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Minami, Dale – Amerasia Journal, 1990
Shows how political campaigning and legal action won a three-year battle (beginning in 1986) for tenure by an Asian Pacific American professor, D. Nakanishi, at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). Describes the case's academic context, explains the legal alternatives, and analyzes the legal/political strategy adopted. (JB)
Descriptors: Activism, Affirmative Action, Asian Americans, Court Litigation
Leatherman, Courtney – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1994
The Supreme Court ordered a lower court to reexamine the free-speech case of a controversial City University of New York black studies professor, demoted from department chairman for making racially biased statements seen as disruptive. The rights of public universities to make such decisions was a central issue. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Black Studies, College Faculty, Constitutional Law
Hostetler, David – Principal Leadership, 2001
In a lawsuit brought by six Virginia public university professors, a federal district court ruled that access to Internet material for academic purposes was a matter of public concern and that plaintiffs' interest in that material outweighed the state's regulating interests. The Fourth Circuit's reversal gave the state extensive authority over…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Access to Computers, College Faculty, Court Litigation

Tucker, Bonnie Poitras; Smith, Joseph F., Jr. – Journal of Legal Education, 1996
The obligations of law schools, under federal law, to accommodate faculty with disabilities are examined. Employment provisions of the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the definition of a disabled individual are reviewed, and real and hypothetical scenarios in hiring and employing law teachers are…
Descriptors: Accessibility (for Disabled), Civil Rights Legislation, Compliance (Legal), Definitions
Lee, Barbara A. – 1986
This chapter addresses developments concerning faculty tenure, examines institutional responses to new pressures and the litigation by faculty over those reponses, and explores faculty and administration rights and responsibilities. Academic administrators have realized that the reappointment, tenure, and promotion processes are an opportunity to…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Contracts, Court Litigation
Ambrose, Charles M. – 1988
A study was conducted to see if differences in attitudes and definitions exist between faculty and administrators toward the concept of academic freedom. The purpose was to gain a better understanding of their attitudes toward, and the perceptions of, academic freedom and compare those perceptions to the academic freedom general taxonomy. Academic…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrative Policy, Administrator Attitudes, College Environment
Mawdsley, Ralph D.; Permuth, Steven – 1985
In problems pertaining to faculty dismissal, public higher education institutions are subject to both constitutional and contractual constraints, whereas private schools are subject almost solely to self-imposed contractual limitations. In public institutions, teachers alleging termination for protected free speech bear the burden of establishing…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Due Process, Faculty College Relationship, Faculty Handbooks
Stevenson, James A. – 1983
America's legal-educational history is filled with scores of cases of alleged radical teachers who have been legally excluded or removed from public school positions. Only a few of these cases have involved the First Amendment issue of inclass utterances by radicals. Such cases are significant because they highlight the established society's…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Court Litigation, Elementary Secondary Education, Freedom of Speech

Davis, Bertram H.; And Others – Academe, 1989
The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, with the explicit approval of the Pope, declared that the Reverend Charles E. Curran was neither suitable nor eligible to teach Catholic Theology at The Catholic University of America. A report by the American Association of University Professors is presented. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Catholic Schools, Censorship, Church Related Colleges

Chien, John W. – Amerasia Journal, 1990
Describes to experience of one of professor D. Nakanishi's graduate students, who with others, lobbied the California State Legislature on Nakanishi's tenure denial at the University of California Los Angeles. Describes Nakanishi as a teacher and mentor and links the tenure struggle to the Asian-American community's political development. (JB)
Descriptors: Activism, Affirmative Action, Asian Americans, Court Litigation
Williams, Gwen B. – Newlsetter, National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions, 1988
The contracts at four-year colleges with a 10-year history of collective bargaining from 1975 to 1985 were analyzed to determine whether the contracts negotiated in 1975 differed from those negotiated in 1985 in the following areas: appointment, promotion, tenure, termination for cause, retrenchment, class size, number of preparations, schedule of…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Academic Standards, Collective Bargaining, College Faculty

Katayama, Mary – Amerasia Journal, 1990
Describes the role of university students in professor D. Nakanishi's three-year battle for tenure at the University of California Los Angeles. Details the development and importance of a plan, outreach, and networking; and describes the campaign's connection with larger issues of justice and equal representation for Asian Pacific Americans. (JB)
Descriptors: Activism, Affirmative Action, Asian Americans, College Students

Hiers, Richard H. – Journal of College and University Law, 1995
Two sets of Supreme Court cases are examined and their links discussed in the context of the recent Jeffries v. Harleston court case concerning the City College of New York. The first pertains to and reflects general protection of academic freedom in public colleges and universities; the second concerns speech rights of public school teachers and…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Federal Courts

Andrews, Judith L.; And Others – Journal of College and University Law, 1987
The legal aspects and policy implications of Catholic University's withdrawal of a tenured faculty priest's ecclesiastical license to teach theology, in response to a Vatican judgment, are examined. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Catholic Educators, Church Related Colleges, Church Role
Stevens, Ed – ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education, 1999
Due process has become an important principle in higher education as a result of many new legal issues, including dismissals of students from campus, firings of staff members, faculty tenure and promotion, sexual harassment, discrimination, and substance abuse. This volume defines due process; explains when due process procedures are required;…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation, Decision Making