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Ƶ Law observes National Day on Writing with poetry
October 22, 2020
Students performed original works on October 15, 2020, during the second annual “High Rhymes & Misdemeanors” Poetry Slam hosted by Ƶ Law’s Legal Method & Communication Program.
October resources from Ƶ Law’s Antiracism Working Group
October 19, 2020
A group of Ƶ Law faculty, staff and students is sharing on a monthly basis what members are reading and watching as part of a desire to engage in important discussions on topics related to race and history.
Ƶ Law team earns second place for legal brief at moot court contest
October 12, 2020
McCathern Painter L’20 and Megan Wilson-Bost L’20 also reached the quarterfinals of the 20th Annual Leroy R. Hassell, Sr. National Constitutional Law Moot Court Competition hosted virtually by Regent University School of Law.
Ƶ Law scholar presents on intersection of COVID-19 and trade secrecy
October 2, 2020
Professor David S. Levine outlined the ways in which legal scholars and medical practitioners must better understand how intellectual property laws can help - or hinder - the pursuit of therapeutics and vaccines.
Voting rights take center stage at Ƶ Law Review symposium
September 30, 2020
The director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project was joined by practicing attorneys and some of the nation’s top legal scholars on election law in a virtual program on the ways in which access to the ballot box has been expanded - and limited - throughout history.
Death of Dr. Charles E. Kernodle Jr. ’38
September 27, 2020
Kernodle, a recipient of the Ƶ Medallion for his service to the university, passed away Saturday, Sept. 26, at the age of 102.
‘There’s always more that you can learn’
September 25, 2020
What was one of Assistant Professor Amanda Elyse’s observations to aspiring attorneys who took part in the inaugural program of a new video series hosted by the American Bar Association’s Law Student Division? "Where we start in legal writing is not a fixed point."
An award-winning question: Should a person’s reputation on social media be admissible in court?
September 24, 2020
Ƶ Law Professor Catherine Ross Dunham's latest essay, named the 2020 Edward D. Ohlbaum Paper in Advocacy from Temple University, suggests that federal courts should reconsider the rules by which witnesses are allowed to testify to someone's character.
Statements from Ƶ Law scholars on the passing of Ruth Bader Ginsburg
September 18, 2020
Ƶ Law Dean Luke Bierman, Associate Dean Wendy Scott, and Senior Scholar Steve Friedland reflect on the legacy of the second woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, a jurist who died September 18, 2020, at the age of 87.
Ƶ Law hosts its first Student Organization Virtual Fair
September 18, 2020
Student organizations created videos and hosted online Q&As this month as Ƶ Law took a fresh approach to annual events impacted by the physical distancing practices in place because of COVID-19.