Digital Rights Management - Alexandria
| October 29, 2007 |
The Seventh ACM DRM Workshop is Oct. 29, 2007, in Alexandria, VA. (ACM is the Association for Computing Machines.)
| October 29, 2007 |
The Seventh ACM DRM Workshop is Oct. 29, 2007, in Alexandria, VA. (ACM is the Association for Computing Machines.)
| October 30, 2007 |
Joseph T. Hansen (United Food and Commercial Workers International Union)
David Schneiderman (Georgetown Law), Investment Rules, Irreversibility, and the Difficulties of Democratic Resistance
Book Panel on Less Safe, Less Free: Why America is Losing the War on Terror by David Cole (Georgetown Law) and Jules Lobel (Pittsburgh Law). Commentary by David Cole, Neal Katyal (Georgetown Law), and Bradford Berenson (Former Associate Counsel to the President)
Greg Sidak (Georgetown Law), Patent Holdup and Oligopsony in Standard Setting Organizations
Michael Simons (St. John’s Law), Prosecutors as Punishment Theorists
Lorie Johnson (Lewis and Clark Law), The Impact of Taxes on Choice of Venue for Distressed Debt Reconstructuring
Irene Calboli (Marquette Law), The Case for Trademark Merchandising
Dan Hunter (New York Law School), Trademark’s Confusing Lie
Jeff McMahan (Rutgers-New Brunswick Philosophy), The Morality of War and the Law of War
Jason Gillmer (Texas Wesleyan Law), Base Wretches and Black Wenches: A Story of Sex and Race, Violence and Compassion, During Slavery Time
| November 1, 2007 |
The Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism is holding the 18th Annual ASEN Conference: Nationalism, East and West: Civic and Ethnic Conceptions of Nationhood, April 15-16, 2008, at the London School of Economics. Paper proposals are due Nov. 1, 2007.
| April 15, 2008 | to | April 16, 2008 |
The Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism is holding the 18th Annual ASEN Conference: Nationalism, East and West: Civic and Ethnic Conceptions of Nationhood, April 15-16, 2008, at the London School of Economics. Paper proposals are due Nov. 1, 2007.
The Association for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism is holding the 18th Annual ASEN Conference: Nationalism, East and West: Civic and Ethnic Conceptions of Nationhood, April 15-16, 2008, at the London School of Economics. Paper proposals are due Nov. 1, 2007.
| October 18, 2007 | to | October 19, 2007 |
Earlier this month (Oct. 18-19, 2007), Fordham University School of Law’s Corporate Law Center hosted Corporations, Investors, and the Securities Markets.
Earlier this month (Oct. 18-19, 2007), Fordham University School of Law’s Corporate Law Center hosted Corporations, Investors, and the Securities Markets.
Carol Stack (UC Berkeley Education), Doing Public Anthropology for Social Justice
Duke International and Comparative Law
Herbert Kronke (Heidelberg Law), UNIDROIT’s Cape Town Treaty System–A Modern Revolution? International Interests in Mobile Equipment in the Global Economy
Harold Burman, Why Unify Transnational Commercial Law? Two Perspectives
Dan Ortiz (Virginia Law), Nice Legal Studies
Mary Jane Angelo (Florida Law), The Killing Fields: Reducing the Casualties in the Battle Between U.S. Species Protection Law and U.S. Pesticide Law
Ashutosh Bhagwat (Hastings), Cooper and Federalism
Elizabeth M. Glazer (Hofsta Law), When Obscenity Discriminates
Mona Hymel (Arizona Law) & Roberta Mann (Widener Law), Moonshine to Motorfuel: Tax Incentives for Fuel Ethanol
Edward Janger (Brooklyn Law), Virtual Territoriality (International Bankruptcy Law)
Corinna Lain (Richmond Law), Death is Different (But Not Really)
David Kairys (Temple Law), Philadelphia Freedom, Memoir of a Civil Rights Lawyer
Ken Feinberg (UCLA Law), The 9/11 Fund–Tort Aberration or Precedent
William Carney (Emory Law), The Mystery of Delaware Law’s Continuing Success
Andy Hanssen (Montana State Economics Dep’t), “Rulers Ruled by Women” An Economic Analysis of the Rise and Fall of Women’s Rights in Ancient Sparta
Washington University in St. Louis
Max Stearns (Maryland Law), Standing at the Crossroads
| October 29, 2007 |
Carol Stack (UC Berkeley Education), Doing Public Anthropology for Social Justice
Ashutosh Bhagwat (Hastings), Cooper and Federalism
Duke International and Comparative Law
Herbert Kronke (Heidelberg Law), UNIDROIT’s Cape Town Treaty System–A Modern Revolution? International Interests in Mobile Equipment in the Global Economy
Harold Burman, Why Unify Transnational Commercial Law? Two Perspectives
Dan Ortiz (Virginia Law), Nice Legal Studies
Mary Jane Angelo (Florida Law), The Killing Fields: Reducing the Casualties in the Battle Between U.S. Species Protection Law and U.S. Pesticide Law
Elizabeth M. Glazer (Hofsta Law), When Obscenity Discriminates
Mona Hymel (Arizona Law) & Roberta Mann (Widener Law), Moonshine to Motorfuel: Tax Incentives for Fuel Ethanol
Edward Janger (Brooklyn Law), Virtual Territoriality (International Bankruptcy Law)
Corinna Lain (Richmond Law), Death is Different (But Not Really)
David Kairys (Temple Law), Philadelphia Freedom, Memoir of a Civil Rights Lawyer
Ken Feinberg (UCLA Law), The 9/11 Fund–Tort Aberration or Precedent
William Carney (Emory Law), The Mystery of Delaware Law’s Continuing Success
Andy Hanssen (Montana State Economics Dep’t), “Rulers Ruled by Women” An Economic Analysis of the Rise and Fall of Women’s Rights in Ancient Sparta
Washington University in St. Louis
Max Stearns (Maryland Law), Standing at the Crossroads
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