2020-21
October 21, 2021
Judge Nancy Gertner (View flyer)
Incomplete Sentences
Judge Gertner is a senior lecturer at Harvard. She recently published a book titled Incomplete Sentences which tells the stories of the people she sentenced over 17 years on the bench and the lessons learned about our deeply flawed justice system.
2019-20
September 24, 2020
Angelique W. EagleWomen: The Rule of Law, The Supremacy Clause, and Permanent Homelands Through Treaties
Angelique W. EagleWoman (Wambdi A. Was'teWinyan) is the co-director of the Indian Law Program and Professor of Law at Mitchell Hamline School of Law. Professor EagleWoman was the first Indigenous law dean in Canada and served as Dean of the Bora Laskin Faculty of Law at Lakehead University. She served as a pro tempore tribal judge in tribal court systems at the trial and appellate levels. Professor EagleWoman's research interests include tribal-based economics, Indigenous sovereignty, international Indigenous principles, and the quality of life for Indigenous peoples.
November 15, 2019
Rachel Meeropol: Litigation in Support of Struggle: from Standing Rock to Solitary Confinement
Rachel Meeropol has worked as a Senior Staff Attorney and the Associate Director of Legal Training and Education at the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) since 2002. She represents federal prisoners in restrictive Communication Management Units, California prisoners held for decades in solitary confinement, and environmental activists targeted for their organizing. Ms. Meeropol is also lead counsel on Turkmen v. Ashcroft, a class action lawsuit against high-level federal officials for the post-911 detention and abuse of Muslim non-citizens, which she argued in the Supreme Court in 2016. She completed her undergraduate degree at Wesleyan University, and graduated from NYU School of Law in 2002.
November 13, 2019
Alfred Woodfox: How I Survived Four Decades in Solitary Confinement
Woodfox is one of the Angola 3, who was held in solitary confinement for 44 years before his release in 2016 after his conviction had been overturned 3 times. His book, “Solitary” has been nominated for a National Book Award.
October 30, 2019
Jennifer Rushlow: No Time to Lose: Addressing the Climate Crisis in Court
Jennifer Rushlow presented on Climate Change. She is the Director of the Environmental Law Center at Vermont Law School. In 2016, Rushlow argued and won a landmark climate law case before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Kain v. Department of Environmental Protection, 474 Mass. 278 (2016).
April 8, 2019
Kathryne M. Young: How to Be-Sort of-Happy in Law School
Professor Young works at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where she teaches courses on policing, evidence, law and society, and social psychology. She received her J.D. from Stanford Law School in 2011 and her Ph.D. in sociology from Stanford University in 2014. "How to Be Sort of Happy in Law School" is Professor Young’s first book, and was named one of Above the Law’s “Distinguished Dozen” legal books of 2018.
April 3, 2019
Karen Kendra Holmes and Kylar Broadus: Transgender Military Ban - Organizing Marginalized Communities of Color
Karen Kendra Holmes works for the Federal Government as a Safety Officer and is a strong advocate for the Transgender Community. She has received numerous awards for her advocacy and service.
Kylar Broadus is the senior public policy counsel at the National LGBTQ Task Force and the director of the organization’s Transgender Civil Rights Project, as well as the founder of the Missouri-based Trans People of Color Coalition.
February 25, 2019
Arthur Miller: What are Courts For?
Arthur R. Miller LL.B., CBE, is one of the nation’s most distinguished legal scholars in the areas of civil litigation, copyright, unfair competition, and privacy. Miller joined NYU School of Law from Harvard Law School, where he not only earned his law degree but also taught for 36 years. A renowned commentator on law and society, he won an Emmy for his work on PBS’s The Constitution: That Delicate Balance and served for two decades as the legal editor for ABC’s Good Morning America.
2018-2019
November 7, 2018
John Tingle: Global Patient Safety Law, Policy, and Practice-With Particular Focus on Developing and Transitioning Countries
Professor Tingle is an Associate Professor at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University in the UK. He has a fortnightly magazine column in the British Journal of Nursing where he focuses on patient safety and the legal aspects of nursing and medicine.
