Remarks and observations concerning American law and cultural studies as it relates to courses taken by students in the University of Osnabrück's and University of Münster's foreign law programs.
Matt LeMieux
24 June 2007
The Final Eight
Entering it's last week of 2006-2007 term, the United States Supreme Court still has eight cases left to decide. And as usual, they are some of the most controversial cases on the docket. Students in my Conversation and Presentation Skills class know that the court is trying to figure out whether a student can be punished for holding up a sign saying "Bong Hits for Jesus" at an event held outside of the school. This case has the potential of redefining how the court deals with the free speech rights of students. But some of the other cases left to decide are equally interesting. For instance, the Court must still determine whether schools can take race into account when assigning students to schools in a given school district. The practice has been used for decades to make sure there is some kind of racial balance in schools. As students in my Constitutional classes know, the issue how race classifications operate under the Equal Protection Clause has been controversial since the adoption of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. Also still on the undecided list is a case dealing with the death penalty and mentally ill defendants, as well as the ability to bring Establishment Clause challenges, as the Court looks at what kind of "harm" one must show to be a plaintiff in a challenge based upon the Establishment Clause. The issues involved in these cases touch upon some of the most hotly debated issues in America, and many people are anxiously awaiting this last week of Court decisions.