2,943 research outputs found

    Lawyers and Spoiled Identity

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    Book Review

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    Book Review

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    The Economics of American Higher Education in the New Gilded Age

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    Student debt is a function of three factors: the cost of higher education, the extent to which that cost is subsidized through sources other than students and their families, and the percentage of nonsubsidized revenue that is supplied via loans rather than out-of-pocket payments. The first factor is a product of how much money colleges and universities choose to spend. The second is determined by total value of the many sources of subsidization upon which higher education draws. The third is a function of the relative wealth or poverty of the people who make up the student bodies at American higher education institutions. This Article will focus on the first two factors, while addressing the increasingly common claim that, in recent years, higher education in America has been “defunded.

    Three Mistakes About Interpretation

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    The Truman Show: The Fraudulent Origins of the Former Presidents Act

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    On January 6, 2021, a seditious mob incited by President Donald Trump invaded and ransacked the Capitol in an attempt to stop a joint session of Congress from certifying Trump’s defeat in the previous November’s election.1 In the days immediately following, many people demanded that President Trump be impeached for a second time for his role in triggering the attack.2 A number of these people pointed out that, should Trump be convicted by the Senate, he would lose the many benefits bestowed on ex-presidents by the Former Presidents Act (FPA), the federal statute enacted in 1958 that first granted both a pension and an array of other valuable taxpayer-funded privileges to former Presidents.3 By 2020, the provisions of the FPA were providing former presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama more than one million dollars per year each in government benefits.4 (Former President Carter was receiving $480,000 in annual benefits).5 For many commenters, the prospect of Donald Trump receiving a comparable level of taxpayer largesse to help subsidize his post-presidential lifestyle was an additional compelling reason to eject Trump from the White House via impeachment and conviction.6 As this series of events illustrated, the Former Presidents Act is a statute of considerable symbolic political significance.7 That significance is also illustrated by the fact that, more than sixty years after its enactment, the FPA has remained a subject of ongoing controversy within Congress itself.8 In recent years, several bills intended to significantly curtail the benefits it provides have been proposed by members of both parties.9 One of these bills reached President Obama’s desk, where he vetoed it late in his second term.1

    Against Constitutional Theory

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    The Economics of American Higher Education in the New Gilded Age

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    A Mirror for the Magistrate

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