Legal Scholarship Blog

Law-Related Calls for Papers, Conferences, and Workshops
A Service from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law & University of Washington School of Law

October 4, 2007 Colloquia/Workshops

October 4, 2007

Boston University

Leora Bilsky (Tel Aviv Law), “Speaking Through The Mask”: Israeli Arabs and the Changing Faces of Israeli Citizenship

Brooklyn

George Conk (Brooklyn Law), A New Tort Code Emerges

Columbia

William Simon (Columbia Law), The Market for Bad Legal Advice: Academic Professional Responsibility Consulting as an Example

Columbia Tax Colloquium

David Weisbach (Chicago Law), A Welfarist Approach to Disabilities

Florida State

Daniel Rodriguez (Texas Law), State Constitutionalism and the Scope of Judicial Review

Georgetown

Louis M. Seidman (Georgetown Law), Book Panel on Silence and Freedom with commentary by Professors Seidman, Sanford Levinson (Texas Law), and Lawrence Solum (Illinois Law)

Iowa

Sharon Davies (Ohio State Law), The Killing of Father James E. Coyle–A Search for Justice in 1921 Birmingham, Alabama

Michigan State

Edward Cheng (Brooklyn Law), The Clinical-Statistical Controversy in Law

Minnesota Public Law

Richard Banks (Stanford Law), Race Consciousness, Color Blindness and Antidiscrimination Doctrine

NYU Legal, Political and Social Philosophy

Leslie Greene (Oxford Law), Being Tolerated

Ohio Northern

Susan Rose-Ackerman (Yale Law), Corruption and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding

Ohio State

Edward Lee (Ohio State Law), Freedom of the Press 2.0

Richmond

Jim Gibson (Richmond Law), Reasonableness

Saint Louis

Childress Lecture Faculty Colloquium

SMU

Jenia Turner (SMU Law), Defense Perspectives on the Tension Between Politics and Law in International Criminal Trials

Vanderbilt

Lori Ringhand (Kentucky Law), “I’m Sorry, I Can’t Answer That”: Positive Scholarship and the Supreme Court Confirmation Process

Washburn

Michael Hunter Schwartz (Washburn Law), How the Best Law Teachers Plan Their Classes

Yale Legal Theory Workshop

William Galston (Maryland Public Policy), Realism in Political Theory

Posted by on October 3rd, 2007 | Civil Rights Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, EVENTS, International Law, Jurisprudence, Law and Race, Law and Society, Legal Education, Legal History, Tort Law, Uncategorized | no comments

October 4, 2007 Colloquia/Workshops

Boston University

Leora Bilsky (Tel Aviv Law), “Speaking Through The Mask”: Israeli Arabs and the Changing Faces of Israeli Citizenship

Brooklyn

George Conk (Brooklyn Law), A New Tort Code Emerges

Columbia

William Simon (Columbia Law), The Market for Bad Legal Advice: Academic Professional Responsibility Consulting as an Example

Columbia Tax Colloquium

David Weisbach (Chicago Law), A Welfarist Approach to Disabilities

Florida State

Daniel Rodriguez (Texas Law), State Constitutionalism and the Scope of Judicial Review

Georgetown

Louis M. Seidman (Georgetown Law), Book Panel on Silence and Freedom with commentary by Professors Seidman, Sanford Levinson (Texas Law), and Lawrence Solum (Illinois Law)

Iowa

Sharon Davies (Ohio State Law), The Killing of Father James E. Coyle–A Search for Justice in 1921 Birmingham, Alabama

Michigan State

Edward Cheng (Brooklyn Law), The Clinical-Statistical Controversy in Law

Minnesota Public Law

Richard Banks (Stanford Law), Race Consciousness, Color Blindness and Antidiscrimination Doctrine

NYU Legal, Political and Social Philosophy

Leslie Greene (Oxford Law), Being Tolerated

Ohio Northern

Susan Rose-Ackerman (Yale Law), Corruption and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding

Ohio State

Edward Lee (Ohio State Law), Freedom of the Press 2.0

Richmond

Jim Gibson (Richmond Law), Reasonableness

Saint Louis

Childress Lecture Faculty Colloquium

SMU

Jenia Turner (SMU Law), Defense Perspectives on the Tension Between Politics and Law in International Criminal Trials

Vanderbilt

Lori Ringhand (Kentucky Law), “I’m Sorry, I Can’t Answer That”: Positive Scholarship and the Supreme Court Confirmation Process

Washburn

Michael Hunter Schwartz (Washburn Law), How the Best Law Teachers Plan Their Classes

Yale Legal Theory Workshop

William Galston (Maryland Public Policy), Realism in Political Theory

Posted by on October 3rd, 2007 | Civil Rights Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, International Law, Jurisprudence, Law and Race, Law and Society, Legal Education, Legal History, Tort Law | no comments

October 3, 2007 Colloquia/Workshops

Chicago-Kent Legal History

Bonnie Honig (Northwestern Law), Antigone’s Anachronism: Homeric Mourning in Democratic Athens

Connecticut

Anthony Bradley (Edinburgh Law), The Wildest Law-Making Powers Appropriate to a Sovereign: Reflections on Removal of the Chagos Islanders to make way for the U.S. base on Diego Garcia

Emory

Dan Burk (Minnesota Law)

Hastings

Aaron Rappaport (Hastings Law), How Not to Do Legal Philosophy Or, The Many Confusions of Conceptual Analysis in the Law

Loyola

Dan Markel (Florida State Law), On Retributive Damages

NYU Legal History

Christopher Beauchamp (Cambridge PhD), Who Invented the Telephone? The Business and Politics of Patent Litigation in the Late Nineteenth Century

Toledo

Matthew Cooper, My Adventures in the CIA Leak Case

Washburn

Carol S. Bruch (UC Davis Law), The Use and Misuse of Social Science Data

Queen’s Law

Honourable Mr. Justice David Doherty (Ontario Court of Appeal), What is a Miscarriage of Justice?

Posted by on October 3rd, 2007 | COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Empirical Legal Studies, Intellectual Property, Jurisprudence, Law and Society, Legal History, Tort Law, Uncategorized | no comments