Akron
Brant Lee (Akron Law), Whiteness as Brand Management
Chicago-Kent Legal History
Mark Graber (Maryland Politics), John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil
CUNY
Michael Jacobson (Vera Institute of Justice)
Michigan Tax Policy
Mitchell Kane (Virginia Law), Bootstraps, Poverty Traps, and Poverty Pits: Tax Treaties as Novel Tools for Development Finance
NYU Legal History
Christopher Beauchamp (Samuel Golieb Fellow, NYU Law), Technology’s Trials: Patents in the United States Courts, 1860-1910
Oregon Environmental & Natural Resources Law
William Rossi (Oregon English) & Molly Westling (Oregon English), Reading, Rhetoric, and Climate
Stetson
David Wilkins (Harvard Law), Toward a Joint Venture Model of Attorney/Client Relationship Between Corporations and their Outside Counsel
Toronto Tax Lax & Policy
Jacques Sasseville (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), Tax Treaties: Better the Devil We Know?
UCLA Williams Institute
Devon Carbado (UCLA Law), Acting White: What’s Sexual Orientation Got to Do With it?
USC Law, History, and Culture
Nan Goodman (Colorado English), Banishment and Jurisdictional Indentity in Seventeenth-Century New England
Washington
Mary Whisner (Washington Law Library), The Buzz about Blawgs
Wei Zhang (Peking Management), Politics of Medical Disputes in China
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| Law Librarianship, Law and Sexuality, Comparative Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Law and Cyberspace, Law and Technology, Law and Race, Legal Ethics, Business Law, Health Law, Intellectual Property, Tax Law, Constitutional Law, Legal History, Environmental Law, Uncategorized |
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Chicago-Kent
Josef Drexl (Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law)
Georgetown
Adam Samaha (Chicago Law), Originalism’s Expiration Date
Loyola
Robert Miller (Villanova Law), Deal Risk and The Economics of Materials
Notre Dame
Rick Garnett (Notre Dame Law), The ‘Hands-Off’ Approach to Religious Doctrine: What are We Talking About
Ohio State
Samuel R. Bagenstos (Washington University in St. Louis Law)
Suffolk
Peer Zumbansen (York Law), Comparative Corporate Governance
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| Law and Gender, Comparative Law, EVENTS, Law and Religion, Law and Economics, CONFERENCES, Business Law, Uncategorized |
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Chicago-Kent
Josef Drexl (Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law)
Chicago Law & Philosophy
Alan Wertheimer (Vermont Political Science)
Georgetown Law & Philosophy
Alastair Norcross (Rice Philosophy), Consequentialism and Commitment
Georgetown Statutory
Lisa Schultz Bressman (Vanderbilt Law), Administrative Law
Harvard
Gary Bass (Princeton Politics), Freedom’s Battle: The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention
Harvard International Law
Jonathan Baron (Penn Psychology)
Michigan International Law
Ambassador Luigi R. Einaudi (Secretary General, Organization of American States), The Ideal and Practice of Democratic Legitimacy in Latin America
Northwestern Law & Economics
Betsey Stevenson (Penn Business), Beyond the Classroom: Using Title IX to Measure the Return to High School Sports
Queen’s Law
John Gardner (Oxford), H.L.A. Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility: Forty Years On
Rutgers-Camden
Michael Dorf (Columbia law), Dynamic Incorporation of Foreign Law
Seton Hall
Brett Frischmann (Loyola-Chicago Law)
Stanford Internet & Society
Jim Bessen (Boston University Law), Patent Failure
St. John’s
Alexandra D. Lahav (UConn Law), Advocacy at Unfair Hearings
UC Berkeley
Malcolm Feeley (UC Berkeley Law) & Edward Rubin (Vanderbilt Law), Federalism: Political Identity and Tragic Compromise
UC Berkeley Law & Economics
Ethan Kaplan (UC Berkeley Economics) & Arindrajit Dube (UC Berkeley Wage and Employment) & Suresh Naidu (UC Berkeley Ph.D.), Coups, Corporations, and Classified Information
UCLA Mondays
Arleen Leibowitz (UCLA Public Policy), The Road to Health is Paved With Poor Incentives
USC Law, Economics and Organization
Tom Ginsburg (Illinois Law), Guarding the Guardians: The Law & Economics of Judicial Councils
Yale Corporate Law
Paul Grossman (Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker), Imaginative Responses to Real World Litigation Problems
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| Law and Sexuality, Comparative Law, Law and Society, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Law and Philosophy, Law and Technology, Law and Economics, Administrative Law, Health Law, Criminal Law, Education Law, Business Law, International Law, Constitutional Law, Uncategorized |
no comments
Chicago-Kent
Josef Drexl (Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law)
Chicago Law & Philosophy
Alan Wertheimer (Vermont Political Science)
Georgetown Law & Philosophy
Alastair Norcross (Rice Philosophy), Consequentialism and Commitment
Georgetown Statutory
Lisa Schultz Bressman (Vanderbilt Law), Administrative Law
Harvard
Gary Bass (Princeton Politics), Freedom’s Battle: The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention
Harvard International Law
Jonathan Baron (Penn Psychology)
Michigan International Law
Ambassador Luigi R. Einaudi (Secretary General, Organization of American States), The Ideal and Practice of Democratic Legitimacy in Latin America
Northwestern Law & Economics
Betsey Stevenson (Penn Business), Beyond the Classroom: Using Title IX to Measure the Return to High School Sports
Queen’s Law
