| March 24, 2010 | to | March 27, 2010 |
International Law in a Time of Change, the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law, will take place March 24-27, 2010, at the Ritz Carlton in Washington, DC. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| March 4, 2010 |
| March 5, 2010 |
The University of Tulsa College of Law‘s 14th Annual John W. Hager Distinguished Lecture will feature Catharine A. MacKinnon speaking on “Trafficking, Prostitution and Inequality,” Thursday, March 4, 2010.
The next day, March 5, the Tulsa Law Review presents its Legal Scholarship Symposium, “The Scholarship of Catharine MacKinnon.” mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The University of Tulsa College of Law‘s 14th Annual John W. Hager Distinguished Lecture will feature Catharine A. MacKinnon speaking on “Trafficking, Prostitution and Inequality,” Thursday, March 4, 2010.
The next day, March 5, the Tulsa Law Review presents its Legal Scholarship Symposium, “The Scholarship of Catharine MacKinnon.” mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| CONFERENCES, Human Rights Law, Law and Gender, Law and Philosophy, Law and Sexuality, LECTURES |
no comments
The University of Auckland Faculty of Law and the Department of Commercial Law is hosting the 2010 Australasian Law Teachers Association (ALTA) Conference July 4-7, 2010. The conference theme is: Power, Regulation and Responsibility: Lawyers in Times of Transition.
Keynote speakers at the plenary sessions will be Dame Sian Elias, Chief Justice of New Zealand, Professor Jeremy Waldron of the New York University School of Law, Stephen Gageler SC and David Collins QC, the respective Solicitors-General of Australia and New Zealand, Associate Professor Mary Keyes of Griffith Law School and Dr Robert Joseph of Waikato Law School. A strong interest group programme will also be at the heart of the conference. The venue will be the brilliant new Owen G Glenn Building of the Business School, with dinners at the University’s famous Fale Pasifika and the harbour front headquarters of the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron. We encourage you to come to New Zealand and attend the conference. Decide now that you will present a paper to one of the interest groups. Be part of what promises to be an exciting intellectual and social occasion.
Important dates
2 April 2010 Abstract submissions close
7 May 2010 Early registrations close
14 June 2010 Full paper submissions close
4 to 7 July 2010 Conference
Email: alta2010 [at] auckland.ac.nz
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| July 4, 2010 | to | July 7, 2010 |
The University of Auckland Faculty of Law and the Department of Commercial Law is hosting the 2010 Australasian Law Teachers Association (ALTA) Conference July 4-7, 2010. The conference theme is: Power, Regulation and Responsibility: Lawyers in Times of Transition.
Keynote speakers at the plenary sessions will be Dame Sian Elias, Chief Justice of New Zealand, Professor Jeremy Waldron of the New York University School of Law, Stephen Gageler SC and David Collins QC, the respective Solicitors-General of Australia and New Zealand, Associate Professor Mary Keyes of Griffith Law School and Dr Robert Joseph of Waikato Law School. A strong interest group programme will also be at the heart of the conference. The venue will be the brilliant new Owen G Glenn Building of the Business School, with dinners at the University’s famous Fale Pasifika and the harbour front headquarters of the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron. We encourage you to come to New Zealand and attend the conference. Decide now that you will present a paper to one of the interest groups. Be part of what promises to be an exciting intellectual and social occasion.
Important dates
2 April 2010 Abstract submissions close
7 May 2010 Early registrations close
14 June 2010 Full paper submissions close
4 to 7 July 2010 Conference
Email: alta2010 [at] auckland.ac.nz
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The University of Auckland Faculty of Law and the Department of Commercial Law is hosting the 2010 Australasian Law Teachers Association (ALTA) Conference July 4-7, 2010. The conference theme is: Power, Regulation and Responsibility: Lawyers in Times of Transition.
Keynote speakers at the plenary sessions will be Dame Sian Elias, Chief Justice of New Zealand, Professor Jeremy Waldron of the New York University School of Law, Stephen Gageler SC and David Collins QC, the respective Solicitors-General of Australia and New Zealand, Associate Professor Mary Keyes of Griffith Law School and Dr Robert Joseph of Waikato Law School. A strong interest group programme will also be at the heart of the conference. The venue will be the brilliant new Owen G Glenn Building of the Business School, with dinners at the University’s famous Fale Pasifika and the harbour front headquarters of the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron. We encourage you to come to New Zealand and attend the conference. Decide now that you will present a paper to one of the interest groups. Be part of what promises to be an exciting intellectual and social occasion.
