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Ithaca Journal: Former assistant professor sues Cornell, U.S. Department of Education
A former Cornell University professor who faced a sexual misconduct allegation is suing the university, the U.S. Department of Education and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. In the lawsuit, Mukund Vengalatorre, a former assistant professor of physics, claims the university mishandled an investigation into the allegation as well as his tenure review process. The suit states he was discriminated against…
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Law and Liberty: Judge Kethledge is the Best Choice to Curtail the Administrative State
The Trump administration has made a priority of shrinking the administrative state. A recent study authored by the New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA), which is headed by the prominent constitutional-law scholar Philip Hamburger, concludes that “If President Trump wishes to appoint another justice who would respect the Constitution and shrink the administrative state, he would…
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SCOTUS blog: Academic highlight: Hamburger and Siegel on the constitutionality of Chevron deference
Academic highlight: Hamburger and Siegel on the constitutionality of Chevron deference “Is Chevron deference unconstitutional? Congress, several justices and legal academics are debating the legitimacy of this decades-old principle of administrative law. In Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council Inc., decided over 30 years ago, the Supreme Court declared that courts must defer to a federal agency’s reasonable interpretation…
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The Economist: Who Has the Right to Judge Americans
“An amicus brief filed by the New Civil Liberties Alliance, a non-profit group, asserts that the SEC, in effect, gamed the civil-service process to obtain sympathetic judges, and that another agency, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, was similarly adept in using the rules to dump a judge it found to be too independent.” Click here…
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