October 24, 2018
Annette M. Martinez-Orabona, Esq.: "(Un)Natural Disasters and Human Rights: Hurricane Maria and the Politics of Disaster in Puerto Rico"
Professor Martinez-Orabona is the Director for the Caribbean Institute for Human Rights and Clinical Professor of Law at the Inter-American University of Puerto Rico.
2017-2018
October 31, 2017
Professor Muneer Ahmad: From the Muslim Ban to DACA Termination: Protecting Immigrant Rights in the Trump Era
Muneer Ahmad is deputy dean for Experiential Education, clinical professor of law, and the director of the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at Yale Law School. He coteaches in the Transnational Development Clinic and the Worker and Immigrant Rights Advocacy Clinic. Professor Ahmad has represented immigrants in a range of labor, immigration, and trafficking cases, and for three years represented a prisoner at Guantanamo Bay; he has written on these and related topics. His scholarship examines the intersections of immigration, race, and citizenship in both legal theory and legal practice.
2016-2017
October 31, 2016
Law Professor Frank Rudy Cooper: Trumped Up Racial Profiling?: Enforcing Civil Rights and the Policing of Black Men in the Era of Black Lives Matters
Frank Rudy Cooper is a professor at Suffolk University School of Law where he teaches constitutional law, criminal procedure, and civil rights law. He is a graduate of Duke University Law School and recently coedited the book Masculinities and the Law: A Multidimensional Approach.
2015-2016
October 14, 2016
Gender and Incarceration Symposium – sponsored by the Western New England Law Review & Clason Speaker Series
The Gender and Incarceration Symposium featured an interdisciplinary discussion related to contemporary issues facing incarcerated individuals, such as parental rights of incarcerated people, treatment of transgender inmates, sexuality-based segregation, sexual violence, pregnancy, solitary confinement, and the intersection of race and gender in confinement.
January 28, 2016
Martha M. Ertman: Love and Contracts
Carole & Hanan Sibel Research Professor, University of Maryland School of Law
Professor Ertman teaches Contracts, Commercial Law, and Contract Drafting courses and writes about the role of contracts in family relationships, homemaking labor, reproductive technologies, and polygamy.
February 22, 2016
Danielle Bessett: Sociology and the Law: Collaborating to Improve Abortion Access
Assistant Professor of Sociology and Women's Gender, And Sexuality Studies, University of Cincinnati
September 22, 2015
Katharine B. Silbaugh: Reactive to Proactive: Title IX's Unrealized Capacity to Prevent Campus Sexual Assault
Professor of Law, Boston University
Professor Silbaugh is an expert on gender, family care, and household labor, as well as various topics in education law such as testing, bullying, and Title IX.
October 13, 2015
C. Thomas Brown: Litigating Marriage Equality: A Law Firm Attorney's Role in Obergefell v. Hodges
Senior Associate, Ropes & Gray, Boston, MA
Attorney Brown specializes in Federal securities law, mergers and acquisitions law, and other complex transactional matters.
October 26, 2015
Dr. Christina M. Greer: "Race, Gender and American Democracy"
Professor of Political Science, Fordham University
Professor Greer's research and teaching focus on American politics, black ethnic politics, urban politics, quantitative methods, and public opinion. She is the author of Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream.
2014-2015
March 26, 2015
Denis Binder, Professor:The Increasing Application of Criminal Law in Accidents and Disasters
Chapman University Law School
Professor Binder has been teaching law for 43 years, with 18 of them at the Western New England University School of Law. His teaching specialties include Antitrust, Environmental Law, Torts, and Toxic Torts.
April 17, 2015
Margaret Haung: From the Classroom to the Courthouse, Bringing Human Rights Home to the U.S.
U.S Chief of Staff and Deputy Executive Director, Campaigns and Programs for Amnesty International USA
April 18, 2015
Purvi Shah: Federal Civil Rights Litigation and Activism in Matters of Police Use of Force
Director of the Bertha Justice Institute at the Center for Constitutional Rights, and member of the Ferguson Legal Defense Committee
September 15, 2014
Federico Fabbrini:Fundamental Rights in Europe: A Comparative Perspective
Senior Assistant Professor, Tilburg Law School
Decades after the creation of the European Union (EU), nations within the EU continue to struggle with fundamental differences of opinion as to what human rights should be protected, and where the authority to protect those rights comes from. Federico Fabbrini, Senior Assistant Professor of European & Comparative Constitutional Law at the Tilburg Law School in the Netherlands, will discuss his text, Fundamental Rights in Europe, comparing and contrasting models of federalism and human rights protection in the EU and the US and offering insight into what lies ahead for the continent.
