Women in Law Organization at Campbell School of Law to Participate in Ovarian Cancer Walk & 5K Run
RALEIGH—For the second straight year, Campbell Law’s Women in Law Student Organization will participate in the annual Gail Parkins Ovarian […]
Articles focusing on education law and policy.
RALEIGH—For the second straight year, Campbell Law’s Women in Law Student Organization will participate in the annual Gail Parkins Ovarian […]
The Eighth Circuit held that a college’s mandatory drug testing policy constitutes an unreasonable search under the Fourth Amendment.
Passing grades are not given away on Capitol Hill.
With more for-profit colleges coming up short, veterans must figure out where to use their GI Bill funds to get an education, many while also supporting families.
A Fayetteville teacher is on paid leave and has received death threats after stomping on the American flag during a civics lesson.
The U.S. Government has been asked to weigh in on a special education case in the 10th Circuit.
How the Supreme Court’s most recent decision concerning affirmative action in college admissions could have just re-set the clock on racial relations on college campuses across the country.
With the recent desegregation of public schools in Cleveland, Mississippi, the hard truth that segregation still exists must be dealt with nationwide.
The lack of homeschool regulation in North Carolina may mean that the State has inadequate information and data on homeschooled student success.
President Obama signs new bill on December 10, 2015 that replaces the Bush administration’s No Child Left Behind Act.
Questions surround the implementation of a new “critical mass” system at the University of California at Berkley’s Law School that left some first-year sections without any black students.
Federal district court rules that students who experience traumatic events while growing up could be considered disabled.
The college will stay open for now, but could be subject to future lawsuits
For-profit colleges are being scrutinized financially and legally.
Campbell Law School’s Intellectual Property Law Society hosted a Patent Law Symposium on April 10, 2015.