Life News (Law and Public Policy)

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Released: 4-May-2010 11:45 AM EDT
Experts Call for Changes to Medical Education Policy to Prepare for Aging America
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Leading physician policy experts are calling for changes in medical education policy at multiple levels to ensure that physicians are ready to treat the country’s growing older adult population.

Released: 3-May-2010 3:00 PM EDT
Greek Debt Crisis is Potential ‘Contagion’ for Global Financial Markets: Cornell Expert
Cornell University

The current Greek debt crisis looks to be a classic case of potential 'contagion' in global financial markets. Things can turn more ominous, however, when speculators in the financial markets begin betting en masse against a country like Greece, for in these cases the fears of some investors can become self-fulfilling prophecies.

   
Released: 3-May-2010 12:00 PM EDT
Thirty Years After Passage, Bayh-Dole Act Drives the Economy, Protects Public Health
Association of University Technology Managers

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Bayh-Dole Act, legislation that fostered the commercialization of many new technological advances that impact the lives of millions. AUTM announced a new Web site, www.B-D30.org, providing articles, history, and more.

   
Released: 3-May-2010 11:00 AM EDT
IFT Supports New Sodium Reduction Efforts
Institute of Food Technologists (IFT)

The Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) today offered its support to help the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) meet the challenges of reducing the amount of sodium in foods.

   
Released: 29-Apr-2010 9:50 AM EDT
Post 9-11 U.S. Immigration Policy Being Shaped by National Security
Toronto Metropolitan University

Following the terrorist attacks of 9-11, the United States enacted a series of laws as part of the war on terror. According to one Ryerson University researcher, this legislation has had an unforeseen impact on America’s immigrants and immigration policies.

Released: 28-Apr-2010 4:00 PM EDT
Vanderbilt Experts Can Talk About Supreme Court Justice Search
Vanderbilt University

Vanderbilt University experts with research and expertise related to the Supreme Court and the nomination of a new justice are available to discuss a range of topics. All of the Vanderbilt experts have done extensive TV, radio and print interviews. Vanderbilt has a 24/7 TV and radio studio. Use of the studio with Vanderbilt experts is free, except for reserving fiber time.

Released: 28-Apr-2010 10:30 AM EDT
Massachusetts Split Over National Health Care Reform, Poll Shows
Dick Jones Communications

Massachusetts residents are split down the middle over whether they support the national health care reform legislation recently enacted in Washington, according to the latest survey from the Western New England College Polling Institute.

Released: 27-Apr-2010 4:00 PM EDT
GW Professor, Expert on Workplace Safety, to Testify at Subcommittee Hearing on Modernizing Whistleblower Protections
George Washington University

GW Professor Dr. Celeste Monforton, an expert on worker safety, will testify at a congressional hearing on a proposal to strengthen protections for workers who blow the whistle on dangerous workplace conditions. She will speak as an advocate for families of workers killed, and those who are seriously injured or become ill on the job. Dr. Monforton’s research and her career have focused on occupational safety, and more specifically, mine safety.

Released: 27-Apr-2010 2:00 PM EDT
Arizona Immigration Law 'An Open Invitation for Racial Profiling by State Police'
Baylor University

A Baylor Law School professor has studied the new Arizona immigration law and believes it will result in racial profiling and violates the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.

Released: 26-Apr-2010 4:00 PM EDT
Twenty-Two Fairleigh Dickinson University Faculty Members Appointed to Serve United Nations
Fairleigh Dickinson University

After becoming the first university in the world to be granted special consultative status by ECOSOC (United Nations Economic and Social Council), Fairleigh Dickinson University has appointed 22 faculty members to serve two-year terms on substantive committees at the United Nations.

Released: 26-Apr-2010 3:45 PM EDT
Arizona Immigration Law Possibly Violates the Fourth, Fourteenth Amendments: Cornell Expert
Cornell University

Immigration law expert Stephen Yale-Loehr, co-author of a 20-volume treatise on immigration law, and Cornell University Law School adjunct professor, comments on the controversial new Arizona immigration-enforcement law.

Released: 23-Apr-2010 9:00 PM EDT
Dem's Not Doomed by Low Congressional Approval Ratings
Washington University in St. Louis

America’s satisfaction with government is hovering at all time lows according to recent polls by Gallup and the Pew Research Center, but don’t assume these sentiments spell doom for the Democratic Party in coming elections, says a congressional expert at Washington University in St. Louis.