October 27, 2014
Phil Tegeler: 50 Years After the Civil Rights Act: The Challenge of Ending Segregation in Housing and Education
Executive Director, PRRAC
November 3, 2014
Judy Rabinovitz: Surge of Central American Migrants at the Border and the Politics of Immigration Reform: Reflections from 25 Years of Fighting for Immigrants' Rights
Deputy Director, ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project
2013-2014
February 10, 2014
Peter Wagner L'03: Overdosing on Prisons: Tackling the Side Effects of the United States’ Globally Unprecedented Use of the Prison
Executive Director, Prison Policy Initiative
Many people intuitively understand how prison and jail might be harmful for the 2.2 million people behind bars; and a growing number of people are coming to understand how the prison system also punishes families and communities. But often left unaddressed is how the political decision to lock up 1% of out adult population harms our entire society. Peter Wagner L’03, Executive Director of the Prison Policy Initiative, will discuss the hidden costs of mass incarceration for our democracy, our economy, and public safety. Wagner cofounded the Prison Policy Initiative in 2001 to build a Western New England independent study project into a national movement against prison gerrymandering. So far, his efforts have led to legislation protecting our democracy from the prison system in four states, including in Maryland where the law he helped write was affirmed by the Supreme Court.
March 26, 2014
Jared D. Correia, Esq.:"Firm Foundations: Managing the Small Firm and Individual Practitioner"
Assistant Director and Senior Law Practice Advisor at LOMAP
Jared D. Correia, Esq. is the Assistant Director and Senior Law Practice Advisor at LOMAP. Before joining LOMAP, Jared managed CLE publications and the Casemaker research engine for the Massachusetts Bar Association. He has also been a practicing lawyer in small firms where he mostly focused on personal injury, real estate, and disability law. Jared is a frequent speaker for local, regional, and national lawyers’ groups. He is a regular contributor to local and national legal publications, including Attorney at Work, which includes his monthly column, “Managing”. Jared is the author of the American Bar Association publication “Twitter in One Hour for Lawyers”. He is featured on a quarterly podcast at Solo Practice University. Jared presented at ABA TECHSHOW 2013 on remote access and social media marketing.
November 14, 2013
Robin Craig: "New Directions in State Public Trust Doctrines in a Climate Change Era"
Professor of Law, S. J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah
Professor Craig will give a quick overview of the basics of the public trust doctrine and discussion of the U.S. Supreme Court's apparently final—but still problematic—abdication of public trust doctrine authority to the states in PPL Montana v. Montana. She will then look at the different directions states are going with their public trust doctrines, including the ecological public trust doctrines and the very new atmospheric public trust doctrines, and end with a brief look at how these new and expanded public trust doctrines might help us cope with climate change.
October 16, 2013
Karl S. Coplan: The Climate Activism Model: Civil Rights, Prohibition, or Abolition?
Professor of Law, Pace Law School
The radical economic and social changes necessary to address global warming are expected to be driven by law and legal institutions, says Professor Coplan, but law-driven social changes of this magnitude, while not unprecedented, are scarce. Today’s climate activist model resembles the civil rights movement of the 1960s and also the temperance and prohibition movements. And a successful shift to a carbon-free economy might resemble the abolition of slavery more than any of these.
September 23, 2013
Michael B. Gerrard: Can the Law Save Island Nations from Drowning?
Professor of Law, Columbia School of Law
Around the world, but especially in the Pacific, the habitability and, eventually, the very survival of several small island nations are threatened by rising seas, largely as a result of increasing greenhouse gas emissions. Professor Gerrard will address the international and domestic legal mechanisms that exist or can be imagined to help these nations, and to deal with the expected international refugee crises.
