Patrick J. Borchers is a lawyer, university administrator, and politician from the state of Nebraska in the Western United States. He is a faculty member from the Law Faculty of Creighton University in the city of Omaha. In 2016, he failed to win seats in the Nebraska legislature. Borchers is a member of the Republican Party.
Video Patrick Borchers
Life and career
The borrower was born in Madison, Wisconsin. He graduated from Boulder High School in Boulder Colorado in 1979. He received a B.S. in physics with Honors from the University of Notre Dame in 1983. He was a 1986 graduate from the University of California, Davis School of Law where he was elected to the Order of Coif. He was a legal employee for Anthony Kennedy from 1986 to 1987 when Kennedy became a judge in the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Kennedy was then appointed to the US Supreme Court.
Borchers practice law in Sacramento, California. In Supervisory Board v. Local Agent Forming Com. , 3 Cal. 4th 903 (1992), he was successfully represented before the California Supreme Court by a group of citizens trying to form a new city of Citrus Heights, California, arguing that it did not violate the same Protection Clause to limit voting to those within the city limits The proposed.
Maps Patrick Borchers
Academic career
After starting his academic career at Albany Law School, he was appointed in 1999, Dean of Law Faculty of Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, serving until 2007. While in that position he founded the Werner Institute for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution. In 2007, Borchers was appointed Vice President for Academic Affairs at Creighton, Head of Academic Section of the university. He resigned in 2013 and was appointed director of the Werner Institute for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution. In August 2015, Borchers resigned as director and returned to full-time law school duties. Borchers academic expertise includes private international law (legal conflict), international arbitration and federal jurisdiction and procedures. He is the author, coauthor or editor of seven books and about 60 legal review articles.
Written statements from Borchers have been cited in cases of conflict-of-law in the US and Ontario. His works have been cited by the United States Supreme Court and the US Court of Appeals. The country's appeals court also quoted his writings, including New York, Louisiana, Missouri) New Jersey, Tennessee, Illinois, and Michigan.
In 2007, Borchers and several other faculty members at Creighton University wrote the report, funded by the United States Agency for International Development on the possibility of a resolution of extraordinary takeover claims against Cuba in the event of a shift in US-Cuban relations. The report recommended the creation of Cuba-US. Tribunal to settle the claim and suggested that because Cuba does not have enough hard currency to settle the claim, the claimant accepts other forms of compensation, such as tax-exempt zone or development rights.
Politics
In 2016, Borchers ran for the Nebraska legislature of the 39th District, a huge Republican district comprising western Douglas County. Under the laws of the boundaries of Nebraska, the incumbent, Republic of Beau McCoy, is not eligible to run for third term in a row. In a non-partisan primary, Borchers confronts other Republican colleagues Lou Ann Linehan, who has been an assistant to former US senator Chuck Hagel, and Bill Armbrust, a farmer who describes himself as a "loving conservative" with libertarian elements. When the primer was held, Borcher came in third, with 1862 of 6169 votes cast, or 30.2%. Armbrust received 1971 votes, or 32.0%; Linehan won 2336 votes, or 37.9%. As the top two voice seekers, Armbrust and Linehan moved to the general election, while the Borchers were eliminated. Linehan won the seat, winning 55% of the votes in the election for Armbrust by 45%.
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia