Official Google Blog: Finding the laws that govern us:
11/17/2009 09:05:00 AM
"Starting today [November 17], we're enabling people everywhere to find and read full text legal opinions from U.S. federal and state district, appellate and supreme courts using Google Scholar."
Information technology, intellectual property law (patents, trademarks and copyrights), U.S. Constitutional Law, European Union (EU) law, world law
LawPundit Pages
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Tech Tidbits: Copyright Matters - The Hill's Hillicon Valley
Tech Tidbits: Copyright Matters - The Hill's Hillicon Valley by Kim Hart currently notes the Google settlement with Authors Guild and the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.
Global Warming and the Real Truth : Did Scientists Doctor the Data and Silence and Discredit Critics?
We have posted at length previously about the slipshod manner in which evidence is handled in the mainstream arts and sciences. See also Man's History is a question of EVIDENCE: Where was Troy? Where did Paris take Helen of Troy? Greece & the Origins of Writing in Western Civilization
We now have a scandal in climate research.
What the Global Warming Emails Reveal - WSJ.com:
"[S]cientists appear to urge each other to present a "unified" view on the theory of man-made climate change while discussing the importance of the "common cause"; to advise each other on how to smooth over data so as not to compromise the favored hypothesis; to discuss ways to keep opposing views out of leading journals; and to give tips on how to "hide the decline" of temperature in certain inconvenient data....
[W]e do now have hundreds of emails that give every appearance of testifying to concerted and coordinated efforts by leading climatologists to fit the data to their conclusions while attempting to silence and discredit their critics. In the department of inconvenient truths, this one surely deserves a closer look by the media, the U.S. Congress and other investigative bodies."
Read the rest here.
We now have a scandal in climate research.
What the Global Warming Emails Reveal - WSJ.com:
"[S]cientists appear to urge each other to present a "unified" view on the theory of man-made climate change while discussing the importance of the "common cause"; to advise each other on how to smooth over data so as not to compromise the favored hypothesis; to discuss ways to keep opposing views out of leading journals; and to give tips on how to "hide the decline" of temperature in certain inconvenient data....
[W]e do now have hundreds of emails that give every appearance of testifying to concerted and coordinated efforts by leading climatologists to fit the data to their conclusions while attempting to silence and discredit their critics. In the department of inconvenient truths, this one surely deserves a closer look by the media, the U.S. Congress and other investigative bodies."
Read the rest here.
The Criminal Justice Leviathan : Who Should be in Jails and Prisons and Why? Right and Left Join to Take On U.S. Over Criminal Justice - NYTimes.com
The United States has the largest population of imprisoned citizens among the civilized nations of the world.
But for what reason?
As my first mentor at Stanford Law School, Herbert Packer, cogently explained in his book The Limits of the Criminal Sanction, there are many undesirable things in society which are simply not rightly subjects for the criminal justice system, and yet, as Adam Liptak observes in his November 23, 2009 New York Times article,
Right and Left Join to Take On U.S. Over Criminal Justice
there are, by count of the Heritage Foundation,
currently over 4400 criminal offenses in the U.S. federal code.
When I taught Anglo-American law in the FFA program at the University of Trier Law School in Germany, I delighted each semester in asking my fledgling first-year students, who were also in the process of taking their first course in German Criminal Law [German Strafrecht], what the purpose of the criminal law was, and the almost unanimous answer given was that the purpose of the criminal law was to PUNISH offenders of the law.
And that is the view of the criminal law held by many people of many nations, also in the United States - a view which is as good as totally erroneous.
As I explained to my students, the PRINCIPAL PURPOSE of the criminal law is of course to PREVENT criminality, and not merely to punish people after the harm has already been done. Criminal sanctions are legislated in order to define and establish what kinds of human behaviour are legally undesirable in civilized society and to set penalties as high as possible to serve as barriers to the commission of legal wrongs. The more heinous a forbidden legal action, the higher the penalty which the law threatens. In legal terms, this is called DETERRENCE.
