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Building on diverse analogies in the law of defamation, of literary property, and of eavesdropping, Brandeis argued that the central, if unarticulated, interest protected in these fields was an interest in personal integrity, "the right to be let alone," that ought to be secured against invasion except for some compelling reason of public welfare.
Samuel D. Warren II, c. 1875 Louis Brandeis, c. 1916. Although credited to both Louis Brandeis and Samuel Warren, the article was apparently written primarily by Brandeis, [5] on a suggestion of Warren based on his "deep-seated abhorrence of the invasions of social privacy."
Brandeis was established in 1948, and members of the founding class of 107 first-year students created the Justice the following spring. The newspaper was named after the university's namesake, Justice Louis Brandeis. In its first issue, published in March 1949, Carl Werner '52 outlined the responsibilities that the first graduating class had ...
The campaign promise is a reference to a quote by Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis that "Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants." [1] The well-received initiative initially faced technical hurdles in its implementation and had limited follow-through.
Louis Brandeis Supreme Court nomination; T. Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century This page was last edited on 27 August 2024, at 02:42 (UTC). Text ...
Louis Brandeis introduced the original Brandeis brief in 1908. The Brandeis brief was a pioneering legal brief that was the first in United States legal history to rely more on a compilation of scientific information and social science literature than on legal citations. [ 1 ]
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The New Brandeis movement opposes the school of thought in modern antitrust law that antitrust should center on customer welfare (as generally advocated by the Chicago school of economics). Instead, the New Brandeis movement advocates a broader antimonopoly approach that is concerned with private power, the structure of the economy and market ...