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Elizabeth Sepper, a University of Texas law professor who specializes in health law, said that even though lawmakers hope the bill will ease physicians' concerns, as written, it doesn't change the ...
Allowing Doctors and Delivery Drivers to Stop Providing Birth Control New framework makes it easier to refuse to offer medical care By Maggie Quinlan, Fri., Feb. 14, 2025 ...
Elizabeth Sepper, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law, says Project 2025 offers a roadmap for what the Trump Administration might do when it comes to abortion, and that ...
Sepper said filing in Amarillo and Paxton’s involvement are no accident. “It’s obviously highly strategic litigation by conservative advocates that’s meant to cut Planned Parenthood off at ...
Sepper said attorneys general do have a role in protecting consumers from deceptive practices. But if they don’t investigate, Shachar said that leaves a “gray area” of enforcement.
Elizabeth Sepper, a professor at the University of Texas Law School and an expert on health law, discusses a judge striking down Georgia's 6 week abortion ban. Derek Muller, a professor at Notre ...
Elizabeth Sepper, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law whose scholarly work has focused on reproductive rights, told me she sees the new platform as “100 percent, a ...
Sepper argued this could “lead to some rather devastating effects in the medium-to-long term” and clashes with precedent, noting that Congress multiple times considered but ultimately rejected ...
But our friend Elizabeth Sepper, a professor at University of Texas at Austin School of Law, quickly pointed out that this is not a net neutral on conscience rights.
Chris Sepper, P.T., age 66, passed away after an illness on April 5, 2013. He retired from Warren Woods Tower High School in 2005. Beloved husband of Karen; loving father of Jeremy (Kristy) and And… ...
But if the court sets a date for oral arguments, Sepper said, “people should take their embryos out of the state immediately.” “There's no reason for them to take this case and side with the ...
The U.S. Supreme Court 2014 decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby allowed religious, anti-abortion employers to refuse to cover contraception in their employee health insurance. But an extraordinary ...