Released: 23-Apr-2010 11:30 AM EDT
NWF, Enviros Denounce State Dept. Dirty Fuels Pipeline Plan
National Wildlife Federation (NWF)

National Wildlife Federation and 25 groups issued a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today calling for suspension of the permitting process for a proposed tar sands pipeline known as Keystone XL. The groups say the full scope of its environmental and social impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions have not been considered.

Released: 22-Apr-2010 3:30 PM EDT
Internet Age Needs Clear Regulation: Cornell Computer Law Expert
Cornell University

Tracy Mitrano, Cornell University’s director of IT Policy and its director of Computer Policy and Law Programs, comments on the recent Federal Appeals Court decision in Comcast v. Federal Communication Commission and the FCC’s efforts to enforce “network neutrality” on Internet providers.

Released: 21-Apr-2010 1:00 AM EDT
New Report Outlines Challenges and Promises of U.S. National Space Strategy
Secure World Foundation

A new report -- Towards a National Space Strategy – offers expert insight into the specific issues inherent in the establishment of space strategy. As noted in the report, the development of a U.S. National Space Strategy offers a broad set of challenges for civil space, national security space and in commercial space.

Released: 20-Apr-2010 3:05 PM EDT
New Insights into the Emergence of American Federalism
University of Chicago

Alison LaCroix’s new book delves into an underexplored area of history, shedding light on the nature of federalism, a system very important to the development of America. Given the ongoing debates about the framers’ original intent, understanding the true origins of federalism is especially significant.

Released: 20-Apr-2010 2:15 PM EDT
SEC Case Against Goldman Sachs ‘Is Not a Slam Dunk’
Cornell University

Charles K. Whitehead, Associate Professor at the Cornell University School of Law and former associate in a law firm representing Goldman Sachs, comments on the strength of SEC charges of fraud in a civil complaint against Goldman Sachs.

Released: 20-Apr-2010 8:30 AM EDT
Probing Public Policy with a New Lens
Binghamton University, State University of New York

To understand why public policies fail or succeed, it's essential to learn how people form networks within an organization, or among groups that collaborate, says Pamela Mischen, associate professor of public administration at Binghamton University.

Released: 20-Apr-2010 1:00 AM EDT
Missile Defense Issues Examined in New Book
Secure World Foundation

Secure World Foundation recognizes a new book, American Missile Defense: A Guide to the Issues, expertly written by Secure World Foundation’s Victoria Samson.

Released: 19-Apr-2010 5:05 PM EDT
Recession Illustrates the Need for Public Assistance, Says Expert
Cornell University

Thomas Hirschl, professor of Development Sociology at Cornell University, comments about the widespread reliance on food stamps, Medicaid, reduced school lunches and other forms of public assistance.

Released: 19-Apr-2010 3:20 PM EDT
New Book Reveals Clinical Look at Poisonings
University of Virginia Health System

Criminal poisoning cases can be hard to recognize and even harder to solve when law enforcement officials don't know what a poisoning looks like. "Criminal Poisoning: Clinical and Forensic Perspectives" contains information for law enforcement, attorneys and medical providers to use when investigating cases of suspected criminal poisonings.

   
Released: 19-Apr-2010 1:00 AM EDT
Secure World Foundation Announcement: Deputy Director Chosen
Secure World Foundation

Selection of Secure World Foundation Deputy Director, James Rendleman, brings to the Foundation a wide variety of science and technology, engineering, management, and space policy skills.

Released: 16-Apr-2010 11:30 AM EDT
U.S. News Ranks Baylor Law Fourth Best in Nation in Trial Advocacy
Baylor University

Baylor Law School's acclaimed Trial Advocacy program was ranked the fourth best in the nation in the law specialty rankings in U.S. News and World Report's 2011 edition of "America's Best Graduate Schools."

Released: 14-Apr-2010 12:10 PM EDT
Pulitzer Prize Winning Historian Releases Book on Capital Punishment
University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin)

In a year when the death penalty continues to stir passions from Texas to Connecticut and beyond, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian David Oshinsky’s new book will help Americans better understand the history, politics and role of capital punishment in the United States.

