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

April 4, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

April 4, 2008

Cincinnati

Natasha Martin (Seattle Law), Immunity for Hire: The Same Actor Factor as a Subterfuge to Equality in the Contemporary Workplace

Duke

Christine Jolls (Yale Law)

Florida

Craig Anthony Arnold (Louisville Law), Land Use Regulation and the Democratic Process

Georgetown International Human Rights

Martin Flaherty (Fordham Law), Executive Authority, Fundamental Rights, and Global Separation of Powers

Georgia International Law

David Caron (UC Berkeley Law), Why International Courts and Tribunals Look and Act as They Do

Harvard International Law

John Mikhail (Georgetown Law)

Iowa

Thomas Merrill (Columbia Law), The Rule of First Possession and the Rule of Accession

Missouri

Heidi Kitrosser (Minnesota Law)

Syracuse

Eric A. Kades (William & Mary Law), A Positive Theory of Eminent Domain

Texas

Kristin Collins (BU Law), Let the Government become their Guardians: Administrative Law, Social Provision, and the Legal Construction of the Family in the Early Nineteenth Century

UCLA Faculty Friday

Mark Tushnet (Harvard Law), The Rights Revolution in the Twentieth Century

Virginia

Gia Lee (UCLA Law), Free Speech Deference

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 30th, 2008 | Law and Humanities, Labor and Employment Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Courts, Legal History, Civil Rights Law, Constitutional Law, Property Law, International Law, Commercial Law, Administrative Law, Uncategorized | no comments

April 3, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

April 3, 2008

Boston University

Scott Moss (Colorado Law), O Brave New World That Has Such Creatures Evidence: An Economic Analysis Of Courts’ Misguided Rules On Discovery Of Digital Evidence

Boston College Legal History

Paul Halliday (Virginia History), The Liberty of the Subject: Conceiving Habeas Corpus in England and Empire

Columbia

Nestor Davidson (Colorado Law), Standardization and Pluralism in Property Law

Fordham

Tsilly Dagan (Bar-Ilan Law), Taxing the Non-Market Economy

Georgetown

Elizabeth Warren (Harvard Law), Making Credit Safer

Harvard

Jessica Stern (Harvard Law), Producing Terror: Organization Dynamics of Survival

Harvard Legal History

Dalia Tsuk Mitchell (George Washington Law), Corporate Directors: Trustees, Representatives, Agents

Loyola

Sonia Katyal (Fordham Law)

Michigan Law & Economics

Fernando Gomez (Barcelona Law), Insurance and Tort: Coordination Systems and Imperfect Liability Rules

Minnesota Faculty Works

Geoffrey Miller (NYU Law), Law Economics and Narrative in the Hebrew Bible

NYU Tax Policy & Public Finance

Jonathan Barry Forman (Oklahoma Law), Making America Work & 2008 Tax Considerations in a Universal Pension System

Northwestern Tax

David Duff (Toronto Law), Rethinking the Concept of Income in Tax Law & Policy

Seattle

Ha-Joon Chang (Cambridge Economics), Bad Samaritans — The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism

SMU

Sionaidh Douglas-Scott (King’s College Law), The EU and Terrorism

Stanford Law & Economics

Yair Listokin (Yale Law), Does Shareholder Voting Maximize Stock Market Value?

Stetson

Jason Gillmer (Texas Wesleyan Law), Base Wretches and Black Wenches: A Story of Sex and Race, Violence and Compassion, During Slavery Times

Texas

Calvin Johnson (Texas Law), Consumption Tax for Extraordinary Returns

Washington

Ilhyung Lee (Missouri Law), Korean Parties and Korean Panelists in UDRP Decisions (and the ‘Bad Faith’ Dilemma)

Yale Legal Theory

Robert Frank (Cornell Management), The Status of Moral Emotions in Consequentialist Moral Reasoning

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 30th, 2008 | Evidence Law, Comparative Law, National Security Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Law and Technology, Insurance Law, Law and Race, Law and Religion, Commercial Law, Tax Law, Business Law, Securities Law, Tort Law, Law and Economics, Legal History, Property Law | no comments

April 2, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

April 2, 2008

Akron

Jane Larson (Wisconsin Law), Regulating Sex: Multiple Paradigms for Thinking About Sexual Freedom and Autonomy

Chicago-Kent

Jeffrey G. Sherman (Chicago-Kent Law)

CUNY

Wendy Bach (CUNY Law)

Emory

Anne Dailey (UConn Law), Imagination and Choice

NYU Legal History

Bernard Freamon (Seton Hall Law), The Abolition of the Indian Ocean Slave Trade and the Vicissitudes of Empire

