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Ƶ Law 'creature of the courtroom' wins moot court honors
October 17, 2018
Anthony DeLucia, who graduates in December with the Class of 2018, earned Ƶ Law’s first ever “best oralist” moot court award at a competition hosted this fall by Regent University School of Law.
Harvard Law Professor Emeritus Alan Dershowitz visits Ƶ Law – Nov. 14
October 12, 2018
Tickets for the first Distinguished Leadership Lecture of the 2018-19 academic year, postponed from September due to Hurricane Florence, have been distributed. The lecture will be streamed to Yeager Recital Hall on Ƶ's main campus for those unable to attend in Greensboro.
Ƶ Law hosts Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
October 10, 2018
Judges heard appellate arguments in an employment discrimination lawsuit involving a former sheriff’s deputy in North Carolina, and a criminal case with Fourth Amendment considerations after police in West Virginia used a GPS tracker without a warrant.
Ƶ Law announces new Moot Court Board members
September 28, 2018
Twenty-five students will help guide the school's Moot Court Program by participating in upcoming national contests and by coordinating Ƶ Law's own national moot court competition in October.
A lack of justice for victims of the Khmer Rouge
September 25, 2018
Forthcoming publications by Sara Ochs, a Legal Method & Communication Fellow at Ƶ Law, and subsequent presentations to international scholars will explain how a "hybrid" tribunal designed to prosecute war criminals in Southeast Asia is on the verge of collapse.
Ƶ Law student places third in national legal writing contest
September 4, 2018
Rebecca Elliott L'19 was honored in the Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition sponsored by the Mercer University School of Law and the ABA Commission on Mental and Physical Disability Law.
Ƶ Law scholar co-authors groundbreaking study on startups & trade secrecy
August 15, 2018
David S. Levine, Ƶ Law’s Jennings Professor and Emerging Scholar, partnered with Ted M. Sichelman of the University of San Diego School of Law to research why young companies in software, biotechnology, medical device, and hardware industries opt to use - or not use - laws that can protect competitive advantage and profits.
Balancing blessings & obligations on the scales of justice
August 10, 2018
In Convocation remarks to the Class of 2020, one of North Carolina’s top philanthropic leaders encouraged Ƶ Law’s newest students to never forget the fortunes of fate that brought them to law school or the responsibilities they have to serve the public with a legal education.
Ƶ Law welcomes the Class of 2020
August 7, 2018
The newest class at Ƶ School of Law in downtown Greensboro is the largest and one of the most diverse in school history, crafted from a record number of applicants drawn to a 2.5-year program that emphasizes learning by doing.
In My Words: Roe v. Wade's Unlikely Champion
July 23, 2018
A newspaper column by Associate Professor Andy Haile points to rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court that indicate an overturn of Roe v. Wade isn't a foregone conclusion simply because of the court's pending conservative majority.