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Stem cell research funding bill [US Senate] News
Stem cell research funding bill [US Senate]
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
July 18, 2006 09:53:00 pm

Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act, passed by the US Senate July 18, 2006 [increasing federal funding for embryonic stem cell research]. Read the full text of the bill [PDF]. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Latest DISPATCHES
Canada dispatch: inconsistent immigration decisions reveal procedural defects in work permit applications

Canada dispatch: inconsistent immigration decisions reveal procedural defects in work permit applications

SCOTUS dispatch: Justices probe limits of state bans on transgender athletes in girls’ sports

SCOTUS dispatch: Justices probe limits of state bans on transgender athletes in girls’ sports

Latest COMMENTARY
Soldiers in Robes: The Case Against Military Immigration Judges

Soldiers in Robes: The Case Against Military Immigration Judges

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
Kenya’s Health Data Deal With the US: What the Agreement Gets Right—and What It Misses in the Age of AI

Kenya’s Health Data Deal With the US: What the Agreement Gets Right—and What It Misses in the Age of AI

by Shirley A. Genga | Free State Centre for Human Rights
Latest FEATURES
Supreme Court Takes Up Transgender Athletes in Girls’ Sports

Supreme Court Takes Up Transgender Athletes in Girls’ Sports

‘The Powerful Already Know the Truth’ — An Interview with Academic Noam Chomsky

‘The Powerful Already Know the Truth’ — An Interview with Academic Noam Chomsky

THIS DAY @ LAW

Eighteenth Amendment came into effect

On January 16, 1920, the Eighteenth Amendment to the US Constitution came into effect as scheduled one year after ratification, marking the beginning of Prohibition. Learn more about Temperance and Prohibition from Professor K. Austin Kerr of the Ohio State University Department of History.

English Parliament bans Roman Catholicism

On January 16, 1581, the English Parliament banned Roman Catholicism throughout the country during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. From that time on, Catholicism declined in England until the Catholic Emancipation of the late 18th century.

Read the history of the Roman Catholic Church in England.

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