John Gardner (Oxford), H.L.A. Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility: Forty Years On
Rutgers-Camden
Michael Dorf (Columbia law), Dynamic Incorporation of Foreign Law
Seton Hall
Brett Frischmann (Loyola-Chicago Law)
Stanford Internet & Society
Jim Bessen (Boston University Law), Patent Failure
St. John’s
Alexandra D. Lahav (UConn Law), Advocacy at Unfair Hearings
UC Berkeley
Malcolm Feeley (UC Berkeley Law) & Edward Rubin (Vanderbilt Law), Federalism: Political Identity and Tragic Compromise
UC Berkeley Law & Economics
Ethan Kaplan (UC Berkeley Economics) & Arindrajit Dube (UC Berkeley Wage and Employment) & Suresh Naidu (UC Berkeley Ph.D.), Coups, Corporations, and Classified Information
UCLA Mondays
Arleen Leibowitz (UCLA Public Policy), The Road to Health is Paved With Poor Incentives
USC Law, Economics and Organization
Tom Ginsburg (Illinois Law), Guarding the Guardians: The Law & Economics of Judicial Councils
Yale Corporate Law
Paul Grossman (Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker), Imaginative Responses to Real World Litigation Problems
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| Comparative Law, Law and Society, Law and Sexuality, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Law and Philosophy, Law and Technology, Law and Economics, Administrative Law, Health Law, Criminal Law, Education Law, Business Law, International Law, Constitutional Law, Uncategorized |
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The Third International Conference on Legal, Security and Privacy Issues in IT (LSPI) together with the Second International Law and Trade Conference (ILTC) will take place September 3-5, 2008, in Prague, Czech Republic. The meetings are sponsored by the International Association of IT Lawyers in cooperation with University of Economics in Prague.
Call for papers deadlines: peer-reviewed papers - Aug. 1, 2008; non-academic presentation abstracts - Aug. 15, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| EVENTS |
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| August 1, 2008 |
| August 15, 2008 |
The Third International Conference on Legal, Security and Privacy Issues in IT (LSPI) together with the Second International Law and Trade Conference (ILTC) will take place September 3-5, 2008, in Prague, Czech Republic. The meetings are sponsored by the International Association of IT Lawyers in cooperation with University of Economics in Prague.
Call for papers deadlines: peer-reviewed papers - Aug. 1, 2008; non-academic presentation abstracts - Aug. 15, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| EVENTS |
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| September 3, 2008 | to | September 5, 2008 |
The Third International Conference on Legal, Security and Privacy Issues in IT (LSPI) together with the Second International Law and Trade Conference (ILTC) will take place September 3-5, 2008, in Prague, Czech Republic. The meetings are sponsored by the International Association of IT Lawyers in cooperation with University of Economics in Prague.
Call for papers deadlines: peer-reviewed papers - Aug. 1, 2008; non-academic presentation abstracts - Aug. 15, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| EVENTS |
no comments
The Third International Conference on Legal, Security and Privacy Issues in IT (LSPI) together with the Second International Law and Trade Conference (ILTC) will take place September 3-5, 2008, in Prague, Czech Republic. The meetings are sponsored by the International Association of IT Lawyers in cooperation with University of Economics in Prague.
Call for papers deadlines: peer-reviewed papers - Aug. 1, 2008; non-academic presentation abstracts - Aug. 15, 2008.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on March 9th, 2008
| Law and Cyberspace, CALLS FOR PAPERS, International Law, Business Law, CONFERENCES |
no comments
| March 7, 2008 | to | March 9, 2008 |
Forgiveness: Probing the Boundaries is an inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference, research and publishing project” that “aims to explore the nature, significance, and practices of forgiveness.” The conference will take place March 7-9, 2008, in Salzburg, Austria. The deadline for abstracts was Nov. 2, 2007.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on November 6th, 2007
| EVENTS |
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| March 6, 2008 | to | March 9, 2008 |
The 26th Annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference will be March 6-9, 2008, in Eugene, OR. The theme is: “Cultivating Corridors for The People.”
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on November 3rd, 2007
| EVENTS |
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| March 7, 2008 | to | March 9, 2008 |
Call for Papers
Evil, Law & the State: Issues in State Power & Violence
March 7-9, 2008
Salzburg, Austria
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference will explore issues surrounding evil and law, with a focus on state power and violence. Perspectives are sought from those engaged in any field relevant to the study of law and legal culture: anthropology, criminology, cultural studies, government/politics, history, legal studies, literature, philosophy, psychology, religion/theology, and sociology, as well as those working in civil rights, human rights, prison services, politics and government (including NGOs), psychiatry, healthcare, and other areas.
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Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 4th, 2007
| EVENTS |
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