Make sure you have a copy on your bookshelf. The Law of Higher Education, Fifth Edition, is the most up-to-date and comprehensive reference, research source, and practical legal guide for college and university administrators, campus attorneys, legal counsel, and institutional researchers, addressing all the major legal issues and regulatory developments in higher education. In the increasingly litigious environment of higher education, William A. Kaplin and Barbara A. Lee’s clear, cogent, and contextualized legal guide proves more and more indispensable every year. Over 3,000 new cases related to higher education have been decided since the publication of the previous edition, and scores of changes to higher education law are made each year. Every section of the fifth edition contains new material, including those related to: Hate speech and free speech rights of faculty in public universities Sharing of research with international colleagues Intellectual property and peer-to-peer file sharing Student suicide Campus safety Police and administrators’ right to search students’ residence hall rooms Governmental support for religious institutions and religious autonomy rights of individual public institutions Collective bargaining and antidiscrimination laws Nondiscrimination and affirmative action in employment, admissions, and financial aid Family and Medical Leave Act and workers’ compensation FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act)
University of Pennsylvania, 33 Fleming v. Jefferson County School District, 383 Fleming v. New York University, 478–479 Flint v. Dennison, 698 Florida Carry, Inc. v. University of North Florida, 836 Florida ex rel. Hawkins v.
This text draws exclusively on federal and state cases emerging from campuses and includes helpful pedagogical elements--such as chapter outlines, questions for discussion, side bars, text boxes, research aids, and summation of law--to ...
Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971), the North Carolina Court of Appeals held that the Davidson College police did not have the ... to be active members of a Christian church; Davidson students were required to take a course in religion; ...
... D., 1183 Kaye, R. E., 965n Keane, A., 1384n Kearns, E. C., 368 Keefe, J. H., 162 Keeton, M. T., 14 Keeton, W. P., ... See Attorneys Leiser, B., 718 Lemley, M., 1514 Lemons, S., 1149n Leonard, J., 128, 903, 1044 Leskovac, H., 1641, ...
[I]n 1982, the Supreme Court decided a trilogy of cases reaffirming the continued viability of the symbiotic relationship, close nexus and public function tests, as workable frameworks for state action analysis: Blum v.
In addition, federal laws and rules for conflicts of interest may extend to employees of institutions receiving federal ... The law of higher education: A comprehensive guide to legal implications of administrative decision making.
Now in its fourth edition, this book reflects the extraordinary growth in the law of higher education and the accompanying rise in scholarship and commentary on higher education law and governance.
A Colorado appellate court relied on Ross to reject the educational malpractice claims of nineteen students in Tolman v. CenCor Career Colleges, Inc., 851 P.2d 203 (Colo. App. 1992), affirmed, 868 P.2d 396 (Colo.
A Teacher's Manual is available to professors. This book also is available in a three-hole punched, alternative loose-leaf version printed on 8.5 x 11 inch paper with wider margins and with the same pagination as the hardbound book.
Title IX was proposed by Representative Edith Green (DOR), chair of a special House Education Labor Committee which reviewed the findings of Nixon«s 1970 Task Force on Women«s Rights and Responsibilities. Committee hearings described ...