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Trevor Jones - New York
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Trevor Jones (New York) has made a profound impact on his community, which inspired his pursuit of a legal career. His commitment to public service has established him as a people's advocate in mass torts. To know more about him visit his official site https://trevorjones.org/
Pace Law Review, 2013
significant majority, dissenting, and concurring judicial opinions on New York law, 4 many of which continue to be relevant to the development of substantive and procedural law in the Empire State. 5 Hopkins's opinions have been cited and relied on by courts throughout the nation. 6 He is recognized and praised as a "compleat jurist," 7 a leading law reformer, 8 and an outstanding scholar. 9
Australian Journal of Rehabilitation Counselling, 2011
A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother. (Proverbs 18:24) On November 22, 2010, Trevor Hawkins died suddenly and unexpectedly of complications from a cerebral haemorrhage. He is survived by his partner, Sandra and their son, William. His loss has deeply affected all who knew him, had worked with him and had been taught by him. Trevor was born in 1951 and grew up in Kulnura, inland from the Central Coast of New South Wales. He moved to Sydney in order to undertake a Bachelor of Arts degree majoring in Psychology. He graduated from the University of Sydney in 1974. Our Privileged Knowledge About Trevor Robert Pryor knew Trevor from 1971 up until his death. They were university undergraduates together in psychology. They subsequently worked together in government departments, universities and in two vocational and rehabilitation companies, which they jointly owned. Robert and Trevor frequently ran joint workshops and conference sessions over a 25-year period. They also co-authored several journal articles in national and international publications. Jim Bright knew Trevor from 1995 up until his death. Jim worked with Trevor at the Vocational Capacity Centre for some years.
European Sport Management Quarterly, 2016
Georgia Journal of International Comparative Law, 2014
I first met Alan Watson in the spring of 1980. I was at the time a student in the joint law and philosophy program at the University of Virginia. One of my philosophy professors was the late David C. Yalden-Thomson, a Hume scholar of the first rank. Although Alan had taught as a visiting professor at Virginia and other American law schools, the occasion of his being in Charlottesville when I met him was a social visit with Yalden-Thomson, whom we all referred to affectionately as "YT," and with whom Alan was a very close friend. I was eager to meet Alan, who had just moved to the United States to assume a position at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. It is not an exaggeration to say that by age forty-seven, when I met Alan, he had already achieved the status of being one of the top legal scholars anywhere in the world. He had been on the faculty of Oxford University and then, at age thirty-two, was appointed to the Douglas Chair of Civil Law at Glasgow University before assuming the Chair of Civil Law at the University of Edinburgh. He had amassed a body of scholarship that was unparalleled in its quantity, quality, and breadth. He had established an outstanding reputation in Roman law and jurisprudence, and it was clear that he was in the process of doing paradigm shifting work in comparative law, starting with his 1974 book, Legal Transplants: An Approach to Comparative Law. So it was with great excitement that my partner, Anna Charlton, and I accepted an invitation from YT to join him, his partner Barbara-a lovely person who passed away in 2012-Alan, and several other law professors and students, for dinner at YT's one weekend.
History Workshop Journal, 2004
University of Pittsburgh Law Review, 2004
Towards the end of my second year of law school, as I began to learn the ropes of my new position as Editor-in-Chief, I had several opportunities to sit down and talk with Dean Sell about the upcoming year. Although I never was a student of his in the classroom, I looked forward to working with the Law Review's most senior faculty advisor. We discussed all sorts of ideas, large and small, for how to improve the Law Review. I looked on as he learned how to use a digital camera. I got to hear a few of his legendary stories. I began to get a feel for how we would work together. It felt particularly good when he leaned over and whispered to me, "I have a feeling we're going to get along very well." Like many second-year law students, I began work as a summer associate shortly after final exams, and did not have the opportunity to see Dean Sell during the summer months. While I frequently found myself at the law school in the evenings, Dean Sell had long since left the building. A week before classes were to begin, I came in to the school to get things ready for the coming year, eagerly looking forward to meeting up with Dean Sell to continue our interrupted conversations from the spring. Shortly after I arrived that Monday morning, however, word arrived that Dean Sell had passed away over the weekend.
The Los Angeles County Men's Jail segregates gay and transgender inmates and says that it does so to protect them from sexual assault. But not all gay and transgender inmates qualify for admission to the K6G unit. Transgender inmates must appear transgender to staff that inspect them. Gay men must identify as gay in a public space and then satisfactorily answer a series of cultural questions designed to determine whether they really are gay. This policy creates harms for those who are excluded, including vulnerable heterosexual and bisexual men, men who have sex with men but do not embrace gay identity, and gay-identified men who do not mimic white, affluent gay culture. Further, the policy harms those who are included in that it stereotypes them as inherent victims, exposes them to a heightened risk of HIV transmission, and disrupts relationships that cut across gender identity and sexual orientation. Thus, this Article casts doubt on the claim that the policy is intended to and actually protects gay and transgender inmates. Moreover, it interrogates the Jail's failure to protect many other categories of inmates who have been shown to be vulnerable to sexual assault in jails, including those who are young, firsttime offenders and those with disabilities. The Jail's policy ultimately reflects and reinforces problematic social assumptions about masculinity, including the notion that gay men are not "real men."
Allied to Medicine (new entry) and Grade 3A in Chemistry (up from Grade 2 in previous RAE). (These achievements formed the basis for a successful bid in 2005 for the University to be awarded "Centre of Excellence" status in the core sciences.
Intercontinental Journal on Physical Education, 2019
2023
Culture, Éducation et Pouvoir. Les chansons dans l’éducation préscolaire au Mexique de 1934 à 1963, 1997
History of Universities, 2017
Omar Yaakob, Mohamad Pauzi Abdul Ghani, Kamarul Baharin Tawi, Dedy Triawan Suprayogi, Azliza Aziz, Khairul Ezani Bin Jaafar, Proceedings Seventh UMT International Symposium on Sustainability Science and Management (UMTAS) 2008, Kuala Terengganu, June 2008
Evangelical Quarterly, 2020
Magistra, 2008
Nuclear Engineering and Design, 1978
Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology, 2005
INTERNATIONAL REFEREED JOURNAL OF NURSING RESEARCHES, 2018
RePEc: Research Papers in Economics, 2018
Cell Reports, 2014
International Review on Computers and Software
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Section A Mathematics, 2020
Nature Climate Change, 2016