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    1. First sale goes to the Supreme Court, again - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      As long as a work is not pirated — that is, it is made and/or initially sold with authorization of the rights holder — we should recognize that (...)

    2. Ford Library Honors Juneteenth

      Ford Library and Goodson Law Library  have co-funded your access to personal accounts on WSJ.com.

    3. First Monday in October

      The term will be the first for new Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson , who was sworn in on June 30 following the retirement of (...)

    4. EU Treaties - European Union - LibGuides at Duke University

      Treaties The treaties constitute the European Union’s ‘primary legislation’, which is comparable to constitutional law at national (...)

    5. WOLA-Duke 2015 Human Right Book Award - The Devil's Tale

      Katz, The Big Truck That Went By: How The World Came To Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster 2012- Héctor Abad, Oblivion: A Memoir 2011- (...)

    6. Q&A with Andrea Wood, Our New Associate Director of Development - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      She previously served as Associate Director of Fellowships at Equal Justice Works, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C. that runs (...)

    7. Diplomats' Papers - Rubenstein Library Resources on Diplomacy and International Relations - LibGuide

      His papers chiefly document the leadership roles he undertook for social justice organizations such as the American Bar Association, (...)

    8. The Goodson Blogson

      The George Washington International Law Review first published the guide in 1986 as a special double issue ( available to Duke users in (...)

    9. Copyright term, open access and the NIH - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) on Who owns the law? Copyright News and Articles - Copyrightlaws.com: Copyright courses and education in plain (...)

    10. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 32 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      But whatever the outcome, copyright’s effect on free expression must be taken seriously as an interest protected by the Constitution and resting (...)

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