2012-2013
April 5, 2013
Professor Wadie Said: The Criminal Terrorist Prosecution
University of South Carolina School of Law
Taking a page from his forthcoming monograph, The Criminal Terrorist Prosecution (Oxford University Press), Professor Said explored the phenomenon of the modern terrorist prosecution. Noting its evolution over time, particularly since the September 11, 2001 attacks, he focused on the ways federal courts have shifted the law in favor of prosecution, creating a kind of terrorist exception to the normal rules of criminal prosecution.
March 12, 2013
Professor Penelope Andrews: Conditional Interdependence and Rethinking Strategies for Pursuing Women's Human Rights
President and Dean, Albany Law School
Speaking about the topics raised in her recent book, From Cape Town to Kabul: Rethinking Strategies for Pursuing Women's Human Rights, Dean Andrews explored ways to approach gender equality and women’s human rights in an array of political, legal, and cultural contexts. She examined the possibilities and limitations of feminist legal theory in religious, indigenous, and “othered” communities.
January 29, 2013
Professor Fionnuala Ní Aoláin: Rethinking Reparations for Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Dorsey and Whitney Chair in Law, the University of Minnesota Law School
Professor of Law at the University of Ulster’s Transitional Justice Institute in Belfast
While the harms caused by sexual violence experienced by men, women, and children during armed conflict have become better known, little attention has been paid to the need for reparations for the victims. Ní Aoláin examined these harms, and argued that criminal accountability is insufficient; innovative and transformative reparations are essential to address the multiple, interlinked effects of sexual violence.
October 22, 2012
Professor Jennifer Gordon: The Public Interest Lawyer and the Quest for Immigrant Workers' Rights
Fordham University School of Law
2011-2012
March 6, 2012
Mary Anne Case: You're telling me it's wrong to do to the prisoners what the Army does to its own soldiers?: Gender Performance Requirements of the U.S. Military in the War on Islamic Terrorism
University of Chicago School of Law
January 19, 2012
Atty. Wendy Murphy: Campus Rape, Title IX, and the New Guidelines: New Clarity and New Controversies
New England School of Law
November 8, 2011
Professor Richard Wilson: Writing History in International Criminal Trials
October 25, 2011
Professor Claudio Grossman: The Future of the Inter-American System of Protection of Human Rights
September 13, 2011
Ms. Jennifer Harbury: U.S. Torture Practice: The Guatemala Experience
2010-2011
February 2011
Professor Intisar Rabb: Internal Criticism and Legal Change in Islamic Law: Criminal Law Reform in Iran
October 12, 2010
Professor Wilma Liebman: More Rights, Fewer Jobs? Labor Law During Hard Times
September 20, 2010
Professor Scott Horton: The Obama Administration and the War on Terror—Continuity or Change You Can Believe In?
August 24, 2010
Professor Gabriel Chin: Quasi-Crime and Quasi-Punishment: Criminal Process effects of Immigration Status
2009-2010
April 8, 2010
Professor Kimberly Mutcherson: Feel Like Makin’ Babies: Mapping the Borders of the Right to Procreate in a Post-Coital World
March 4, 2010
Professor Erin Murphy: Databases, Deterrence, and the Future of Constitutional Criminal Procedure
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
February 18, 2010
Professor Robert M. Chesney: The Emerging Law of Military Detention: Guantanamo and Beyond?
Professor in Law, the University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Professor Chesney discussed the impact of Boumediene v. Bush and explored the consequential responsibilities that have fallen on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
October 13, 2009
Professor Michael Wishnie: The Immigration Debate: From the Berkshires to Washington
November 2009
Professor Laura Dickinson: Outsourcing War and Peace
Foundation Professor of Law, the Sandra Day O’Conner College of Law at Arizona State University
Professor Dickinson shared insights from her upcoming monograph, Outsourcing War and Peace, discussing the increasing privatization of military functions, foreign aid, and government diplomacy, and the challenges of legal accountability resulting from such privatization.
September 2009
Professor Bethany Berger: Williams v. Lee and the Debate Over Indian Equality
In a landmark 1958 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the jurisdiction of Indian tribal courts for disputes that occur on Indian land in the case of Williams v. Lee. Professor Berger discussed the case and the impact it had on Indian equity.
