| October 4, 2007 | to | October 5, 2007 |
Law Seminars International presents Gamer Technology Law, Oct. 4-5, 2007, in Seattle. (We don’t usually include commercial CLEs here, but this one was sent to us by a professor who recommended it.)
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on November 3rd, 2007
| EVENTS |
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| October 5, 2007 | to | October 6, 2007 |
The University of Wisconsin School of Law hosts New Legal Realism Meets Feminism & Legal Theory II: Empirical Perspectives on the Place of Law in Women’s Work and Family Lives , Oct. 5-6, 2007, Madison.
Women working in a variety of settings face challenges rooted in traditional cultural and social patterns surrounding gender. These challenges include barriers in the workplace, the historic divisions between work and family lives, and cultural conceptualizations of “work” itself. This conference draws together empirical and legal perspectives to examine the different strategies and models women have used in addressing the dilemmas of work and family.
The conference is cosponsored by the Feminism and Legal Theory Project, Emory University, and the New Legal Realism Project, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on November 3rd, 2007
| EVENTS |
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The Tulsa Law Review invites you to submit an article for our Annual Supreme Court Review Issue that will feature Guest Editor Erwin Chemerinsky.
PAPER REQUIREMENTS:
Papers should address any Supreme Court decision from the 2006-2007 term, and within that range, any issue(s) within that decision. Alternatively, papers may discuss an issue that spans multiple Supreme Court cases that were decided within the same term. Papers must not be previously published or accepted for publication.
DEADLINE:
Papers must be received electronically by January 15, 2008.
INQUIRY OR SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Please direct all inquiries or e-mail your submissions to:
CONTACT: Tulsa Law Review
attn: Kelly Merkle
Email: kelly-merkle[at]utulsa.edu
with “Supreme Court Review” noted in the subject line of your message.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 5th, 2007
| EVENTS |
no comments
The Tulsa Law Review invites you to submit an article for our Annual Supreme Court Review Issue that will feature Guest Editor Erwin Chemerinsky.
PAPER REQUIREMENTS:
Papers should address any Supreme Court decision from the 2006-2007 term, and within that range, any issue(s) within that decision. Alternatively, papers may discuss an issue that spans multiple Supreme Court cases that were decided within the same term. Papers must not be previously published or accepted for publication.
DEADLINE:
Papers must be received electronically by January 15, 2008.
INQUIRY OR SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
Please direct all inquiries or e-mail your submissions to:
CONTACT: Tulsa Law Review
attn: Kelly Merkle
Email: kelly-merkle[at]utulsa.edu
with “Supreme Court Review” noted in the subject line of your message.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 5th, 2007
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Constitutional Law |
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Alabama
Michele Goodwin (Minnesota Law), Biotechnology: The New Empire
Cincinnati
Paul Caron (Cincinnati Law), Law School Rankings: Past, Present, and Future
Drake Constitional Law Center
Emma Coleman Jordan (Georgetown), Wealth and Inequality: Thinking about Communities and Individualism
Duke
Zephyr R. Teachout (Duke Law)
Duke Global Law
Susan Rose-Ackerman (Yale Law), Treaties and National Security
Georgetown Law and Economics
Tom Hazlett (George Mason Law), Natural Experiments in U.S. Broadband Regulation
Iowa
Christina Bohannan (Iowa Law), Copyright Harm and Fair Use
New York Law School South Africa Reading Group
Adam Dodek (Toronto Law), The Springbok, the Maple Leaf, and the Eagle: South African-Canadian Constitutional Relationships in a World of Old, New, and Middle-Aged Constitutions
Northern Kentucky
Wolfram Karl (Salzburg Law), Fundamental Rights and Terrorism–The European Experience
Southwestern
Kate Bohl (Stetson Law), Generations of X and Y Take Legal Writing: Practical Strategies for Class Management
Texas
Robert Mikos (UC Davis), Regulating under the Influence of the Controlled Substances Act
UCLA Faculty Fridays
Curtis Milhaupt (Columbia Law), Reputational Sanctions in China’s Security Market
USC
Nicole Garnett (Notre Dame Law), Suburbs as Exit, Suburbs as Entrance
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 5th, 2007
| Legal Research & Writing, National Security Law, COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, Law and Science, Law and Economics, Securities Law, Intellectual Property, Constitutional Law, International Law, Legal Education, Uncategorized |
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Alabama
Michele Goodwin (Minnesota Law), Biotechnology: The New Empire
Cincinnati
Paul Caron (Cincinnati Law), Law School Rankings: Past, Present, and Future
Drake Constitional Law Center
Emma Coleman Jordan (Georgetown), Wealth and Inequality: Thinking about Communities and Individualism
Duke
Zephyr R. Teachout (Duke Law)
Duke Global Law
Susan Rose-Ackerman (Yale Law), Treaties and National Security
Georgetown Law and Economics
Tom Hazlett (George Mason Law), Natural Experiments in U.S. Broadband Regulation
Iowa
Christina Bohannan (Iowa Law), Copyright Harm and Fair Use
New York Law School South Africa Reading Group
Adam Dodek (Toronto Law), The Springbok, the Maple Leaf, and the Eagle: South African-Canadian Constitutional Relationships in a World of Old, New, and Middle-Aged Constitutions
Northern Kentucky
Wolfram Karl (Salzburg Law), Fundamental Rights and Terrorism–The European Experience
Southwestern
Kate Bohl (Stetson Law), Generations of X and Y Take Legal Writing: Practical Strategies for Class Management
Texas
Robert Mikos (UC Davis), Regulating under the Influence of the Controlled Substances Act
UCLA Faculty Fridays
Curtis Milhaupt (Columbia Law), Reputational Sanctions in China’s Security Market
USC
Nicole Garnett (Notre Dame Law), Suburbs as Exit, Suburbs as Entrance
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 4th, 2007
| National Security Law, Legal Research & Writing, Law and Science, EVENTS, Law and Technology, Law and Economics, Securities Law, Intellectual Property, CONFERENCES, Constitutional Law, International Law, Legal Education, Uncategorized |
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The Catholic University Law Review is organizing A Tribute to Justice Sandra Day O’Connor: Reflecting on Justice O’Connor’s Jurisprudence Relating to Race and Education. The call for papers deadline is Oct. 5, 2007. The symposium will take place Feb. 22, 2008. Details after the jump. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on September 21st, 2007
| EVENTS |
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