Douglas Howard Ginsburg became the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in 2001 after serving as an associate judge since 1986. The work is multi-disciplinary, pulling together materials from the fields of law, economics, and technology.http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0314853960/?tag=prabook0b-20http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0314829466/?tag=prabook0b-20Diploma, Latin School Chicago, 1963;Bachelor of Science, Cornell Univercity, 1970;Juris Doctor, University of Chicago, 1973.Once logged in, you can add biography in the database(Organization of materials reflects the reality of competi...)Associate, Covington & Burling, Washington, 1972;law clerk, United States Court Appeals, Washington, 1973-1974;law clerk, Supreme Court of the United States Court, Washington, 1974-1975;professor, Harvard University, 1975-1983;deputy assistant attorney general for regulatory affairs antitrust divsn, unites states department Justice, Washington, 1983-1984;assistant attorney general antitrust division, unites states department Justice, Washington, 1985-1986;administrator for information and regulatory affairs, Executive Office President, Office Management and Budget, Washington, 1984-1985;judge, United States Court Appeals (District of Columbia circuit), since 1986.
Organization of materials reflects the reality of competition between media in the marketplace and pushes the students to analyze underlying legal issues in a broader context. Douglas Howard Ginsburg, American Federal judge, educator. See Douglas Howard Ginsburg's compensation, career history, education, & memberships. The book relies heavily upon textual discussion to explain complex regulatory issues and to expose underlying policy considerations. Nominated by Ronald Reagan on September 23, 1986 Faced with the embarrassment of backing a nominee who had admitted illicit drug use, the White House dispatched Secretary of Education William J. Bennett to urge Ginsburg to withdraw his name from consideration. They thought they had just the person they needed in Ginsburg and, although Ginsburg had less than a year's experience as a judge, Reagan nominated him for the vacancy. Ginsburg is also an honorary member of the District of Columbia Bar Association.Stung by the Senate's rejection of Bork, Reagan and his aides were determined to find a nominee who would fulfill their requirement of judicial restraint but who had no "history" that would make their choice vulnerable to attack. Douglas Howard Ginsburg, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Mecham scholar University of Chicago Law School, 1970-1973; recipient Casper Platt award University of Chicago Law School, 1972. He is a member of the Illinois State Bar Association, the Massachusetts State Bar Association, the American Economic Association, and the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. "My views on the law and on what kind of Supreme Court justice I would make have been drowned out in the clamor," he stated. He was appointed to this court in October 1986 by President Ronald Reagan. He commended Reagan and his wife, Nancy Reagan, for "leading the fight against illegal drugs," adding,"I fully support their effort and I hope that the young people of this country, including my own daughters, will learn from my mistake and heed their message. The coverage is appropriate not only for the law school setting but also for specialized courses in schools of communication. Lecturer law Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1987-1991.Distinguished professor of law George Mason U., Arlington, Virginia, since 1988.