Individual Case. Business law course
United States v. Morrison and the civil rights remedy of the Violence Against Women Act: a civil rights law struck down in the name of federalism
Full case
https://go-gale-com.proxylib.csueastbay.edu/ps/i.do?p=AONE&u=csuh_main&id=GALE%7CA68148800&v=2.1&it=r
Course: Business Law
Individual Case
The case paper is described in Chapter 5 Case 5-1 and based on the Christy Brzonkala v. Antonio J. Morrison et al., 120 S. Ct. 1740 (2000) (full case is also available on-line through our Librarys Westlaw database). The assignment has two parts:
Part One: Case brief use the 5 elements to brief this case as outlined in How to Brief a Case:
1. Case name and citation
2. Facts
3. Issue
4. Ruling
5. Reasons
Part Two: Discussion questions answer both questions:
1. Explain whether you find the reasoning of the majority or minority opinion [of the Supreme Court] more persuasive. Why?
2. Identify which stakeholders (who) would primarily benefit under the majority decision and which stakeholders (who) benefit under the minority decision. Why?
Note: Assignments deemed plagiarized (from solution manuals, other students answers, etc.) will be given a grade of ZERO. To avoid this, use your own thoughts and words . If using material from the text or other sources, please cite the material and put the passage in quotation marks ( ). Please use a word document (no longer than 5 pages).
Grading Rubric
Requirement
Meets Expectations (10-15 points)
Does Not Meet Expectation (0-9 points)
1. Case Brief
Identify each (5) elements of a brief with well written descriptions, especially the Reason element
Identified (5) elements of a brief but did not clearly describe all of the elements or description of elements is inappropriate
Requirement
Meets Expectations (8-10 points)
Does Not Meet Expectation (0-7 points)
2. Discussion questions (2)
Discussion of two questions is clear, complete and excellent writing style (i.e. good grammar, coherent paragraphs, etc.)
Discussion of two questions is incomplete or is inappropriate