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 26th Colloquia/Workshops

February 26, 2009

Boston College

      Leandra Lederman (Indiana Law)

Brooklyn Law

       Michael S. Kang (Emory Law), Voting as Veto

Columbia

       Scott Hemphill (Columbia Law), An Aggregate Approach to Antitrust: Using New Data and Agency Rules to Preserve Drug Competition

Connecticut

       Gillian Lester (UC Berkeley Law), Targeting, Universalism, and the Formation of Social Preferences

Florida International University

       Bob Cottol (George Washington Law), Terra do Nosso Senhor: The Paradox of Race and Slavery in Brazil

Florida State

       Robert Thompson (Vanderbilt Law)

Minnesota Work in Progress

       Susanna L. Blumenthal (Minnesota Law), The Apprehension of Fraud in Nineteenth-Century American Law

Stetson

      Huyen Pham (Texas Wesleyan Law), Empirical Analysis of Variation in Local Immigration Laws

Suffolk

       Larry Cata Backer (Penn State Law), Sovereign Wealth Funds: Regulatory Approaches at the Juncture of Public and Private Law.

UCLA Legal Theory

       Tim Scanlon (Harvard Philosophy), When Does Equity Matter

Wisconsin Law, War, and Human Society

       Dyan Mazurama (Tufts Law)

Yale Law and Economics

        Richard Craswell (Stanford Law), When is a Willful Breach ‘Willful’?  The Link Between Definitions and Damages

Posted by on February 25th, 2009 | COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, International Law, Law and Economics, Law and Gender, Law and Philosophy, Law and Society, Legal History | no comments

February 25th Colloquia/Workshops

Connecticut

       Daphne Barak-Erez (Tel Aviv Law), The Institutional Aspects of Comparative Law

Emory

      Susan Bandes (DePaul Law)

Florida State

       Hope Babcock (Georgetown Law)

Georgetown Law and Philosophy

       David Brink (U.C. San Diego Philosophy)

Harvard Health Law

       Ted Marmor (Yale Management), Comparative Perspectives and Policy Learning in the World of Health Care

Hofstra

       Oren Bracha (Texas Law), The Ideology of Authorship, Revisited

NYU Legal History

       Michael Klarman (Harvard Law), Backlash: The Occasionally Perverse Consequences of Court Decisions”

SMU

       Lackland M. Bloom (SMU Law)

Stanford Environmental and Natural Resources Law

       Tim Quinn (Association of California Water Agencies), Water Supply Reliability in a World of Shortages

USC Law History And Culture

       Ronald Dworkin (NYU Law)

Posted by on February 25th, 2009 | COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Comparative Law, Environmental Law, Health Law, Law and Economics, Law and Philosophy, Law and Politics | no comments