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Ƶ Law scholar on machines as crime fighters
January 11, 2016
Ƶ Law Professor Michael Rich’s article “Machines as Crime Fighters—Are You Ready?” in the winter 2016 edition of the American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice magazine, examines legal and practical challenges to the automated prediction of criminals.
Michael Rich featured for best new legal scholarship
January 7, 2016
Ƶ Law Professor Michael Rich is featured in a journal devoted to identifying "the best new scholarship relevant to the law" for his forthcoming University of Pennsylvania Law Review article on law enforcement's use of "big data."
Antonette Barilla on the international impact of MLK
January 7, 2016
In an Ƶ Law Now commentary, Prof. Antonette Barilla writes that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s impact internationally is significant, but often under-appreciated.
Hannah Vaughan authors article on lawyers’ obligation to deaf clients
December 18, 2015
Ƶ Law Professor Hannah Vaughan, director of the Law School’s Elder Law Clinic, authored “Falling On Deaf Ears: Lawyers’ Obligation to Provide Sign Language Interpreters for Deaf Clients.” Vaughan’s article appears in the December issue of Gray Matters, a publication of the North Carolina Bar Association’s Elder and Special Needs Law Section.
Antonette Barilla presents on strategies for law school success
December 18, 2015
Ƶ Law Professor Antonette Barilla proposed measures for law school educators to maximize millennial students’ learning and achievement at the New England Consortium of Academic Support Professionals Conference.
David Levine publishes scholarship on trade secrecy legislation
December 1, 2015
Ƶ Law Professor David Levine’s article detailing weaknesses of the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA) and its relationship to cybersecurity was published Dec. 1 in the Washington and Lee Law Review Online.
Ƶ Law Professor David Levine leads law scholars' effort to improve federal cyberespionage response
November 19, 2015
Ƶ Law Professor David Levine coauthored a Nov. 17 letter to Congress, signed by 42 law and technology scholars, opposing passage of the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2015 (DTSA) on grounds that it inadequately addresses cyberespionage while creating greater problems in legal and economic spheres.
The value of public views on judicial system's fairness and impartiality
November 19, 2015
Ƶ Law Dean Luke Bierman, a member of the N.C. Commission on the Administration of Law and Justice, says new polling results can inform efforts led by the state’s Chief Justice to strengthen North Carolina’s judicial system.
Ƶ Law professor provides analysis of refugee resettlement process
November 18, 2015
Ƶ Law Professor Heather Scavone, the director of the Law School's Humanitarian Immigration Law Clinic, shed light on international and U.S. procedures for screening refugees in an interview with WGHP FOX8 News.
Faith Rivers James presents on leadership development for law students
November 10, 2015
Faith Rivers James, Ƶ Law’s associate dean for experiential learning and leadership, and professor of law, presented on Ƶ Law’s pioneering leadership program this week in Georgia, at both a scholar/practitioner workshop and a national conference.