Important dates
2 April 2010 Abstract submissions close
7 May 2010 Early registrations close
14 June 2010 Full paper submissions close
4 to 7 July 2010 Conference
Email: alta2010 [at] auckland.ac.nz
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Legal Education, Legal Profession |
no comments
The AALS Section on Women in Legal Education will hold a program during the AALS 2011 Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California, Jan. 4-8, with paper presentations by the winners of the New Voices in Gender Studies paper competition.
Submissions should be of scholarship relating to (1) women in legal education, (2) any aspect of women’s relationship to the law, or (3) gender, sexuality and the law. There is a maximum 30,000 word limit (inclusive of footnotes) for the submission. Since this is a paper presentation opportunity, and not one for publication, submitted papers can be committed for publication prior to their submission, but cannot be actually in print prior to their submission. Each professor may submit only one paper for consideration.
Papers will be reviewed anonymously. The manuscript should be accompanied by a cover letter with the author’s name and contact information. The manuscript itself, including title page and footnotes, must not contain any references that identify the author or the author’s school. The submitting author is responsible for taking any steps necessary to redact self-identifying text or footnotes.
To be considered, papers must be submitted electronically to Professor Linda Jellum, Mercer University School of Law, jellum_l@law.mercer.edu. The deadline for submission is Monday, August 16, 2010. Authors of accepted papers will be notified by October 1, 2010. Call for Paper participants will be responsible for paying their annual meeting registration fee and travel expenses.
Full-time faculty members of AALS member and fee-paid law schools, who have been teaching for seven or fewer years as of August 16, 2010, are eligible to submit papers. Foreign, visiting (and not full-time on a different faculty) and adjunct faculty members, graduate students, and fellows are not eligible to submit.
Papers will be selected after review by members of the Executive Committee and Advisory Board of the Section, including Professor Bridget Crawford, Professor Nancy Levit, Professor Kathryn Stanchi, and Professor Ettie Ward.
Any inquiries about the Call for Papers should be submitted to:
Professor Nancy Levit
Curators’ and Edward D. Ellison Professor of Law
UMKC School of Law
(816) 235-2391
levitn [at] umkc.edu
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| January 4, 2011 | to | January 8, 2011 |
The AALS Section on Women in Legal Education will hold a program during the AALS 2011 Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California, Jan. 4-8, with paper presentations by the winners of the New Voices in Gender Studies paper competition.
Submissions should be of scholarship relating to (1) women in legal education, (2) any aspect of women’s relationship to the law, or (3) gender, sexuality and the law. There is a maximum 30,000 word limit (inclusive of footnotes) for the submission. Since this is a paper presentation opportunity, and not one for publication, submitted papers can be committed for publication prior to their submission, but cannot be actually in print prior to their submission. Each professor may submit only one paper for consideration.
Papers will be reviewed anonymously. The manuscript should be accompanied by a cover letter with the author’s name and contact information. The manuscript itself, including title page and footnotes, must not contain any references that identify the author or the author’s school. The submitting author is responsible for taking any steps necessary to redact self-identifying text or footnotes.
To be considered, papers must be submitted electronically to Professor Linda Jellum, Mercer University School of Law, jellum_l@law.mercer.edu. The deadline for submission is Monday, August 16, 2010. Authors of accepted papers will be notified by October 1, 2010. Call for Paper participants will be responsible for paying their annual meeting registration fee and travel expenses.
Full-time faculty members of AALS member and fee-paid law schools, who have been teaching for seven or fewer years as of August 16, 2010, are eligible to submit papers. Foreign, visiting (and not full-time on a different faculty) and adjunct faculty members, graduate students, and fellows are not eligible to submit.
Papers will be selected after review by members of the Executive Committee and Advisory Board of the Section, including Professor Bridget Crawford, Professor Nancy Levit, Professor Kathryn Stanchi, and Professor Ettie Ward.
Any inquiries about the Call for Papers should be submitted to:
Professor Nancy Levit
Curators’ and Edward D. Ellison Professor of Law
UMKC School of Law
(816) 235-2391
levitn [at] umkc.edu
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The AALS Section on Women in Legal Education will hold a program during the AALS 2011 Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California, Jan. 4-8, with paper presentations by the winners of the New Voices in Gender Studies paper competition.