University of Connecticut School of Law
2008-2009
October 8, 2008
Professor David Hall: Multiple Intelligences and the Practice of Law
Northeastern University School of Law
This lecture explored the emerging scientific developments associated with emotional, social, and spiritual intelligences and the roles they play in developing effective and well-balanced lawyers. A special emphasis was placed on the development of spiritual intelligence within the context of the legal profession, the subject of his book, The Spiritual Revitalization of the Legal Profession: A Search for Sacred Rivers (Edwin Mellen Press, 2005).
October 3, 2008
Professor Michael Ratner: The First 100 Days: Restoring our Constitution
President, The Center for Constitutional rights
November 17, 2008
Professor Stephanie Robinson: Election 2008: Race, Gender, Power, and the Future of America
President and CEO of The Jamestown Project
February 2009
Dr. David Michaels: Doubt is Their Product: Manufactured Uncertainty and Public Health
Interim Chairman of the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services
March 2009
David Singleton: Diligence Alone Won't Do: Representing Indigent Defendants Zealously
Executive Director, the Ohio Justice and Policy Center
2007-2008
April 2008
Professor Lolita Buckner Inniss: A 'Ho New World: Raced and Gendered Insult as Ersatz Carnival and the Corruption of Freedom of Expression Norms
March 2008
Professor Dan Kahan: Whose Eyes Are You Going to Believe—An Empirical (and Normative) Assessment of Scott v. Harris
November 2007
Professor John Zeleznikow: Using Information Technology to Support the Resolution of Disputes
October 2007
Professor Anthony Roisman: Reintegrating Public Interest Lawyering into the Legal Profession and Legal Education
September 2007
Atty. Andrew Beckerman-Rodau ’81: The Attack on Intellectual Property Law—Is It Justified?
2006-2007
March 2007
Professor Cheryl Wade
Dean Harold F. McNiece: Advancing The Corporate Discourse About Race
Professor of Law at St. John's University School of Law
February 2007
Professor James Stribopoulos: Does a Judge's Party of Appointment or Gender Matter to Case Outcomes?
January 2007
Professor Kent Greenfield: The Failure of Corporate Law
October 2006
Professor Robert B. Keiter: Glacier National Park and its Neighbors: A Twenty-year Study in Regional Resource Management
2005-2006
March 20, 2006
Professor Martha Ertman: New Frontiers in Private Ordering
University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law
In a world that is often ruled by buyers and sellers, those things that are often considered priceless become objects to be marketed and from which to earn a profit. Ranging from black market babies to exploitative sex trade operations to the marketing of race and culture, Professor Ertman, coauthor of Rethinking Commodification (NYU Press 2005), challenges us to reexamine the traditional legal question: “To commodify or not to commodify?”
February 2006
Professor Zygmunt J.B. Platter: Law, Media, and Environmental Policy: A Fundamental Linage in Sustainable Democratic Governance
Boston College Law School
This talk explored some of the interrelationships between law, media, and environmental analysis at the macro level of national and international concern. It addressed issues such as global warming, endocrine disrupters in food supplies, and the micro level of on-the-ground daily lawyering in litigation and local governance and how attorneys can play a greater role in improving such matters.
January 2006
Professor Patricia A. McCoy: Predatory Lending: Who's to Blame?
University of Connecticut School of Law
Her lecture included details about securitization and predatory lending.
November 2005
Professor Tim Casey: Problem-Solving Courts, the Perpetual Reform of the Justice System, and the Possibilities for a Better Future
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
October 2005
Professor Michael Tigar: The Enemy Combatant Doctrine and the Scope of Executive Power
Washington College of Law at American University
Professor Tigar spoke about the antiterrorism case Jose Padilla v. Donald Rumsfeld, et al., and its implications for civil liberties and human rights in the United States.
2004-2005
April 2005
Sir Nicholas Lyell, Q.C: Security, Justice, and Liberty in a Free Society
The former British Attorney General and Solicitor General under Prime Ministers Margaret Thatcher and John Major, Sir Nicholas is the longest continually serving law officer of the Royal Crown. His lecture focused on the nature of terrorism, the strengths and risks inherent in a free society, and the importance of defending and sharing the “priceless inheritance” of the U.K. and the U.S.