Released: 13-Apr-2010 11:20 AM EDT
Loyola Medical Panel to Discuss New Healthcare Reform
Loyola Medicine

Loyola University Health System is hosting a panel of experts to discuss the implications of new healthcare reform.

Released: 12-Apr-2010 3:55 PM EDT
News Source on Supreme Court, John Paul Stevens
 Johns Hopkins University

If you're looking for an expert to put the career and legacy of John Paul Stevens into perspective — as well as someone who can talk about what happens next and how the high court will likely change — consider Johns Hopkins University Professor Joel Grossman.

Released: 12-Apr-2010 3:35 PM EDT
U Iowa College of Law Class Examines New Health Care Reform Law
University of Iowa

A class to be offered next fall at the University of Iowa College of Law will spend an entire semester examining the recently passed health care reform law.

Released: 12-Apr-2010 9:00 AM EDT
Book Examines George W. Bush's Domestic Policies
Indiana University

Former President George W. Bush achieved remarkable domestic policy success in light of his tenuous standing with the public and sharp divisions in Congress, a new book says.

Released: 12-Apr-2010 8:30 AM EDT
Connect 2 Congress Lets You Track Your Senator, One Vote at a Time
Georgia Institute of Technology

Student creates system that makes keeping up with Congress as easy as clicking a mouse.

Released: 9-Apr-2010 3:50 PM EDT
Implications of the Impending Retirement of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens: Cornell Expert
Cornell University

Michael C. Dorf, constitutional law scholar, former Supreme Court law clerk and professor at Cornell University Law School, discusses the implications of the impending retirement of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.

Released: 9-Apr-2010 12:00 PM EDT
‘Pragmatic Populist’ Retires: Former Clerk Reflects on Stevens and the Supreme Court
Washington University in St. Louis

“The retirement announcement of Justice John Paul Stevens does not comes as a big surprise, but it is still a sad day,” says Gregory P. Magarian, J.D., former Stevens clerk and professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis. “The Supreme Court is losing a great jurist and a great man.” Magarian calls Stevens a “pragmatic populist” because of the way he approached his decisions with the Court.“Stevens always has been very focused on what a Supreme Court decision is going to do to an ordinary person,” he says. “He has never written an opinion just to make a point or put on a show."

7-Apr-2010 10:00 AM EDT
Educate Individuals to Prevent Sky-Rocketing Healthcare Costs
Tufts University

Educating individuals about the costs of healthcare could save money and lead to a more efficient use of the healthcare system, reports a new study. The authors note that healthcare reform offers an unprecedented opportunity to provide incentives to use the healthcare system efficiently and to educate people about the effects of their behavior on overall healthcare costs.

   
Released: 7-Apr-2010 12:10 PM EDT
Wage Theft Widespread in Cook County
University of Illinois Chicago

Low-wage workers in Cook County lose $7.3 million each week in at least a dozen industries through violations of minimum wage and overtime laws, says a study by researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Released: 6-Apr-2010 3:00 PM EDT
College Graduates Face Tight Job Market, Says Professor
Rowan University

The job outlet is grim for new graduates, says a Rowan University Professor, giving his suggestions to improve that picture.

 
Released: 6-Apr-2010 10:30 AM EDT
TARP Payback, Profit Was Expected, Says Expert
Cornell University

Steven C. Kyle, Cornell University associate professor of Applied Economics and Management, comments on reports that the Treasury Department is already earning an 8.5 percent profit on its investments in bailed out banks.

Released: 5-Apr-2010 12:35 PM EDT
Northeastern to Host Global Regulation of Nanotechnologies Conference in Boston, May 7 to 8
Northeastern University

Leading international experts on the global regulation of nanotechnologies, including scientists, lawyers, ethicists and officials from governments, industry stakeholders, and NGOs will join in a two-day conference May 7-8, 2010 at Northeastern University’s School of Law.

   
Released: 2-Apr-2010 10:15 AM EDT
Professor Studies the Law of Locks (Hairstyles, That Is)
University of Iowa

While federal law protects African American men who wear their hair in an Afro to work, University of Iowa law professor Angela Onwuachi-Willig notes that black women do not have the same legal protections for such natural hairstyles as locks, twists or braids.

