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Leslie, David W. – 1984
The concept of institutional academic freedom is discussed. Attention is directed to how the concept confounds the distinct values and standards traditionally used in analysis of cases involving individual rights in higher education, and legal and practical problems it raises for the maintenance of traditional concepts of academic freedom. The…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Higher Education
Leslie, David W. – 1978
Three areas of court litigation pose challenges to the administration of higher education. First, developments in equal protection and related areas promise reassessment of the distribution of educational finances. Both federal and state court cases suggest a shift from a requirement of equal educational opportunity to equal educational effects.…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Court Litigation, Decision Making, Due Process
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Leslie, David W. – Review of Higher Education, 1987
The academic common law may soon vanish, not as a result of court action but due to the American Association of University Professors's declining role in defending the common law of academic employment. The profession is challenged to maintain its independence from external control by reconsidering its own common law. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Collective Bargaining, College Faculty, Court Litigation
Leslie, David W. – 2002
This paper considers how educators can best arrive at "big, good ideas" for the improvement of higher education and how they can best put them to use where they are needed. Getting big, good ideas probably comes from working on big, good questions. There is a substantial body of research literature about the big questions of education, and it is…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Improvement, Educational Research, Higher Education