Dupre page

Anne Dupre

  • Foreign Duty: Export Control Goes Private

    This article will spell out the sorts of internal changes -- compliance supervisors, for example -- that businesses need to introduce. It will also take note of the need for the lawyer to adapt loan agreements with EPCI compliance in mind, and to review an exporter's principal agreements. Business Law Today, Vol. 2, No. 2 (November-December 1992), pp. 46-49
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    Anne DuPre

  • Should Students Have Constitutional Rights? Keeping Order in the Public Schools

    This Article focuses on how the Supreme Court's conception of the public school as either an institution of social reproduction or reconstruction, a conflict Professor Dupre maintains is deeply rooted in intellectual history, has affected the power that public schools have been afforded in matters of discipline and order. George Washington Law Review, Vol. 65, No. 1 (November 1996), pp. 49-105
  • Equal Protection of the Laws: Recent Judicial Decisions and their Implications for Public Educational Institutions

    This article reviews recent judicial decisions concerning the Equal Protection Clause and provides an analysis of their implications for public educational institutions. 114 Educ. L. Rep. 1 (1997).
  • Disability, Deference, and the Integrity of the Academic Enterprise

    Congress has established a complex set of laws regarding the education of disabled students. This Article discusses the obligations the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act impose on schools and focuses on how courts address the decisions of educators regarding disabled students. Georgia Law Review, Vol. 32, No. 2 (Winter 1998), pp. 393-473
  • Transforming Education: The Lesson from Argentina

    This Article traces education reforms in Argentina from the colonial period to the present. Specifically, the Article focuses on La Ley Federal de Educacion, passed in 1993, which sought to reform primary and secondary education throughout Argentina by promoting educational equity through a just distribution of educational services and opportunity. Anne Dupre, Transforming Education: The Lesson from Argentina (2001)
  • Children and the Law: Cases and Materials (1st edition)

    Children and the Law: Cases and Materials (1st edition)
    A casebook which presents materials for a general course in children and the law while at the same time providing sufficient attention to the juvenile justice system so as to be utilized as the vehicle for teaching a more narrow course in juvenile delinquency and status offenses. ISBN 0820555304 Dupre, Anne and Gardner, Martin R., "Children and the Law: Cases and Materials (1st edition)" (2002). Books. 56.
  • Education Finance Litigation: A Review of Recent High Court Decisions and their Likely Impact on Future Litigation

    This article addresses the impact that school funding litigation has had in shaping public schools across the US and serves as an update to a 2001 article, which reviewed school funding litigation since the Serrano v. Priest decision. This article updates that research by providing brief reviews of the most recent and significant school funding litigation decisions. 186 Educ. L. Rep. 1 (2004).
  • School Funding Litigation: Who's Winning the War?

    This Article examines how the landscape of school funding litigation has changed over the three decades since Serrano and Rodriguez. The Article covers in three parts the history, the role of the courts, and the efficacy of court involvement in school funding litigation. It scrutinizes so-called "activist" courts: have plaintiffs achieved their desired reforms? Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. 57, No. 6 (November 2004), pp. 2351-2413
  • Commentary: Grades- Achievement, Attendance, or Attitude

    This article addresses the impact that grades can have on the lives of students and what is meant by student achievement. It also addresses disputes involving grading policies that allowed non-academic factors in decisions on grades or academic credit. The article includes a brief summary of the history and legal theories related to grading challenges and then provides a review of the relevant case law. 199 Educ. L. Rep. 569 (2005).
  • National Student Education Law Conference

    National Student Education Law Conference
    This conference held September 24-25, 2005 at UGA’s Institute of Higher Education published papers in the Education Law and Policy Forum. It focused on significant issues in education law, ranging from academic freedom to school funding. Faculty members from law schools and graduate programs nationwide served as discussants and commentators.National Education Law Conference
  • Protecting Children From the Dark Side of the Internet

    This article examines the history of judicial and legislative responses to the issue of consumption of pornography and other harmful materials over the Internet by children. The article gives an overview of free speech law in the US and summaries relevant U.S. legislation. It highlights Reno v. ACLU, Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, United States v. American Library Association, and Ashcroft v. ACLU. 212 Educ. L. Rep. 553 (2006).
  • The Spirit of Serrano: Past, Present and Future

    The litigation sparked by the Supreme Court of California's 1971 decision in Serrano v. Priest continues to reshape the legal, political, and educational landscape in the United States. Lawsuits have transformed school funding policies nationwide. This article briefly reviews and discusses the past, present and likely future of Serrano-inspired school funding litigation. 32 J. Educ. Fin. 22 (2006).
  • National Student Education Law Conference

    National Student Education Law Conference
    The conference held on September 30, 2006 at UGA’s Institute of Higher Education published papers in the Education Law and Policy Forum. Students (6 from Georgia Law) in grad and professional programs across the country convened with some of the nation’s leading education and law scholars on current and pressing issues in education law. National Student Education Law Conference
  • Blood and Turnips in School Funding Litigation

    There are always winners and losers in school funding reforms leading to protracted litigation in these cases. These reforms directly affect: tax burdens, distribution of resources, and allocation of educational opportunities. Competition over limited resources is inevitable. Although win-win scenarios are ideal, they are not likely in school funding disputes. Journal of Law & Education, Vol. 36, No. 4 (October 2007), pp. 481-496
  • The story of Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System v. Southworth: "loosing battles, wining wars"

    The story of Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System v. Southworth: "loosing battles, wining wars"
    Contribution to "Education law stories" edited by Michael A. Olivas, Ronna Greff Schneider. http://gavel.law.uga.edu/search?/adupre/adupre/1%2C30%2C57%2CB/frameset&FF=adupre+anne+proffitt&7%2C%2C10
  • Speaking Up: The Unintended Costs of Free Speech in Public Schools

    Speaking Up: The Unintended Costs of Free Speech in Public Schools
    Examines the way courts have wrestled with student expression in school, including political protest, speech codes, student newspapers, book banning in school libraries, and school prayer. ISBN 9780674031142. Dupre, Anne Proffitt. 2009. Speaking up: the unintended costs of free speech in public schools. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.