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Supreme Court's same-sex marriage decision raises new questions
June 26, 2015
ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Professor Michael Rich details questions of law and policy raised by the Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage decision.
No more waiting
June 26, 2015
ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Professor Enrique Armijo says U.S. Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage ruling means “the right to marry the person you love can no longer be made to wait for the time it takes for the voters to debate and approve.”
Compelled speech in the medical context
June 22, 2015
Scholarship by ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Professor Scott Gaylord recently published in the South Carolina Law Review addresses a federal circuit court split over the authority of states to require doctors to communicate specific information to patients prior to an abortion.
Luke Bierman spotlights need for innovation in ABA report on law school financing
June 19, 2015
In a new American Bar Association task force report, ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Dean Luke Bierman calls on the legal profession to “preserve values core to our role in society as the shepherds of the rule of law while concomitantly adapting to a new era.”
Same-sex marriage and religious freedom
June 18, 2015
In this week's ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Now faculty commentary series, Professor Catherine Wasson explains that a U.S. Supreme Court decision validating same-sex marriage would require changes in the policies and procedures of the secular state, not religious doctrine and practice.
Catherine Wasson elected to national legal writing executive board
June 15, 2015
Catherine J. Wasson, associate professor of law and director of ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law’s legal method & communication program, has been elected to the executive board of the Association of Legal Writing Directors (ALWD).
Celebrate Magna Carta
June 15, 2015
For the 800th anniversary of one of the world’s most important documents, ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Dean Luke Bierman writes in a Greensboro News & Record column that “history’s most important and persuasive statements of liberty, justice and equality, including our own U.S. and state constitutions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the European Convention on Human Rights, derive from that field in Runnymede 800 years ago.”
Congress' Fast Track to Bad Law
June 11, 2015
Fast tracking the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) in Congress excludes any opportunity for meaningful public input about the agreement and leads to bad policy, ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Professor David Levine says in this week’s ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Now faculty commentary.
Olympian Jim Thorpe and the importance of wills
June 5, 2015
In this week’s ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Now faculty commentary series, Professor Margaret Kantlehner describes the legal battle over the remains of Olympian Jim Thorpe, illustrating the value of wills.
Promises made, promises kept
May 29, 2015
In this week’s ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Now faculty commentary series, ÂÒÂ×ÊÓÆµ Law Dean Luke Bierman supports a landmark ruling on pension protection by the Illinois Supreme Court and calls for creative thinking on a national scale to ensure fair and effective state budget solutions.