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Ithaca Journal: Former assistant professor sues Cornell, U.S. Department of Education

October 10, 2018
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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Overlawyered blog, CATO Institute

July 9, 2018
The New Civil Liberties Alliance has evaluated the likely picks on the basis of their posture toward the powers of the administrative state. Click here to read more TweetShareShare0 Shares
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SCOTUS Blog: Monday Round-Up

July 9, 2018
New Civil Liberties Alliance surveys six possible candidates, giving a slight edge to Kethledge over Kavanaugh. Click here to read more TweetShareShare0 Shares
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Law and Liberty: Judge Kethledge is the Best Choice to Curtail the Administrative State

July 8, 2018
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

May 17, 2018
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

May 15, 2018
“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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