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

February 15, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

February 15, 2008

Duke Global Law

Gregory S. Alexander (Cornell Law), Can Constitutions be Transformative? The Role of Background Traditions and Culture

Florida

Stephen H. Legomsky (Washington University Law), Learning to Live with Unequal Justice: Asylum and the Limits to Consistency

Georgia International Law

Nadia Bernaz (National University of Ireland at Galway), The Caribbean Court of Justice: One Court with Two Jurisdictions — A Unique Judicial Institution?

Notre Dame

Laura Dickinson (UConn Law), Civil Rights and Legal History

UCLA Fridays

Ronald J. Allen (Northwestern Law), Juridical Proof and the Best Explanation

USC

Christopher Slobogin (Florida Law), Dangerousness and Death Penalty

Vanderbilt Faculty Presentations

Chris Brummer (Vanderbilt Law), The Public Markets and International Financial Centers

Tracey E. George (Vanderbilt Law)

Villanova

Jennifer Hendricks (Tennessee Law)

Virginia

Saikrishna Prakash (San Diego Law), The Separation and Overlap of War and Military Powers

Posted by on February 14th, 2008 | Business Law, Civil Rights Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, EVENTS, Law and Economics, Law and Society, Legal History, National Security Law, Uncategorized | no comments

February 15, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

Duke Global Law

Gregory S. Alexander (Cornell Law), Can Constitutions be Transformative? The Role of Background Traditions and Culture

Florida

Stephen H. Legomsky (Washington University Law), Learning to Live with Unequal Justice: Asylum and the Limits to Consistency

Georgia International Law

Nadia Bernaz (National University of Ireland at Galway), The Caribbean Court of Justice: One Court with Two Jurisdictions — A Unique Judicial Institution?

Notre Dame

Laura Dickinson (UConn Law), Civil Rights and Legal History

UCLA Fridays

Ronald J. Allen (Northwestern Law), Juridical Proof and the Best Explanation

USC

Christopher Slobogin (Florida Law), Dangerousness and Death Penalty

Vanderbilt Faculty Presentations

Chris Brummer (Vanderbilt Law), The Public Markets and International Financial Centers

Tracey E. George (Vanderbilt Law)

Villanova

Jennifer Hendricks (Tennessee Law)

Virginia

Saikrishna Prakash (San Diego Law), The Separation and Overlap of War and Military Powers

Posted by on February 14th, 2008 | Business Law, Civil Rights Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Courts, Law and Economics, Law and Society, Legal History, National Security Law | no comments

February 14, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

Boston University

Shari Diamond (Northwestern Law)

Columbia

Mitchell Kane (Columbia Law), Bootstraps, Poverty Traps and Povert Pits: Tax Treaties as Novel Tools for Development Finance

Florida State

Jonathan Simon (UC Berkeley Law), Katz at Forty: A Sociological Jurisprudence Whose Time Has Come

Fordham

James Kainen (Fordham Law), Re-Evaluating Home Building and Loan v. Blaisdell

Georgetown

Samuel Buell (Washington at St. Louis Law), Underappreciated Virtues of Overbreadth in Criminal Law

Michigan Law & Economics

Albert Choi (Virginia Law), Integrating an Agreement to Induce Information Disclosure

Minnesota Faculty Works

Paul Schwartz (UC Berkeley Law), The Future of Tax Privacy

New York Law Tax Policy & Public Finance

Sarah Lawsky (George Washington Law), Probably? Understanding Tax Law’s Uncertainty

SMU

Jeff Kahn (SMU Law), International Travel and the U.S. Constitution during the War on Terror

Stanford Law & Economics

Jonathan Macey (Yale Law), False Promises: Finding a Role for Directors in Corporate Governance

Toronto Health Law

David Henry (Institute of Clinical Evaluative Sciences), The Australia/USA Free Trade Agreement – Impact on Access to Medicine

UC Berkeley

Nancy Polikoff (Washington College of Law, American University), Beyond (Straight and Gay) Marriage: Valuing All Families Under the Law

UCLA Legal Theory

Amy M. Adler (NYU Law), Against Moral Rights (in Visual Arts)

Vanderbilt Faculty Presentations

Frank Bloch (Vanderbilt Law), The Quest for Socially Relevant Legal Education in India

Washburn

Tonya Kowalski (Washburn Law), Imperatives and Incentives to Introduce Native American Nations and Law in First-Year Legal Method Courses

Posted by on February 14th, 2008 | Business Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Family Law, Health Law, Indian Law, Jurisprudence, Law and Economics, Law and Gender, Law and Race, Law and Religion, Law and Sexuality, Legal Education, National Security Law, Tax Law, Uncategorized | no comments