SMU Law & Citizenship

Michael Kirsch (Notre Dame Law), Taxing Citizens in a Global Economy

Texas

Alejandro Moreno (Texas Medicine), Implementation of the Istanbul Protocol - A Summary Report of the Efforts to Eliminate Torture and Ill-Treatment in Mexico

Toronto Law & Economics

Edward Rock (Penn Law), The Hanging Chads of Corporate Voting

UC Hastings

Reza Dibadj (USF Law)

UCLA Williams Institute

Adam Romero (The Williams Institute), When Family Falls

USC Law, History & Culture

Josephine McDonagh (King’s College), On Settling and Being Unsettled: Motion and Emotion in Dickens’s Bleak House

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 30th, 2008 | Law and Sexuality, Comparative Law, Law and Humanities, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, Law and Gender, Law and Literature, Family Law, Business Law, Tax Law, Legal History, Law and Economics, Uncategorized | no comments

April 1, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

April 1, 2008
9:00 am

Chicago-Kent

M. Elizabeth Magill (Virginia Law)

Connecticut

Elizabeth Trujillo (Suffolk Law), Deconstructing the Public/Private Overlaps in Foeign Investment and Trade Regimes

Georgetown

Muneer Ahmed (American University), Guantanamo is about the Body

Harvard Internet & Society

Allison Fine

Lewis & Clark

Rachel Godsil (Seton Hall Law), Protecting Status: The Mortgage Crisis, Eminent Domain, and the Ethic of Homeownership

Loyola

Gaicinto Dela Caneaea (Rome Law)

Texas

Emily Kadens (Texas Law), Merchants, Kings, and the Codification of Commercial Law

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 30th, 2008 | COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, National Security Law, Law and Economics, International Law, Commercial Law, Uncategorized | no comments

March 31, 2008 Colloquia/Workshops

March 31, 2008

Chicago Law & Philosophy

Stephen Schulhofer (NYU Law)

Connecticut

Ulrich Haltern (Humboltd), Law and the Identity of Europe

Florida

Michael B. Lang (Chapman Law), What Every Tax Lawyer Should Know About Patented Tax Strategies

Georgetown Law & Philosophy

Steve Darwall (Michigan Law), The Nature and Value of Rights & The Second-Person Standpoint: Respect, Morality, and Accountability Chapter 1 & 2

Georgia

David B. Mustard (Georgia Business) & Thomas A. Eaton (Georgia Law)

Harvard

Mary Bilder (Boston Law), James Madison, Law Student

Harvard International Law

Margaret Levi (Washington Political Science)

Marquette

Anita Krishnakumar (St. John’s Law), Early Reflections on the Roberts Court and Statutory Interpretation

Northwestern Law & Economics

Roberta Romano (Yale Law), Does the Sarbanes-Oxley Act Have a Future?

Ohio State University

Deborah L. Brake (Pittsburgh Law), The Invisible Pregnant Athlete and the Promise of Title IX

Queen’s Law

Victor Tadros (Warwick Law), Wrongs and Crimes

Rutgers-Camden

Ralph Porcher (Institute of Advanced Study), The Hand of Midas: When Concepts Turn Legal or Deflating the Hart-Dworkin-Debate

Seton Hall

Reinier Kraakman (Harvard Law)

Stanford Law, Science, & Technology

Mark Forman

St. John’s

Michael M. O’Hear (Marquette Law), Lovely Rita?: Procedural Justice and Federal Sentencing

Temple

Donald Harris (Temple Law)

Texas

Michael Perino (St. John’s Law)

UC Berkeley

Alexandra Kalev (Arizona Sociology), Cracking the Glass Cages? Restructuring and Ascriptive Inequality at Work

UC Hastings

Yafir Holzman-Gazit (Israel Management Law), Land Expropriation in Israel

UCLA Faculty Mondays

Naomi Lamoreaux (UCLA Economics), Scylla and Charybdis? Some Historical Reflections on the Two Basic Problems of Corporate Governance

USC Law, Economics, and Organization

Josh Lerner (Harvard Business), Inducement Prizes and Innovation

Virginia Law & Economics

Stephen Choi (NYU Law), Director Elections and the Influence of Proxy Advisors

Washington University in St. Louis

Anuj Desai (Wisconsin Law)

Posted by pittlegalscholarship on March 30th, 2008 | COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, EVENTS, Law and Philosophy, Courts, Law and Gender, Law and Economics, Business Law, Property Law, Tax Law, International Law, Legal History, Uncategorized | no comments