317 research outputs found

    Loose Women, Lecherous Men: A Feminist Philosophy of Sex

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    A review of Loose Women, Lecherous Men, by Linda LeMoncheck

    Concluding Reflection: \u27Where Do We Go From Here?\u27

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    Women and Men in Theological Education

    Cabinet Action and the CRTC: An Examination of Section 23 of the Broadcasting Act

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    L'article 23 de la Loi sur la radiodiffusion prévoit que le gouverneur en conseil peut annuler ou renvoyer au Conseil de la radiodiffusion et des télécommunications canadiennes, pour un nouvel examen ou une nouvelle audition, l’attribution, la modification ou le renouvellement de toute licence de radiodiffusion. Cette disposition manque de précision et la procédure suivie par le Cabinet reste obscure. En effet l'on ne sait trop si des parties intéressées peuvent s'adresser au Cabinet, ou si leur demande l'atteindra effectivement. Cet article analyse la législation pertinente, les situations dans lesquelles le Cabinet est intervenu (quelques-unes dans lesquelles il s'est abstenu), et les mécanismes de la procédure. Cette dernière partie est basée sur des interviews menées auprès de personnes participant à cette procédure, et elle en démontre le caractère possiblement inéquitable. L'auteur conclut que le pouvoir de révision du Cabinet devrait être maintenu mais que sa mise en oeuvre devrait être orientée par des normes

    Clearing the Roadblocks to Sobriety Checkpoints

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    This Note examines the constitutional and policy implications of sobriety checkpoints. Part I discusses the competing interests involved in implementing sobriety checkpoints. Part II presents an appropriate constitutional standard for judging sobriety checkpoints. Part III proposes reform-oriented measures that conform to constitutional guidelines. This Note concludes that properly conducted sobriety checkpoints are constitutional

    Modern Legislation, Metropolitan Court, Miniscule Results: A Study of Detroit\u27s Landlord-Tenant Court

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    This article is a description of a study of cases filed and tried in the Detroit, Michigan, Common Pleas Court, Landlord-Tenant Division, during 1970 and 1971. The court is in a large urban center and handles a high volume of cases, in most of which one or both parties appear without an attorney. The impetus for the study was Michigan legislation passed in 1968, which gave tenants additional defenses to summary eviction procedures. The main goal of the study was to observe the effects of the legislation on tenants who were subject to summary proceedings in Detroit. The purpose of the study was not just an analysis of landlord-tenant law or practices per se, but also the more general inquiry into the administration of justice and practical effects of reform legislation

    The Coherence of Love

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    Kant and Sexual Perversion

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    Bad apples: Feminist politics and feminist scholarship

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    Review of Joan McGregor, Is It Rape?

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    Gender, Objectivity, And Realism

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