Main News
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By Theresa M. Beiner I am in my eighteenth year [1] of teaching at a law school that currently sits in the third tier…
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By Gary Slater [1] The logical method of abduction provides a constructive means of addressing religious disputes in public settings. By allowing one…
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By Justice Jess Dickinson First in a series of pieces from the Representing Hope: New Paradigms for Access to Justice conference.
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By Jeffrey Keddie The article discusses consumer-side terms asserted at the point-of-sale as an option for working toward political-type change via social movements instead of through government.
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By Jay Barth In recent years Arkansas has made impressive progress on big challenges that have confounded leaders in other states.
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By Maggie Carroll
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By Bill Quigley and Amber Ramanauskas Haiti, a close neighbor of the United States with a population of more than nine million people, was devastated by earthquake on January 12, 2010. Before the quake, Haiti was already the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere and one of the most impoverished in the world. After? Conservative estimates for the cost of reconstructing Haiti are nearly $14 billion.
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By Dustin Duke I was recently reading an out of state ethics opinion where the lawyer involved was facing disbarment. The crux of the opinion, and the source of the lawyer’s proverbial hot water, was that he had failed to adequately involve his clients in their case.
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By Lee Lowther In late spring of 2011, David Slade pitched the idea for the Arkansas Journal of Social Change and Public Service to a group of my now co-editors.