lessened the force of these usury statutes.