Detention (Academia) - Factbites
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Topic: Detention (Academia)


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 WFU - School of Law - Professor Margaret Taylor Receives 2003 Fried Excellence in Teaching Award
Professor Taylor’s remarkable ability to untangle difficult legal issues and translate them into a form that can be easily understood by both students and colleagues has won her admiration and respect in government circles, in academia, and in the entire advocacy community.
Determined to critique the laws underlying the injustice she saw on that tour, she enrolled in an immigration class during her first year at Yale Law School and wrote a student paper on INS detention policies.
She also served on the advisory board of the Vera Institute of Justice Appearance Assistance Program, a pilot project that tested a model of supervised release as an alternative to INS detention.
www.law.wfu.edu /x2709.xml   (550 words)

  
 Jordan
Christians hold government positions and are represented in the media and academia approximately in proportion to their percentage of the general population.
The Government stated that it had no record of Dashi's detention.
In June 2000, due to a dispute stemming from an intrachurch rivalry between the Jerusalem Patriarchate and the Antioch Orthodox Patriarchate, the Government closed an Arab Orthodox church in Amman that was aligned with the Antioch Patriarch in Damascus, Syria.
www.state.gov /g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2001/nea/8266.htm   (550 words)

  
 The secret history of American literature
Secret world of US jails The United States government, in conjunction with key allies, is running an 'invisible' network of prisons and detention centres into which thousands of suspects have disappeared without trace since the 'war on terror' began.
Even academia is bent on keeping this a secret, mostly because 95% of American professors are socialists (communists) and they love their government jobs.
Barbara Meredith, a vice-president at the Association of American Publishers, a trade group, says that the open access movement could undermine the sustainability of the publishing industry, even though the entire open access literature currently represents less than 1% of what is published.
www.stargeek.com /item/149855.html   (550 words)

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