Released: 1-Apr-2010 9:00 PM EDT
Demographer: 2010 Census Likely to Show Texas Population Increasing, Changes in West Texas Ethnic Makeup
Texas Tech University

Bradatan said she thinks the 2010 Census may be more complete and the results perhaps less shocking thanks to the American Community Survey.

Released: 1-Apr-2010 3:55 PM EDT
State and Local Government Finance Focus of Weidenbaum Center Conference
Washington University in St. Louis

The Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government and Public Policy and the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis will host a daylong conference titled “State and Local Government Finance amid Economic Turbulence” beginning at 8 a.m. Friday, April 9, in Simon Hall's May Auditorium. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is required.

Released: 31-Mar-2010 2:35 PM EDT
President Obama Addresses America’s Energy Challenges
National Wildlife Federation (NWF)

In a speech today, President Obama made a series of energy policy announcements, including expanded offshore oil drilling and new fuel economy standards for automobiles. The president also reiterated his call for Congress to deliver a comprehensive climate and energy bill this year.

Released: 31-Mar-2010 12:00 PM EDT
Deficit Cutting After Health Reform: UM-Concord Coalition-Hoyer Forum
University of Maryland, College Park

This public forum will map the hard choices leading to a sustainable, long-term fiscal policy – one of the first such events to assess the situation following the passage of U.S. health care reform. The Fiscal Solutions Tour is sponsored by the University of Maryland School of Public Policy and the non-partisan Concord Coalition.

Released: 31-Mar-2010 9:00 AM EDT
Deportation of Lawful Immigrant Parents Harms U.S. Citizen Children
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

The U.S. has deported the lawful immigrant parents of nearly 88,000 citizen children in just a decade, according to a new report released today from the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of California, Davis law schools.

 
Released: 31-Mar-2010 1:00 AM EDT
New Book Evaluates Sustainable Use of Outer Space
Secure World Foundation

A new publication provides a fresh comprehensive evaluation on how to achieve the sustainable use of space by means of respecting fairness and responsibility.

Released: 30-Mar-2010 3:00 PM EDT
U.S. Foreign Policymakers Huddle with Scholars in Arizona
Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Historians, political scientists, communicators and law professors will huddle with U.S. foreign policymakers from the military, CIA and State Department in Phoenix March 31-April 2 on topics including nuclear proliferation, counterinsurgency, trafficking and immigration.

Released: 30-Mar-2010 1:15 PM EDT
Mississippi State to Host National Air Force Conference on Unmanned Aircraft
Mississippi State University

Academics, military leaders, policy officials and others will attend this conference on the Air Force's development and future plans for remotely piloted aircraft.

Released: 30-Mar-2010 8:00 AM EDT
Defending Planet Earth: Special Publication Details Asteroid, Comet Threat
Secure World Foundation

A partnership between Secure World Foundation and The Planetary Society has created a special publication devoted to “Defending Our World” – an impressive look at the threat to Earth from asteroids and comets.

Released: 29-Mar-2010 12:15 PM EDT
Drug Courts Need Intervention, Says Problem-Solving Courts Expert
Washington University in St. Louis

“Proponents claim drug courts are an effective alternative to incarceration and work to curb recidivism, reduce costs and even save lives, but it is not at all clear whether any of these things are true,” says Mae Quinn, JD, problem-solving courts expert and professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.

Released: 29-Mar-2010 10:30 AM EDT
War and Journalism Highlight Kentucky Conference
University of Kentucky

The University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Telecommunications, in cooperation with the University of Edinburgh, will present a conference on war, journalism and history in Lexington, Ky., April 8-11, 2010.

Released: 24-Mar-2010 5:00 PM EDT
CLEAR Act Protects Income of Poor and Middle Class Families
University of Massachusetts Amherst

A new study by James K. Boyce and Matthew E. Riddle of the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, assesses the impacts of the CLEAR Act on families.

Released: 24-Mar-2010 11:00 AM EDT
Former U.S. Congressman Teaches the Environment & Politics
Salisbury University

A champion of environmental issues who served Maryland’s 1st district for 9 terms, former U.S. Congressman Wayne Gilchrest is now sharing first-hand experience at Salisbury University. His environmental issues course allows students to explore AND debate Washington politics and policies!



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