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Stanford, California, USA
Csatlakozott 2008. augusztus

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  1. 4 perccel ezelőtt

    Stanford Law Professor talks to about the newest Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett on election ballots stating, "It will make the court seem less legitimate if she weighs in at this point on a 5-4 decision."

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  2. 3 órával ezelőtt

    “Cash bail is on life support. It is going to disappear one way or the other. It may just go out with a whimper and not a bang,” says SLS's Robert Weisberg via :

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  3. retweetelte
    9 órával ezelőtt

    Stanford Law School’s Black Law Students Association (BLSA) marks 50 years since they started at SLS. Read more in

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  4. 9 órával ezelőtt

    SLS's and MIT's both co-directors of write an op-ed for the about how administrators and ordinary citizens came together to make a fair, safe and secure national vote possible.

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  5. retweetelte
    nov. 6.

    Stanford Latinx Law Students Association (SLLSA) marks 50 years since they started at SLS. Read more in

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  6. nov. 6.

    Stanford Law's Jeffrey Fisher comments on the latest Supreme Court conflict involving religious beliefs and gay rights via .

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  7. nov. 6.

    PBS discusses what we currently know about vote counting and the election-related lawsuits with SLS's .

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  8. retweetelte
    nov. 6.

    Join , , Jane Bambauer, and me for a discussion of The Filter Bubble: What’s the Problem, and what (if anything) should be done about it? Friday, November 6, 2020, 1:30 – 3:00 PM Pacific time. Register to attend: ­­

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  9. nov. 6.

    Stanford Law Professor Bernadette Meyler () writes an op-ed for on President Trump's legal war against the US election results.

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  10. nov. 6.

    . looks at why Big Tech may be hoping for a Joe Biden presidency. Stanford Law Professor comments:

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  11. nov. 6.

    Proposition 22 was passed in California, what are businesses like Uber and Lyft planning to do next? talks with Stanford Law's William Gould IV about California's proposition system.

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  12. nov. 5.

    The California Privacy Protection Agency will be the first of its kind tasked solely with enforcing privacy laws. 's comments via .

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  13. nov. 5.

    “Historically, you’ve seen about 1% of ballots get bounced for one reason or another... but people are more attuned to the deadline this year, and voters are more aware of the criteria for casting absentee ballots" says SLS's via

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  14. nov. 5.

    “This is a 100-year flood of voters that we were seeing,” says SLS's Nate on how more than 93m have already cast ballots as election campaign enters final stretch via :

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  15. nov. 5.

    Are we having a healthy election? talks with SLS's Nate along with Zahavah Levine and Chelsey Davidson to discuss how the election is actually going.

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  16. nov. 4.

    William Gould IV, Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, at Stanford Law will lead an independent review of San Francisco City's equal employment opportunity practices to prevent workplace discrimination.

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  17. nov. 4.

    "...in every recent election there have been millions of ballots that are not counted on election night. Moreover, to do otherwise would disenfranchise overseas military voters whose votes frequently come in after election night.” says SLS's :

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  18. nov. 4.

    Stanford Law's Alicia Seiger () writes for about what a global pandemic has taught us about tackling climate change.

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  19. nov. 4.

    “[The changes] make it less likely for drivers to be able to assert that they’re employees,” says SLS's William Gould IV on the possible changes the Trump administration could make on independent contractors via :

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  20. retweetelte
    nov. 3.

    What happens for post-election? lays out some of the possibilities, including the chance of making net neutrality protections permanent nationwide.

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