February 2005
Professor Gerald W. Markowitz: Deceit and Denial: The Deadly Disease of Industrial Politics
John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York
A leading authority and researcher in occupational health and safety and former Chair of the Thematic Studies Department at John Jay College, Professor Markowitz explored a variety of aspects of health policy, with special focus on the reaction of the lead paint and chemical industries’ response to the questions about product danger to public health. He detailed how his book, Deceit and Denial, provides answers to questions of dangerous environmental degradation and escalating corporate greed while offering suggestions for changing policy to offer greater protection to consumers.
January 2005
Professor Susan R. Jones: An Economic Justice Imperative
George Washington University Law School
Professor Jones discussed the need for critical examination of current economic justice in light of globalization and technological advances. Those advances, she said, are changing the nature of work and creating information inequality as well as an overall widening of the power gap. Professor Jones is the director of The George Washington University Law School’s small business clinic.
November 2004
Professor Lawrence Cunningham: Choosing Gatekeepers: The Financial Statement Insurance Alternative to Auditor Liability
Boston College Law School
A prolific legal scholar and authority on corporate finance, accounting, and mergers and acquisitions, Professor Cunningham's lecture explored corporate reporting reform, proposing financial statement insurance as an alternative to the existing model of financial statement auditing backed by auditor liability.
October 2004
Professor Edward G. Rubin: Charity Begins in Washington, D.C.
University of Pennsylvania Law School
In his talk, Professor Rubin speaker focused on how the advent of the modern administrative state has changed the moral foundations of charity. He advocates that instead of private giving, citizens should vote for comprehensive social welfare programs.
2003-2004
March 2004
Professor Lance Compa: Evaluating Workplace Rights in the United States Under International Labor Standards: The Meatpacking Industry Case
Cornell University
November 2003
Professor Saras Jagwanth: Beyond Discrimination: Positive Duties to Promote Equality
University of Cape Town
October 2003
Barry Werth: Privacy, Politics and Hysteria: Lessons from the 1960 Smith College Homosexual Scandal
Author
2002-2003
April 2003
Professor Charles Ogletree: The Current Reparations Debate
March 2003
Professor Marina Angel: Women Abused in 1917 and Today: A Jury of Her Peers
Temple University Law School
February 2003
Professor Eric Muller: Civil Liberties in Wartime: The Case of the Japanese-American Draft Resisters of World War II
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
January 2003
Hon. Joseph F. Baca: The New Federalism
New Mexico Supreme Court Justice
2001-2002
April 2002
Professor Howard Shelanski: Regulation, Deregulation, and Technological Change
University of California at Berkeley
March 2002
Professor Angela Jordan Davis: The American Prosecutor: Independence, Power, and the Threat of Tyranny
American University Washington College of Law
February 2002
Professor Anita Hill: Social Change and Workplace Realities: How Improved Harmony in the Workplace Affects Productivity
Brandeis University
February 2002
Professor Paul Butler: Punishing the Crimes of Slaves: A Historical and Doctrinal Analysis
George Washington University School of Law
January 2002
Professor Joseph Singer: Canons of Conquest: The Supreme Courts Attack on Tribal Sovereignty
Harvard Law School
October 2001
Professor Spencer Overton:But Some are More Equal: Race, Exclusion, and Campaign Finance
University of California at Davis School of Law
2000-2001
April 2001
Professor E. Allan Farnsworth: Oops! Reflections on Mistake and the Law
Columbia Law School
April 2001
Professor Lani Guinier: The Miner's Canary: Rethinking Race and Power
Harvard University Law School
March 2001
Professor Sheryll D. Cashin: Middle Class Black Suburbs and the State of Integration: A Post Integrationalist Vision for Metropolitan America
Georgetown University Law Center
November 2000
