Chicago-Kent
William A. Birdthistle (Chicago-Kent Law), The Fortunes and Foibles of Exchange-Traded Funds
Chicago-Kent Legal History
Joanna Grisinger (Clemson History), Looking Inward: The Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 and Administrative Reform
Chicago Law & Economy
Sharon Hannes (Tel Aviv Law), Compensating for Executive Compensation
Emory
David Hoffman (Temple Law), Docketology, District Courts, and Doctrine
Georgetown
Risa Goluboff (Virginia Law), The Lost Promise of Civil Rights (Intro), Chapter 9: Brown and the Remaking of Civil Rights
Loyola
Jackie Lipton (Case Western Law), The Rise of Publicity in Rubloff Reception
Marquette
Ed Fallone (Marquette Law), The Borderless Consitution
Notre Dame
Judy Fox (Notre Dame Law), Foreclosures and Abandoned Homes in South Bend: A Search for Causes and Solutions
Pittsburgh
Daniel Berkowitz (Pittsburgh Economics) & Karen Clay (Carnegie Mellon Heinz School of Public Policy & Management), Legal Origins and the Evolution of Institutions: Evidence from American State Courts
Stetson
Steve Friedland (Elon Law), Some Thoughts on Implementing the Carnegie Report — Curriculum, Assessment and Learning Environments
UCLA Law, Economics, & Organizations
Emmanuel Saez (UC Berkeley Economics), Optimal Minimum Wage Policy in Competitive Labor Markets
Yale Legal History
Joshua Getzler (Oxford Law), Changing Attitudes to Finance in English Law and Equity c. 1860-1920
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 10th, 2008
| Law and Race, Law and Economics, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Courts, Legal History, Civil Rights Law, Education Law, Business Law, Constitutional Law, Securities Law, Property Law |
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Chicago Law & Philosophy
Janice Nadler (Northwestern Law)
Duke International & Comparative Law
Jurgen Basedow (Max Planck Institute), The Reform of European Antitrust Law
Georgetown Law & Philosophy
John Mikhail (Georgetown Law), Bentham’s Theory of Fictions and Critique of Natural Rights
Georgia
Douglas H. Yarn (Georgia State Law)
Penn Law & Philosophy
John Gardner (Oxford Law), Introduction to the Second Edition of H.L.A. Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility
Rutgers-Camden
Damon Smith (Rutgers-Camden Law), Reconceptualizing Urban Redevelopment: Participatory Planning and Procedural Protections
San Diego
Ken Bamberger (UC Berkeley Law)
Seton Hall
Janai Nelson (St. John’s Law)
Stanford Internet & Society
Judith Donath (MIT), Virtual Design and Trustworthy Signals
St. John’s
Sherry F. Colb (Columbia Law), Why is Torture “Different” and How “Different” is it?
Temple
Steven L. Schwarcz (Duke Law), Protecting Financial Markets: Lessons from the Subprime Mortgage Meltdown
UC Berkeley
Cindy Skach (Harvard Government), The Constitution of Peoples: Outlaw Religion and the Public Sphere
UC Berkeley Law & Economics
Robert Litan (Kauffman Foundation), Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity
Yale Corporate Law
Michael R. Eisenson (Charlesbank Capital Partners), An Insider’s Perspective on Private Equity Investing
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 10th, 2008
| Comparative Law, Law and Religion, Law and Humanities, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Law and Philosophy, EVENTS, Law and Economics, Antitrust Law, Intellectual Property, Property Law, Business Law, Commercial Law, Civil Rights Law, Uncategorized |
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Chicago Law & Philosophy
Janice Nadler (Northwestern Law)
Duke International & Comparative Law
Jurgen Basedow (Max Planck Institute), The Reform of European Antitrust Law
Georgetown Law & Philosophy
John Mikhail (Georgetown Law), Bentham’s Theory of Fictions and Critique of Natural Rights
Georgia
Douglas H. Yarn (Georgia State Law)
Penn Law & Philosophy
John Gardner (Oxford Law), Introduction to the Second Edition of H.L.A. Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility
Rutgers-Camden
Damon Smith (Rutgers-Camden Law), Reconceptualizing Urban Redevelopment: Participatory Planning and Procedural Protections
San Diego
Ken Bamberger (UC Berkeley Law)
Seton Hall
Janai Nelson (St. John’s Law)
Stanford Internet & Society
Judith Donath (MIT), Virtual Design and Trustworthy Signals
St. John’s
Sherry F. Colb (Columbia Law), Why is Torture “Different” and How “Different” is it?
Temple
Steven L. Schwarcz (Duke Law), Protecting Financial Markets: Lessons from the Subprime Mortgage Meltdown
UC Berkeley
Cindy Skach (Harvard Government), The Constitution of Peoples: Outlaw Religion and the Public Sphere
UC Berkeley Law & Economics
Robert Litan (Kauffman Foundation), Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism, and the Economics of Growth and Prosperity
Yale Corporate Law
Michael R. Eisenson (Charlesbank Capital Partners), An Insider’s Perspective on Private Equity Investing
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 10th, 2008
| Law and Religion, Law and Economics, Comparative Law, Law and Humanities, Law and Philosophy, Antitrust Law, Civil Rights Law, CONFERENCES, Property Law, Intellectual Property, Business Law, Commercial Law, Uncategorized |
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| February 6, 2008 | to | February 12, 2008 |
If you like to plan ahead (the ABA certainly does!), here are future ABA meetings: Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on November 6th, 2007
| EVENTS |
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