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 25, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

Akron

John Conley (North Carolina Law), The Corporate Social Responsibility Movement as an Ethnographic Problem

Georgetown Law & Philosophy

David Brink (UCSD Philosophy), Mill’s Ambivalence About Rights

Georgia

Ahmed E. Taha (Wake Forest Law)

Georgia State

Paul Miller (Washington Law), Good Intentions and Eugenics: Avoiding Genetic Genocide

McGeorge

Greg Mitchell (Virginia Law), Second Thoughts

Marquette

Anthony Colangelo (SMU Law)

Northwestern Law & Economics

Richard Craswell (Stanford Law), When is a Willful Breach Willful?

Rutgers-Camden

Richard Hyland (Rutgers-Camden Law), A Flexible Methodology for Comparative Law

Stanford Internet & Society

Kim Alexander (California Voter Foundation), Digital Democracy –a Look Back, a Look Ahead

St. John’s

Kenneth C. Kettering (New York Law School), Securitization and Its Discontents

Temple

Benjamin L. Liebman (Columbia Law), A Populist Threat to China’s Courts?

UC Berkeley

Noga Morag-Levine (Michigan State Law), Civil Law, Common Law, and the Origins of Anglo-American Skepticism towards the Precautionary Principle

UC Berkeley Law & Economics

Andy Daughety (Vanderbilt Economics), Mass Torts and the Incentives for Suit, Settlement, and Trial

UCLA Mondays

Rick Hasen (Loyola-LA Law), The Untimely Death of Bush v. Gore

Yale Corporate Law

Randall K.C. Kau (XE Capital Management), The Winding Path from Tax Law to Hedge Fund Land

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 25th, 2008 | Comparative Law, Law and Society, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Law and Technology, Law and Philosophy, Law and Economics, Legal History, Business Law, Contract Law, Tax Law, Securities Law, Tort Law, Uncategorized | no comments

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