Professor Blake D. Morant: The Paradox of the Televised Fair Trial: Group Theory and the Intuitive Effects of Television
Washington and Lee University School of Law
October 17, 2000
Professor Pedro A. Malavet: Puerto Rico: Cultural Nation, American Colony
Frederic G. Levin College of Law, University of Florida
September 26, 2000
Professor Mary Anne Case: Molecular Constitutionalism and Community Standards
University of Chicago Law School
1999-2000
October 20, 1999
Professor Anthony Paul Farley: Jurisprudence & Human Emotions
Boston College Law School
November 18, 1999
Joan Vermuelen, Esq.: Lawyering for Poor Communities in the 21st Century
Executive Director, New York Lawyers for Public Interest
September 23, 1999
Professor Cynthia Fuchs Epstein: The Part-time Paradox: Gender, Work, and Family
City University of New York Graduate Center
1998-1999
February 22, 1999
Professor Austin Sarat: Imagining the Law of the Father: Loss, Dread, and Mourning in the Sweet Hereafter
Amherst College
November 10, 1998
Professor William E. Nelson: Liberty, Equality, and Opportunity: Progressive Legalism in New York, 1920-1980
New York University School of Law
1997-1998
March 30, 1998
Professor Robert G. Bone: The Process of Making Process: A Critical Look at the Procedural Rulemaking
Boston University School of Law
March 6, 1998
Professor David J. Luban: Rediscovering Fuller's Legal Ethics
Georgetown University Law Center
November 13, 1997
Professor Akhil Reed Amar: The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction
Southmayd Professor of Law, Yale Law School
October 23, 1997
Professor Anthony V. Alfieri: Black and White: The Practice of Critical Race Theory
University of Miami School of Law
October 8, 1997
Professor Catharine Wells: Pragmatism and the Problem of Relativism
Boston College Law School
1996-1997
April 21, 1997
Professor Brian Z. Tamanaha: A General Jurisprudence for the Study of Law and Society in the
New Millennium
St. John's University School of Law
April 7, 1997
Professor Vicki Schultz: Reconceptualizing Harassment Law
Yale Law School
March 24, 1997
Professor Pamela S. Karlan: Just Politics?: Five Not So Easy Pieces of the 1995 Term
Roy L. & Rosamond Woodruff Research Professor, University of Virginia School of Law
March 6, 1997
Professor Neil Gotanda: The Origins of Racial Categorization in Colonial Virginia, 1619-1705
Boston College Law School
February 10, 1997
Professor Michael Davis: Constitutionalism in Global Perspective: Democracy, Rights, and Relativism
Chinese University of Hong Kong
October 25, 1996
Professor Eric Orts: Shirking and Sharking: Agency, Law, Agency Costs, and a Dual Theory of the Firm
The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
October 3, 1996
Professor James E. Fleming: Fidelity to Our Imperfect Constitution
Fordham University School of Law
September 18, 1996
Professor Philip N. Meyer: Stories About Legal Writing in Law School, Practice, & Dreams
Vermont Law School
1995-1996
April 23, 1996
Professor Peter H. Schuck: Refugee Burden Sharing
Yale Law School
April 16, 1996
Professor Jordan M. Steiker: Decision-making in Capital Cases
University of Texas School of Law
March 4, 1996
Professor Paul Finkelman: Legal Ethics and Fugitive Slaves: The Anthony Burns Case, Judge Loring, and Abolitionist Attorneys
University of Miami School of Law
1994-1995
April 28, 1995
Professor Mary E. Becker: (Almost) No Such Thing as Free Speech at Work
University of Chicago Law School
April 10, 1995
Professor Sanford Levinson: And They Whisper: Some Reflections on Flags, Monuments, and State Holidays, and the Construction of Social Meaning in a Multicultural Society
University of Texas School of Law
February 16, 1995
Professor Susan Stefan: Issues Relating to Women and Ethnic Minorities in Mental Health Treatment Law
University of Miami School of Law
November 28, 1994
Professor Gary J. Bernhard: University Without Walls, University of Massachusetts Amherst
"Organizational Change
November 16, 1994
Professor Jules L. Coleman: Mischief and Fortune
Yale Law School
September 26, 1994
Professor David Gray Carlson: On the Efficiency of Secured Lending and the Meaning and Use of the Concept of 'The Perfect Market' in Law and Economics
Yeshiva University, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
