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Kansas juvenile jury trial ruling [Kansas SC] News
Kansas juvenile jury trial ruling [Kansas SC]
June 21, 2008 10:37:00 am

In the Matter of L.M., Supreme Court of the State of Kansas, June 20, 2008 [ruling that juvenile defendants have a constitutional right to a jury trial]. Read the full text of the opinion. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Canada dispatch: Montreal activist Yves Engler found guilty over email campaign to police, original harassment charge dropped

Canada dispatch: Montreal activist Yves Engler found guilty over email campaign to police, original harassment charge dropped

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SCOTUS dispatch: Justices consider Trump’s power to fire fed governor

Latest COMMENTARY
The Rohingya Crisis in Court: A Guide to the ICJ Proceedings

The Rohingya Crisis in Court: A Guide to the ICJ Proceedings

by Arnav Laroia and Ria Garg | West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences
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Unplugged from International Law: What Iran’s Internet Shutdown Reveals About Modern Sovereignty

by AmirAli Maleki
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From ‘Ghana Beyond Aid’ to US Detention: The Rise and Fall of Ken Ofori-Atta

THIS DAY @ LAW

US Supreme Court decided Dartmouth College case

On February 2, 1819, the US Supreme Court decided Dartmouth College v. Woodward, ruling that the charter of a college was a contract that a state could not alter arbitrarily.

New Amsterdam incorporated

On February 2, 1653, the City of New Amsterdam was incorporated by the Dutch Republic. After the British conquest, the city was renamed New York after the Duke of York.

Breviary of Alaric put into effect by Visigoth king

King Alaric II of the Visigoths put the Breviary of Alaric, a collection of Roman laws, into effect on February 2, 506. The breviary contains constitutions and laws of the newly fallen Roman Empire, including the Theodosian code, and parts of the Gregorian and Hermogenian Codes. The Breviary of Alaric predated the Byzantine Empire's Code of Justinian by 23 years.  Read an entry on the Breviary of Alaric from the Encyclopaedia Brittanica.

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