Remove 2022 Remove Administrative Law Remove Court Remove Court Rules
article thumbnail

Guest Post: Climate Litigation in Japan: Citizens’ Attempts for the Coal Phase-Out

ClimateChange-ClimateLaw

The Supreme Court of Japan may soon weigh in on a growing field of climate litigation in Japan against coal-fired power plants. On May 6, 2022, the Citizens’ Committee on the Kobe Coal-Fired Power Plant filed an appeal to Japan’s Supreme Court in Citizens’ Committee on the Kobe Coal-Fired Power Plant v.

article thumbnail

Becerra’s Blunder: Did the Administration Allow Fauci and other Officials to Operate Illegally?

JonathanTurley

Not only did these directors make sweeping policy changes for the nation but, in 2022 alone, they awarded more than $25 billion in federal biomedical grants. After all, this appears simple (albeit shocking) negligence by the Biden administration as opposed to some nefarious effort. Last September, for example, the U.S.

Legal 31
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Report: Summer School on the new Foreign Relations Law, MPIL Heidelberg, June 8-10, 2022

Conflict of Laws

Summer School on the new Foreign Relations Law. MPIL Heidelberg, June 8-10, 2022. However, there is a variety of situations that cannot be assigned clearly to any of these established areas of law, thus highlighting the question if they should be assembled in a new field. Foreign Relation Law as international or domestic law?

Laws 52
article thumbnail

Tick, Tick, Tick…: The Supreme Court Readies an Explosive Docket for 2022

JonathanTurley

Below is my column in the Hill on upcoming year for the Supreme Court. The Court’s docket is likely to put the institution at ground zero of a heated election year. Major decisions on abortion and gun rights are expected by June 2022. That’s what 2022 is likely to be. While the court could simply overturn Roe v.

Court 42
article thumbnail

US Supreme Court rejects North Carolina’s ‘independent legislature’ theory

JURIST

The US Supreme Court ruled Tuesday in Moore v. The theory stipulates that state legislatures retain exclusive authority over the administration of elections; therefore, state courts are not allowed to intervene, even if the law in question violates the state constitution.

Court 211
article thumbnail

Colorado G.O.P. asks justices to review Trump ballot eligibility

SCOTUSBlog

Share Lawyers for Colorado’s Republican Party came to the Supreme Court on Wednesday, asking the justices to overturn a ruling by that state’s highest court that would leave former President Donald Trump off Colorado’s primary ballot in 2024 because of his role in the Jan. But the court put its ruling on hold until Jan.

Court 141
article thumbnail

Supreme Court to decide whether insurrection provision keeps Trump off ballot

SCOTUSBlog

Share The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Thursday in what is shaping up to be the biggest election case since its ruling nearly 25 years ago in Bush v. Although the question comes to the court in a case from Colorado, the impact of the court’s ruling could be much more far-reaching. And on Dec.

Court 145