Submissions should be of scholarship relating to (1) women in legal education, (2) any aspect of women’s relationship to the law, or (3) gender, sexuality and the law. There is a maximum 30,000 word limit (inclusive of footnotes) for the submission. Since this is a paper presentation opportunity, and not one for publication, submitted papers can be committed for publication prior to their submission, but cannot be actually in print prior to their submission. Each professor may submit only one paper for consideration.
Papers will be reviewed anonymously. The manuscript should be accompanied by a cover letter with the author’s name and contact information. The manuscript itself, including title page and footnotes, must not contain any references that identify the author or the author’s school. The submitting author is responsible for taking any steps necessary to redact self-identifying text or footnotes.
To be considered, papers must be submitted electronically to Professor Linda Jellum, Mercer University School of Law, jellum_l@law.mercer.edu. The deadline for submission is Monday, August 16, 2010. Authors of accepted papers will be notified by October 1, 2010. Call for Paper participants will be responsible for paying their annual meeting registration fee and travel expenses.
Full-time faculty members of AALS member and fee-paid law schools, who have been teaching for seven or fewer years as of August 16, 2010, are eligible to submit papers. Foreign, visiting (and not full-time on a different faculty) and adjunct faculty members, graduate students, and fellows are not eligible to submit.
Papers will be selected after review by members of the Executive Committee and Advisory Board of the Section, including Professor Bridget Crawford, Professor Nancy Levit, Professor Kathryn Stanchi, and Professor Ettie Ward.
Any inquiries about the Call for Papers should be submitted to:
Professor Nancy Levit
Curators’ and Edward D. Ellison Professor of Law
UMKC School of Law
(816) 235-2391
levitn [at] umkc.edu
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Law and Gender, Legal Education |
no comments
The Center for Gender and Sexuality Law at Columbia Law School invites applications for a sabbatical visitor for the 2010-2011 academic year to undertake research, writing and collaboration with Center faculty and students in ways that span traditional academic disciplines. The CGSL welcomes applications from faculty from any field who are interested in spending a semester or the academic year in residence at Columbia Law School working on scholarly projects relating to Gender and/or Sexuality Law.
Sabbatical Visitors will receive an office with phone and computer, secretarial support and full access to university libraries, computer systems and recreational facilities. In addition, Sabbatical Visitors will be expected to participate in CGSL activities and present a paper at the Center’s Colloquium Series.
Applicants should submit:
• a curriculum vitae
• a writing sample
• a research statement (of approximately 1,000 words) that describes the proposed work during the Sabbatical period
Applications are due April 1, 2010. We prefer electronic submissions to
gender_sexuality_law [at] law.columbia.edu
Direct questions to:
Center for Gender and Sexuality Law Sabbatical Visitor Program
Columbia University
435 W. 116th Street
New York, N.Y. 10027
gender_sexuality_law@law.columbia.edu
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The Center for Gender and Sexuality Law at Columbia Law School invites applications for a sabbatical visitor for the 2010-2011 academic year to undertake research, writing and collaboration with Center faculty and students in ways that span traditional academic disciplines. The CGSL welcomes applications from faculty from any field who are interested in spending a semester or the academic year in residence at Columbia Law School working on scholarly projects relating to Gender and/or Sexuality Law.
Sabbatical Visitors will receive an office with phone and computer, secretarial support and full access to university libraries, computer systems and recreational facilities. In addition, Sabbatical Visitors will be expected to participate in CGSL activities and present a paper at the Center’s Colloquium Series.
Applicants should submit:
• a curriculum vitae
• a writing sample
• a research statement (of approximately 1,000 words) that describes the proposed work during the Sabbatical period
Applications are due April 1, 2010. We prefer electronic submissions to
gender_sexuality_law [at] law.columbia.edu
Direct questions to:
Center for Gender and Sexuality Law Sabbatical Visitor Program
Columbia University
435 W. 116th Street
New York, N.Y. 10027
gender_sexuality_law@law.columbia.edu
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| JUNIOR SCHOLARS, Law and Gender, Law and Sexuality, OTHER SCHOLARLY OPPORTUNITIES |
no comments
St. Thomas
Richard Painter (Minnesota), Berle’s Vision Beyond Shareholder Interests: Why Investment Bankers Should Have (Some) Personal Liability.
