
Panel Addresses Disability Rights, Health Care, and Incarceration
The Solomon Center hosted a panel on the role of certain laws in promoting health for people impacted by mass incarceration and disability.

Maintaining Our Community
During moments like this, it is imperative that members of our community take care of one another.

Yale Law School Launches Crossing Divides Program
Yale Law School Dean Heather K. Gerken announced today the launch of the Ronnie F. Heyman ’72 Crossing Divides Program, designed to foster discourse across the political and ideological spectrum and reinforce the core values of lawyering. The program will feature a prominent speaker series, co-teaching opportunities for courses, and support student initiatives that reinforce this work.

PTCC Furthers Exchanges and Research on LGBTQ Equality in China
The Paul Tsai China Center, with programming led by Senior Fellow Darius Longarino, is advancing its significant work facilitating exchanges and research on LGBTQ equality with influential scholars, legal and health professionals, and other Chinese stakeholders.

Panel Reflects on a Year After the Fall of Roe

Connecticut Education Funding Increase Aligns with Research by Professor Liscow
Connecticut legislators included an additional $150 million in the most recent state budget to benefit lower-income school districts. The decision is in line with recommendations outlined by Professor Zachary Liscow ’15 in a 2017 paper on equitable state funding.

To Build a Better Online Community, Initiative Looks Beyond Moderation
The Justice Collaboratory’s Social Media Governance Initiative is looking at ways to create a healthier online community that start before harmful content is posted.

Professor Koh Asks International Court of Justice to Decide Ukraine’s Suit Against Russia
Sterling Professor of International Law Harold Hongju Koh, for the third time in the last two years, returned to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the Hague in September to argue on behalf of Ukraine against Russia.