Word: abrahamã
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Tribe’s embarrassing admission came after an article on The Weekly Standard’s website detailed several uncomfortable similarities between his work and Henry J. Abraham??s 1974 book, Justices and Presidents. Among other resemblances, Abraham??s text contains a 19-word passage which also appears verbatim in Tribe’s book. The accusations were the third instance of a Harvard Law School (HLS) professor being accused of plagiarism in the past year—and the second this month. On Sept. 2, Climenko Professor of Law Charles J. Ogletree issued...
...source among some 3,500 footnotes. Tribe’s 1985 book, on the other hand, contains no footnotes or endnotes on account of a desire to make the book more “accessible” to the general public. To be sure, the book does reference Abraham??s book in the appendix as background literature, but Tribe has no citations to lean on—as Goodwin did—when claiming no intent to deceive...
Instead, Tribe includes a single sentence mentioning Abraham??s book in an appendix on background literature...
...Weekly Standard posted an article on its website Saturday charging Tribe with using language that closely mirrors sections of Henry J. Abraham??s 1974 book on Supreme Court appointments, Justices and Presidents...
...point in his 1985 book, Tribe lifts a 19-word passage verbatim from Abraham??s text...