We have criminal laws because we hope thereby to deter the commission of crimes. The infliction of punishment is a necessary result of the breaking of those laws. However, the pure infliction of punishment is contrary to contemporary Western norms. Our modern Western Civilization is not a barbaric system of retribution but is rather based on the rule of law, which forbids the kind of blood revenge common in primitive cultures and backward religions. Indeed, the more significant the punishment component in law, the more primitive the society which imposes that punishment.
At Stanford, I helped John Kaplan, who became my mentor after Herbert Packer's tragic and untimely passing, write and edit his still extant textbook, Criminal Justice. One of his key lines of thinking about criminal law was the understanding that law is a reflection of the society or non-society out of which it emerges. Societal rules on the high seas are not the same as those in suburbia. Ultimately, whether a society is enlightened and civilized or is a barbarian collection of near savages is something which we can easily judge from their criminal justice system.
Read Liptak's article for potential forthcoming changes in the American criminal justice system.
But for what reason?
As my first mentor at Stanford Law School, Herbert Packer, cogently explained in his book The Limits of the Criminal Sanction, there are many undesirable things in society which are simply not rightly subjects for the criminal justice system, and yet, as Adam Liptak observes in his November 23, 2009 New York Times article,
Right and Left Join to Take On U.S. Over Criminal Justice
there are, by count of the Heritage Foundation,
currently over 4400 criminal offenses in the U.S. federal code.
When I taught Anglo-American law in the FFA program at the University of Trier Law School in Germany, I delighted each semester in asking my fledgling first-year students, who were also in the process of taking their first course in German Criminal Law [German Strafrecht], what the purpose of the criminal law was, and the almost unanimous answer given was that the purpose of the criminal law was to PUNISH offenders of the law.
And that is the view of the criminal law held by many people of many nations, also in the United States - a view which is as good as totally erroneous.
As I explained to my students, the PRINCIPAL PURPOSE of the criminal law is of course to PREVENT criminality, and not merely to punish people after the harm has already been done. Criminal sanctions are legislated in order to define and establish what kinds of human behaviour are legally undesirable in civilized society and to set penalties as high as possible to serve as barriers to the commission of legal wrongs. The more heinous a forbidden legal action, the higher the penalty which the law threatens. In legal terms, this is called DETERRENCE.
We have criminal laws because we hope thereby to deter the commission of crimes. The infliction of punishment is a necessary result of the breaking of those laws. However, the pure infliction of punishment is contrary to contemporary Western norms. Our modern Western Civilization is not a barbaric system of retribution but is rather based on the rule of law, which forbids the kind of blood revenge common in primitive cultures and backward religions. Indeed, the more significant the punishment component in law, the more primitive the society which imposes that punishment.
At Stanford, I helped John Kaplan, who became my mentor after Herbert Packer's tragic and untimely passing, write and edit his still extant textbook, Criminal Justice. One of his key lines of thinking about criminal law was the understanding that law is a reflection of the society or non-society out of which it emerges. Societal rules on the high seas are not the same as those in suburbia. Ultimately, whether a society is enlightened and civilized or is a barbarian collection of near savages is something which we can easily judge from their criminal justice system.
Read Liptak's article for potential forthcoming changes in the American criminal justice system.
The Wall Street Journal Has The Richest Readership Among Print Publications
CHART OF THE DAY:
"The Wall Street Journal has the wealthiest readership among print readers according to a new survey from Mediamark Research & Intelligence, by way of BtoB Online."
See how others rank, here.
"The Wall Street Journal has the wealthiest readership among print readers according to a new survey from Mediamark Research & Intelligence, by way of BtoB Online."
See how others rank, here.
TechnoLawyer Blog: How Your Law Firm Can Get Started With Twitter Risk Free
Neil Squillante at TechnoLawyper Blog has a useful November 23, 2009 posting about
How Your Law Firm Can Get Started With Twitter Risk Free
How Your Law Firm Can Get Started With Twitter Risk Free
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