Avsnitt
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Steve Wright Podcast Interview- Episode 36 by Law in Action: A UW Law School Podcast
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Interview with University of Wisconsin Law School Assistant Professor of Law Ion Meyn on his recently published article, "White-on-Black Crime: Revisiting the Convict Leasing Narrative."
The article examines the years between 1880-1915 and the growing amount of evidence that suggests criminal convictions of Black men were the result of criminal conspiracies to traffic Black victims. This human trafficking inflated the historical Black crime rate but also obscured the criminal conduct of white beneficiaries. -
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Interview with UW Law School Associate Clinical Professor and Director of the Family Court Clinic Jennifer Binkley to discuss her recently-published book, "Wisconsin Family Law with Forms." The book is an essential resource for Wisconsin family law practitioners.
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Interview with UW Law School Professor Emeritus Peter Carstensen on his recent article, "How to Break Up Amazon."
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A remotely-recorded podcast episode with Yaron Nili (SSRN; Law Repository), Professor of Law and Smith-Rowe Fellow in Business Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Professor Nili is an expert in corporate law, governance, and business. His new article “Side Letter Governance” is forthcoming in the Washington University Law Review. This newest article focuses on a standard but difficult to study practice in private equity known as “side letters.” The article examines how side letters have evolved and how they are viewed in the industry now and what role they play in dealing with investors. -
An interview with Head of Reference & Scholarly Services at the University of Wisconsin Law School Library Elizabeth Manriquez.
Elizabeth discusses her role and how it fits in to the UW Law School's digital repository. She gives the history of the repository, talks about the team of librarians who work on it, and describes some of the newer collections housed within it. -
An interview with Professor of Law and Director of the Great Lakes Indian Law Center Richard Monette at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Prof. Monette discusses the recent (Nov. 2022) SCOTUS case Brackeen v. Haaland. This case focused on the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978's placement preferences for child placement proceedings involving an "Indian child". -
An interview with Assistant Professor of Law Nina Varsava at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Prof. Varsava discusses her forthcoming article, "Precedent, Reliance, and Dobbs". The article examines treatment of stare decisis in the 2022 majority Dobbs opinion focusing on its approach to reliance. The article argues that the justices’ refusal to recognize the reliance interest at stake is inconsistent with the Court’s previously prevailing stare decisis doctrine and is also mistaken as a matter of first principles, undermining basic rule of law values. -
An interview with Assistant Professor of Tax Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School Nyamagaga Gondwe.
Prof. Gondwe discusses her forthcoming article, "The Tax-Invisible Labor Problem: Care Work, Kinship, and Income Security Programs in the IRC." -
An interview with Associate Professor of Law and Faculty Co-Director of the State Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Wisconsin Law School Robert Yablon.
Prof. Yablon discusses his recent article on the concept of "gerrylaundering", an idea related to gerrymandering. -
An interview with Doyle-Bascom Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Wisconsin Law School Mark Sidel.
Prof. Sidel discusses his recent pieces on the increasing tendency of governments to restrict foreign investments, grants, and donations to nonprofit and philanthropic organizations in those countries. -
An interview with Voss Bascom Professor of Law Anuj Desai, discussing his forthcoming article, "Text is Not Enough," which focuses on textualism and statutory interpretation through the lens of the 2020 Supreme Court Title VII case Bostock v. Clayton County.
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An interview with University of Wisconsin Law School Professor Emeritus William (Bill) Clune.
Prof. Clune's research focused on school finance, school law, special education, and systemic educational policy. This podcast interview discusses his new book, Legal Realism to Law in Action: Innovative Law Courses at UW Madison, published Dec. 2021 by Pro Quo Books. It compiles articles and interviews focusing on 4 groundbreaking classes conceived and taught at UW Law School and the faculty responsible for them and their legacy. -
An interview with the Voss-Bascom Professor of Law and Dean of International Studies Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin Law School, David Trubek and the Michael J. Connell Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus at UCLA Law, Richard Abel.
Profs Trubek and Abel discuss their recent symposium, “The Short Happy Life of the Yale Program in Law and Modernization: From the Cold War to Comparative Legal Sociology and Critical Legal Studies.” Profs Trubek and Abel were the main professors managing this program at Yale Law School and they talk about each of their research interests and how the program came about and its goals and ideas. -
An interview with Prof. S. Lisa Washington, the 2021-22 William H. Hastie Fellow at the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Prof. Washington discusses her forthcoming article on how the family regulation system mirrors the criminal justice system and in practice finds that parents encounter a system as coercive, intrusive, and disempowering, especially for marginalized communities. -
An interview with Director of Research Centers and Senior Lecturer at the University of Wisconsin Law School, Prof. Sumudu Atapattu.
Prof. Atapattu discusses various issues on the topic of environmental justice and sustainable development, especially as it pertains to the Global South. -
An interview with Associate Dean and Director of the Law Library Bonnie Shucha of the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Dean Shucha discusses various issues surrounding the scholarly visibility of legal academia publishing and the role that law libraries have to play in enhancing visibility, impact, and discoverability. -
An interview with Professor Anne Smith of the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Professor Smith is the Director of the Law & Entrepreneurship Clinic and she discusses the services the clinic provides and projects the clinic is involved in. She also discusses how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the clinic's services and workflow. -
An interview with Professor Steph Tai of the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Professor Tai discusses two recent articles about food law, touching on the intersection of food law and climate change as well as the cultural heritage of food. -
An interview with Dean Daniel P. Tokaji of the University of Wisconsin Law School.
Dean Tokaji discusses two recent pieces he authored on election law as well as an upcoming article relying on the scholarship of Neil Komesar, University of Wisconsin Law School Professor Emeritus.
Dean Tokaji's work is especially relevant today and he has excellent insights into the future of truth and democracy. - Visa fler