59 research outputs found

    The Logic of Solidarity: Social Structure in Le Chambon-Feugerdilles

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    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50919/1/144.pd

    If You Lose, It Is Binding, but If You Win - They Get a New Trial: Illinois Uninsured Motorist Arbitration

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    In Reed v. Farmers Insurance Group the Illinois Supreme Court-by a 4-3 vote-upheld an arbitration system in which injury victims are bound by awards below 20,000,butinwhichinsurancecompaniescaninsistonatrialdenovoforawardsoverthatamount.2˘7Arecentlegislativeenactmenthascomplicatedthethresholdatwhichawardschangefrombindingtonon−binding,byincreasingitto20,000, but in which insurance companies can insist on a trial de novo for awards over that amount.\u27 A recent legislative enactment has complicated the threshold at which awards change from binding to non-binding, by increasing it to 50,000. However, even in cases where a higher threshold applies, those injury victims receiving awards below the threshold (or losing on the issue of liability) are bound by the arbitration, while injury victims receiving awards higher than the threshold can be required to re-litigate their cases de novo in the court system. This is the arbitration system that awaits Illinois drivers, passengers, and pedestrians who are injured today by uninsured motorists

    Screening migrants in the early Cold War: the geopolitics of U.S. immigration policy

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    The main elements of U.S. immigration policy date back to the early Cold War. One such element is a screening process initially designed to prevent infiltration by Communist agents posing as migrants from East-Central Europe. The development of these measures was driven by geopolitical concerns, resulting in vetting criteria that favored the admission of hardline nationalists and anti-Communists. The argument proceeds in two steps. First, the article demonstrates that geopolitics influenced immigration policy, resulting in the admission of extremist individuals. Second, it documents how geopolitical concerns and the openness of U.S. institutions provided exiles with the opportunity to mobilize politically. Although there is little evidence that the vetting system succeeded in preventing the entry of Communist subversives into the United States, it did help to create a highly mobilized anti-Communist ethnic lobby that supported extremist policies vis-à-vis the Soviet Union during the early Cold War

    Cornell Conference on Representations of Work in France

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