Florida
Julian Juergensmeyer (Georgia State), Bill Belleville, Bringing It All Back Home: Leadership, Land Use, and Local-nomics.
This paper is not publicly available.
Iowa
Richard Albert (Boston), Constitutional Handcuffs.
New York
Scott Cummings (UCLA), Clinical Theory Workshop: “Managing Pro Bono: Doing Well by Doing Better.”
This paper is not publicly available.
Adam Ashforth (Michigan), South Africa Reading Group: “What do they talk about, when they talk about death, in Malawi, in a time of AIDS?”
This paper is not publicly available.
Ohio State
Vicki Jackson (Georgetown).
Penn
Penn/NYU Law & Finance Symposium.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
St. Thomas
Richard Painter (Minnesota), Berle’s Vision Beyond Shareholder Interests: Why Investment Bankers Should Have (Some) Personal Liability.
Florida
Julian Juergensmeyer (Georgia State), Bill Belleville, Bringing It All Back Home: Leadership, Land Use, and Local-nomics.
This paper is not publicly available.
Iowa
Richard Albert (Boston), Constitutional Handcuffs.
New York
Scott Cummings (UCLA), Clinical Theory Workshop: “Managing Pro Bono: Doing Well by Doing Better.”
This paper is not publicly available.
Adam Ashforth (Michigan), South Africa Reading Group: “What do they talk about, when they talk about death, in Malawi, in a time of AIDS?”
This paper is not publicly available.
Ohio State
Vicki Jackson (Georgetown).
Penn
Penn/NYU Law & Finance Symposium.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 26th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS |
no comments
Florida
Julian Juergensmeyer (Georgia State), Bill Belleville, Bringing It All Back Home: Leadership, Land Use, and Local-nomics.
This paper is not publicly available.
Marquette
Stephen Engel, (Marquette).
Minnesota
Cheryl Boudreau, (UC Davis).
Toronto
Scott Burris (Temple), Stigma from a Public Health Law Perspective: Research Questions and Ethical Issues .
This paper is not publicly available.
Yale
Thomas Brennan, (Northwestern).
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 25th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
| August 26, 2010 | to | August 28, 2010 |
Lavender Law, the National LGBT Bar Association’s Annual Career Fair and Conference, will take place Aug. 26-28, 2010, in Miami Beach. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 24th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Lavender Law, the National LGBT Bar Association’s Annual Career Fair and Conference, will take place Aug. 26-28, 2010, in Miami Beach. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 24th, 2010
| Civil Rights Law, CONFERENCES, Family Law, Law and Gender, Law and Sexuality |
no comments
The 2010 Transgender Law Institute will be held in Miami Beach, FL, on August 26, 2010, as part of the National LGBT Bar Association’s annual Lavender Law Career Fair and Conference. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 24th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Ohio Northern
Daniel Hamilton (Illinois), Emancipation and the Common Law: Slavery Litigation after the Civil War.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 24th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
Ohio Northern
Daniel Hamilton (Illinois), Emancipation and the Common Law: Slavery Litigation after the Civil War.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 24th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS |
no comments
Northwestern
Daniel Shaviro (NYU), The Case Against Foreign Tax Credits.
This paper is not publicly available.
Rutgers
Donald McCabe (Rutgers).
Tulsa
Monica Hakimi (Michigan), Operationalizing the Responsibility to Protect
This paper is not publicly available.
Washington University
Barry Friedman (NYU).
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 22nd, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
| March 4, 2010 |
| 2:00 pm | to | 6:00 pm |
| March 5, 2010 |
The University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law for a multi-disciplinary symposium focusing on issues of law, ethics, and maintaining patient confidentiality in the electronic age. The symposium, Privacy and Ethics Meets Biomedical Informatics, begins at 2:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 4 and runs all day on Friday, March 5. It is cosponsored by the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, the Division of Medical Ethics, and the Department of Biomedical Informatics. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 11th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law for a multi-disciplinary symposium focusing on issues of law, ethics, and maintaining patient confidentiality in the electronic age. The symposium, Privacy and Ethics Meets Biomedical Informatics, begins at 2:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 4 and runs all day on Friday, March 5. It is cosponsored by the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, the Division of Medical Ethics, and the Department of Biomedical Informatics. mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 11th, 2010
| CONFERENCES, Health Law |
no comments
Seton Hall University School of Law hosts the Third National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference Sept. 9-12, 2010. The conference theme is Our Country, Our World in a “Post-Racial” Era.
