Yale Law School Clinic Alumni Co-Write Guide to Public Interest Lawsuits for Local Governments
Alumni of the San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project at Yale Law School were among the authors of Local Action, National Impact: A Practical Guide to Affirmative Litigation for Local Governments, a guidebook released by Public Rights Project.
Tracey Meares and Emily Bazelon Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Walton Hale Hamilton Professor of Law Tracey L. Meares and Senior Research Scholar in Law and Truman Capote Fellow in Law Emily Bazelon ’00 have been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Expanding Access to Justice through Online Dispute Resolution
At the Seminar in Private Law April 16, 2019, Colin Rule, VP of Online Dispute Resolution at Tyler Technologies, spoke about expanding access to justice through online dispute resolution.
MFIA Seeks to Keep Law Enforcement Disciplinary Hearings in Public Record
The New York Times and Yale Law School’s Media Freedom and Information Access (MFIA) Clinic filed a brief last month in a case concerning public access to police disciplinary records.
Orly Lobel on Covenants not to Compete and Human Capital Accumulation
Orly Lobel, Don Weckstein Professor of Labor and Employment Law, Class of 1975 Endowed Professor at University of San Diego School of Law presented her new paper, titled “Gentlemen Prefer Bonds: How Employers Fix the Talent Market” at the Center for Private Law.
2019 Bernstein Symposium Explores Refugee Rights
The twenty-first annual Bernstein Symposium, entitled “Borders, Refuge, and Rights,” explored questions related to forced displacement and the international refugee regime.
Exhibit on Alumna Shows a Life of “Perseverance and Resilience”
The wide-ranging career of Inez Smith Reid ’62 is shown in an exhibit at the Lillian Goldman Law Library, recently visited by the judge.
Professor Liscow on the Effects of Tax Policy Changes
Associate Professor of Law Zachary Liscow discuses recent tax policy changes and their effects.