Housing Course Joining Law, Architecture, and Business Wins Design Education Award
A Yale course on affordable housing that is about to yield eight new homes in New Haven is being held up as an example of design education.
Unanimous Supreme Court Agrees with Housing Clinic Brief in USDA v. Kirtz
The Supreme Court agreed with an amicus brief submitted by the Housing Clinic in a recent unanimous decision
Justice Collaboratory Study Focuses on Community Response to Gun Violence Prevention Policies
A new study by The Justice Collaboratory at Yale Law School seeks to better understand the power and influence of gun violence prevention programs through the voices of participants and impacted communities.
MFIA Clinic Files Brief on How To Fight Lies about Voting, Protect Freedom of Expression
The Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic filed an amicus brief in a case in which an influential social media user attempted to trick voters into believing they could vote by text message.
Chae Initiative Students Explore Private Sector Entrepreneurship in New York
The Chae Initiative in Private Sector Leadership, part of The Tsai Leadership Program at Yale Law School, held its second annual trip to New York City in January to immerse students in the world of private sector leadership.
When “Small” Wars Are a Prelude to Atrocities
In her new book "They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence," Professor Lauren Benton charts the history of so-called small wars in European empires.
Historical Profile: Edwin A. Randolph, Class of 1880
In 1880, Edwin A. Randolph became the first Black person to graduate from Yale Law School and first Black person to be admitted to the Connecticut bar.
Historical Profile: Jerome N. Frank
Jerome N. Frank was “one of the most prominent lawyers and legal intellectuals of his time,” according to Chancellor Kent Professor Emeritus of Law and Legal History Robert W. Gordon, and launched the Legal Realism movement with his book, Law and the Modern Mind.