What makes the Fulton case unusual is the dearth of legal precedents that might help predict how the court will rule. "There really are no cases at the Supreme Court level that are close to this one," said Douglas Laycock, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law. "All the precedents are pretty general, and the facts in Fulton are unbelievably complicated. They could write this decision all kinds of different ways. It's really impossible to predict."
“There are no mechanisms to ensure investors that the green investment will actually occur," said Mitu Gulati, a law professor at the University of Virginia. “The only conclusion I can draw from that is that investors don’t actually care. It’s so much eyewash."
David Nemer, a Brazil political analyst and assistant professor at the University of Virginia, said, “Bolsonaro is doubling-down on his bet on early treatment to give people a sense of security to keep going to work,” said Nemer, adding that Bolsonaro’s strategy appears to favor an open economy over health and distract citizens from his vaccine failures. “He needs something to contain his rising rejection rates.”
One challenge is that directors don’t tend to leave their board seats very often. Board members generally stick around for about a decade, said Yo-Jud Cheng, a business professor at the University of Virginia. “I mean, it’s very uncommon for someone to be, you know, pushed off of a board.”
“When I heard they had closed Bethlehem Steel, I thought, ‘How do you do that? What do you do when it’s in the middle of a town?’” asked June West, a University of Virginia business professor who uses the Bethlehem Steel transformation as a lesson in brownfield redevelopment.
Dr. Bruce Greyson, professor emeritus in psychiatry at the University of Virginia, had also suggested that humans have a non-physical part. He also added that NDEs have transformed people's attitudes, values, beliefs, and behaviors.
(Video) Top U.S. officials are urging young people to get vaccinated as the Delta variant begins to spread. The dangerous variant has already become the dominant strain in the U.K. As CBS News' Nikki Battiste reports, Dr. Anthony Fauci says we "cannot let that happen" in the U.S. Then, Dr. Taison Bell, a University of Virginia critical care and infectious disease physician and medical ICU director, joins CBSN's Elaine Quijano with his analysis.
Jalane Schmidt, a religious studies and director of the Memory Project at the University of Virginia, has also worked to remove the statues and told CNN she was impressed by the number of community members who warned the city council not to simply shuffle the statues to another community where they “would continue to promote Lost Cause ideology. … This represents a shift in the conversation about monuments from mere demands for removal to concern for what happens to statues after they’re removed,” Schmidt said Tuesday.
Rich Schragger, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, was skeptical of the pro-Lee landowner’s arguments which would, in effect, compel the state to speak in support of Lee and his Confederate cause. “One could imagine a property owner saying ‘I'll make an agreement with you, but you’ll have to put up a sign that supports Republicans or Democrats, or you have to vote a certain way,’" Shragger said. "Those would be quite shocking restrictions on peoples’ rights, and in this case it's a restriction on the democratic process, the ability of the commonwealth to decide what...
Juandiego Wade and Brian Pinkston won the two Democratic party nominations for Charlottesville City Council up for grabs Tuesday. Wade, a member of the Charlottesville School Board, received 4,910 total votes. Pinkston, a project manager at the University of Virginia, received 3,601 votes.
Larry Sabato, the director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, says that because Virginia's race is the most competitive in the country, money is coming in from inside the state and national sources. He says it could easily be the most expensive election in Virginia's history, but money is not the only thing that matters.
Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, said it was a strong night for McAuliffe: Given that it was a five-way race, Sabato said, “Republicans were hoping he would get under 50, some well under 50, percent of the vote, and of course he’s over 60%.”
"Virginia is still competitive," Larry Sabato, the founder and director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, told ABC News in May ahead of the GOP convention. "The problem is (the GOP candidates) created a record for themselves on Trump. They have only said positive things -- positive to very positive. ... Terry McAuliffe has been around the block a few times. He knows how to link them to Trump."
Just two governorships — Virginia and New Jersey — will be up for grabs in November. While Democratic incumbent Phil Murphy is expected to be re-elected in New Jersey, analysts said the Virginia contest was a “toss-up” that would attract significant national interest. “This is the marquee race of this year,” said Kyle Kondik of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, noting that governor’s races in the state, which are held a year after a presidential election, have historically been seen as a referendum on the party in the White House.
The Virginia governor's race is seen as a test for both parties following Democrat Joe Biden's 2020 presidential victory and could be a bellwether of voter sentiment ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, when Democrats will be looking to maintain control of the U.S. Congress. "If the Republicans can manage to recapture Virginia, which has clearly moved in a Democratic direction, the prospects for Democrats in the midterm elections in 2022 will be dimmed; there's just no doubt about it," said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.
Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, said Trump's shadow still loomed over the race given the continued news coverage he generates. "Yes, Youngkin projects a good image," Sabato said. "But it's easily dented, maybe even destroyed, because he has a big 'R' next to his name and he is very definitely tied to Donald Trump."
The message of Helfer’s excommunication and that of other members seems to be that the faith can tolerate diverse opinions but “when that behavior seeks to influence others, then that’s when the church takes official action,” said Kathleen Flake, a professor of Mormon studies at the University of Virginia.
Several major websites were briefly inaccessible early Tuesday morning. The sites all rely on Fastly, which is supposed to improve the speed of reliability for its sites. University of Virginia professors who specialize in cybersecurity weighed in on the error to break it down to the community. “What happened is they changed the configuration and it had unintended consequences,” Jack Davidson, a professor of computer science at UVA, said. “Because of the global breach of this, it’s hard to back it out, to kind of undo what you just did, it takes time.”
Lisa Woolfork, an associate professor of English at the University of Virginia, said Black women in academia face “the same obstacles that Black women face in general. … They are very much rooted in the same racism that impacts every Black person’s life in this country.” The work of Black scholars, Woolfork said, is sometimes not seen as academically valuable because it is about Black people. Or it is otherwise dismissed or belittled. “Why is it that when Black women do achieve, when Black women are at the top of their game, there still is something, some institution, some set of policies or j...
(Co-written by Cathy Hwang, professor of law) Three decades of finance, economics, and legal studies in corporate governance have been built substantially on data sets with nearly unknown provenance. A new paper sets to correct this fatal flaw of contemporary corporate governance research by debuting a brand new resource—the Cleaning Corporate Governance database.