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Duke Law School and O’Melveny to host virtual celebration of the lives of Walter and Anne Dellinger

SCOTUSBlog

EDT, Duke Law School and O’Melveny & Myers LLP will co-host a virtual memorial service for Walter Dellinger and his wife, Anne Dellinger. Walter Dellinger, a constitutional scholar who argued 24 cases at the Supreme Court, died on Feb. Share On Saturday, March 19, at 1 p.m. The event is open to all.

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Supreme Court of North Carolina Reverses Convictions Based on Trial Judge Flatly Prohibiting Questions About Implicit Bias to Prospective Jurors

EvidenceProf Blog

Michele Benedetto Neitz, Pulling Back the Curtain: Implicit Bias in the Law School Dean Search Process, 49 SETON HALL L. An implicit bias is “‘an association or preference that is not consciously generated and is experienced without awareness.’"

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“Chief Justice Extols Legacy of Sandra Day O’Connor; In remarks at an award ceremony, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. described his colleague as a trailblazing and civic-minded presence on the Supreme Court”

HowAppealing

described his colleague as a trailblazing and civic-minded presence on the Supreme Court”: Zach Montague of The New York Times has this report. ” And Michael Austin and Jazper Lu of The Duke Chronicle report that “ Chief Justice John Roberts speaks at Duke Law ceremony honoring late Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.”

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US dispatch: ‘independent state legislature’ theory raised by Moore v. Harper threatens US election administration

JURIST

Marisa Wright is a US National Correspondent for JURIST, and a 2L at Harvard Law School. . Harper stems from a challenge to North Carolina’s congressional and legislative redistricting plan as unconstitutional partisan gerrymanders. The North Carolina General Assembly immediately appealed that ruling.

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US dispatch: Supreme Court hears arguments on affirmative action as race-conscious university admissions hang in the balance

JURIST

Marisa Wright is a US National Correspondent for JURIST, and a 2L at Harvard Law School. . The US Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Monday morning in two cases challenging the validity of race-conscious affirmative action programs in college admission. University of North Carolina and Students for Fair Admissions Inc.

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Kafka in America: When Judges Don’t Know the Law

The Crime Report

Anthony Perkins in a still photo from Orson Well’s 1962 film version of “The Trial” In Franz Kafka’s sinister 1925 novel, The Trial, the hero finds himself the defendant in a court case where he is unaware of what law he has broken. North Carolina Justice. Could that happen in the U.S.?

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US dispatch: SCOTUS set to hear arguments in Harvard case that may end affirmative action in higher education

JURIST

Marisa Wright is a US national staff correspondent for JURIST, and a 2L at Harvard Law School. . Supreme Court is set to hear arguments next Monday in a case that could have major implications for racial equality and college admissions. The Court will consider two questions presented by the case.

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