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Walmart Pregnancy Accommodation Ruling Puts Pressure on Congress
A recent Seventh Circuit decision upholding a Walmart distribution center’s temporary light duty policy that excludes pregnant workers is creating urgency for the Senate to pass bipartisan legislation that would require such accommodations.
Initiative to Stop HIV’s Spread Gains Post-Pandemic ‘Reset’
Efforts to end the spread of HIV in the US are slowly recovering after the Covid-19 pandemic hindered a federal initiative to end the epidemic by 2030, public health officials and researchers said.
Boy Scouts Bankruptcy Exposes Court Split on Liability Releases
A recent decision allowing entities tied to the Boy Scouts of America to be released from sexual abuse claims has reignited debate over a controversial bankruptcy tactic and raised the stakes of an upcoming appellate court ruling involving Purdue Pharma LP.
Shrimp Genetics Verdict Dips Into Uncharted Trade Secrets Realm
A jury verdict believed to be the first to find that genetic material of a living organism qualified as a trade secret may add to precedent in a little-explored area of intellectual property law.
Judge Blocks Florida Race ‘Guilt’ Training Ban for Employers
A Florida law restricting workplace bias or diversity training violates the First Amendment and can’t be enforced, a federal judge ruled Thursday.
‘No Winners’ if States Launch Water War Amid Megadrought
The seven states using Colorado River water likely will avoid an epic legal showdown over the most severe water cuts amid the region’s megadrought—but legal analysts say California, Nevada, and Arizona in particular will face heavy burdens to conserve.
Prince, Andy Warhol, and Fair Use at the Supreme Court
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