It will feature panels on the “war on terror,” urban revitalization, criminal law, health care, education, immigration, human trafficking, voting rights, international and comparative law, judicial nominations, environmental justice, and corporate responsibility, among others. It will also include a Junior Faculty and Development Workshop. A media plenary session will explore the meaning of a “post-racial” society and its relevance to legal scholarship and teaching.
Calls for papers or proposals:
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 9th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Seton Hall University School of Law hosts the Third National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference Sept. 9-12, 2010. The conference theme is Our Country, Our World in a “Post-Racial” Era.
It will feature panels on the “war on terror,” urban revitalization, criminal law, health care, education, immigration, human trafficking, voting rights, international and comparative law, judicial nominations, environmental justice, and corporate responsibility, among others. It will also include a Junior Faculty and Development Workshop. A media plenary session will explore the meaning of a “post-racial” society and its relevance to legal scholarship and teaching.
Calls for papers or proposals:
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 9th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| September 9, 2010 | to | September 12, 2010 |
Seton Hall University School of Law hosts the Third National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference Sept. 9-12, 2010. The conference theme is Our Country, Our World in a “Post-Racial” Era.
It will feature panels on the “war on terror,” urban revitalization, criminal law, health care, education, immigration, human trafficking, voting rights, international and comparative law, judicial nominations, environmental justice, and corporate responsibility, among others. It will also include a Junior Faculty and Development Workshop. A media plenary session will explore the meaning of a “post-racial” society and its relevance to legal scholarship and teaching.
Calls for papers or proposals:
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 9th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Seton Hall University School of Law hosts the Third National People of Color Legal Scholarship Conference Sept. 9-12, 2010. The conference theme is Our Country, Our World in a “Post-Racial” Era.
It will feature panels on the “war on terror,” urban revitalization, criminal law, health care, education, immigration, human trafficking, voting rights, international and comparative law, judicial nominations, environmental justice, and corporate responsibility, among others. It will also include a Junior Faculty and Development Workshop. A media plenary session will explore the meaning of a “post-racial” society and its relevance to legal scholarship and teaching.
Calls for papers or proposals:
mw
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on February 9th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Criminal Law, Education Law, Health Law, Immigration Law, JUNIOR SCHOLARS, Law and Politics, Law and Race, Local Government Law, National Security Law, Poverty Law |
no comments
Northwestern
Stephanie Hoffer (Ohio State), Defining the Role of Direct Democracy in Non-Essential Government Spending.
This paper is not publicly available.
Rutgers
Christine Farley, (American).
Willamette
Bennett Capers (Hofstra), Real Rape Too.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 8th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
Northwestern
Stephanie Hoffer (Ohio State), Defining the Role of Direct Democracy in Non-Essential Government Spending.
This paper is not publicly available.
Rutgers
Christine Farley, (American).
Willamette
Bennett Capers (Hofstra), Real Rape Too.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 8th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS |
no comments
Iowa
Lisa Bernstein (Chicago).
New York Law School
Eduardo Capulong (Montana), Client Activism in Progressive Lawyering Theory.
This paper is not publicly available.
Queen’s University
Jennifer H. Arlen (New York), Structuring Corporate Criminal Enforcement to Deter Corporate Crime.
This paper is not publicly available.
Tulsa
Margaret Penrose (Texas Wesleyan), Luxuries or Necessities, the Right to Counsel During Habeas Corpus Proceedings.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 5th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS |
no comments
Iowa
Lisa Bernstein (Chicago).
New York Law School
Eduardo Capulong (Montana), Client Activism in Progressive Lawyering Theory.
This paper is not publicly available.
Queen’s University
Jennifer H. Arlen (New York), Structuring Corporate Criminal Enforcement to Deter Corporate Crime.
This paper is not publicly available.
Tulsa
Margaret Penrose (Texas Wesleyan), Luxuries or Necessities, the Right to Counsel During Habeas Corpus Proceedings.
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 5th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments
Georgetown
John McGinnis (Northwestern).
Georgia
Stephanie M. Stern (Loyola), The Inviolate Home: From Iconic Property to Relational Privacy in the Fourth Amendment.
This paper is not publicly available.
Harvard
Colleen Flood (Toronto).
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on February 1st, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS |
no comments