Articles by: JurisMagazine

Finding Passion in the Legal Profession

  By Carlie Masterson, Staff Writer I write this after a week of evaluating where I am now, and where I truly want to be within the legal profession. Duquesne University School of Law lost an extraordinary alumna on October 12, 2016. Judge Debra A. Pezze,[1] a 1979 graduate, passed […]

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Duquesne Law Students Visit Washington, D.C.

  By Susan Pickup, Staff Writer Last weekend, Duquesne University School of Law students in Professor Rhonda Gay Hartman’s health law class joined those from the School of Pharmacy on their trip to Washington, D.C. The buildings on Capitol Hill were flooded with students in white coats, who were visiting […]

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Unaccompanied Minor Litigants: Expecting 10-Year-Old to Appear Pro Se in Immigration Court is Recipe for Removal

  By Natalie Tupta, Staff Writer In the last several years, record numbers of children have crossed the southern border of the United States without their parents in search of a better life. U.S. Customs and Border Protection reports apprehending 108,511 “Unaccompanied Alien Children” (UACs) between the ages of 0 […]

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No Good Deed Goes Unpunished: JASTA and the Golden Rule

    By Matt DeSantis, Staff Writer September saw the first Congressional override of a presidential veto in President Barack Obama’s term, resulting in a law that limits the scope of foreign states’ sovereign immunity even further than its predecessor, the 1976 Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.[1][2] The passage of this […]

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Electing a New Immigration Policy

  By Amber McGee, Staff Writer Immigration is an issue of great controversy. There are many variables to consider when making a plan for how to handle the influx of immigrants coming to the United States both legally and illegally. It is important to consider the economic as well as […]

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