1993-1994
February 22, 1994
Professor Linda S. Mullinex: Discovery in Disarray: The Pervasive Myth of Pervasive Discovery Abuse and the Consequences for Unfounded Rulemaking
University of Texas School of Law
December 9, 1993
Professor Dorothy E. Roberts: Mothers and Crime
Rutgers University, S.I. Center for Law and Justice
October 19, 1993
Professor Frederick Schauer: Giving Reasons
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University
1992-1993
April 19, 1993
Professor Carol Sanger: Girls and the Getaway: Cars, Culture, and the Law
Santa Clara University School of Law
April 2, 1993
Professor Tracey Maclin: The Debate over the Central Meaning of the Fourth Amendment
Cornell Law School
March 5, 1993
Professor Jack M. Balkin: Coherence and Legal Understanding
Yale Law School
October 23, 1992
Professor Ruth Wedgwood: Use of Armed Forces in International Affairs: The Case of Panama
Yale Law School
October 16, 1992
Professor Zipporah B. Wiseman: Soia Mentschikoff, Notes Toward a Bibliography
University of Texas School of Law
1991-1992
April 2, 1992
Professor Kendall Thomas: Beyond the Privacy Principle: Sexuality, Corporeality, and the Constitution of Power
Columbia University School of Law
March 1992
Professor Dennis M. Patterson: Doing Law
Rutgers University School of Law-Camden
February 1992
Professor David A. J. Richards: The Reconstruction Amendments
New York University School of Law
February 1992
Professor Jonathan R. Macey: The Canons of Statutory Construction and Judicial Preference
University of Chicago Law School
November 1991
Professor Judy Scales-Trent: Black Women and the Constitution: Finding Our Place, Asserting Our Rights
State University of New York at Buffalo School of Law
November 1991
Professor Julius G. Getman: The Strike in Jay, Maine: Employers' Rights to Hire Substitute Workers for Strikers
University of Texas School of Law
November 1991
Professor Kathryn Abrams: Sexual Harassment: Second Thoughts on the 'Reasonable Woman
Boston University School of Law
October 1991
Professor Aviam Soifer: The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and the 1780 Constitution
Boston University School of Law
October 1991
Professor Carol A. Weisbrod: Emblems of Federalism
University of Connecticut Law School
1990-1991
April 1991
Professor Stephen L. Carter: Affirmative Action
Yale Law School
April 1991
Professor Owen M. Fiss: State Activism and State Censorship
Yale Law School
February 1991
Professor Claire Dalton: Experience as a Source of Health(y) Law
Northeastern University School of Law
November 1990
Professor Marilyn Schuster: Eliminating Bias and Prejudice from the Law School Classroom
Smith College
October 1990
Professor James Boyd White: Justice as Translation
University of Michigan Law School
October 1990
Professor Frances E. Olsen: The Sex of Law
University of California at Los Angeles School of Law
October 1990
Professor E. Allan Farnsworth: For This Relief, Much Thanks: Punitive Damages in Arbitration
Columbia Law School
1989-1990
May 1990
Professor Robert Ackermann: Feminist Epistemology
University of Massachusetts Amherst
April 1990
Professor Randy E. Barnett: Power, Law, and Legal Discourse
Chicago-Kent College of Law
March 1990
Professor Donald N. McCloskey: Economics and Narrative
University of Iowa
March 1990
Professor M. Ethan Katsh: Technological Change and the Transformation of Law
University of Massachusetts Amherst
February 1990
Church and State in Springfield
Professor John H. Mansfield
Harvard Law School and
Professor Jay Demarath
University of Massachusetts Amherst
February 1990
Professor Elizabeth V. Spelman: The Inessential Woman
Smith College
November 1989
Professor Arthur Ripstein: Foundationalism and Political Theory
University of Toronto
November 1989
Professor Thomas H. Morawetz: Critical Legal Studies, Feminism, and a Critique of Law
University of Connecticut School of Law
September 1989
Professor Judith Resnick: Group Litigation and Civil Procedure
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
1988-1989
April 1989
Professor Edwina L. Rissland: Computer-Based Legal Reasoning
University of Massachusetts Amherst
April 1989
Professor William N. Eskridge: Statutory Interpretation
Georgetown University Law Center