Videos tagged with Katharine T. Bartlett

  • Practical and ethical considerations specific to white collar crime were the subject of an afternoon symposium at Duke Law School on October 22. The symposium, which brought together practitioners and jurists from across the Carolinas, was organized by Walter T. Cox III, in honor of longtime Duke Law faculty member Robinson O. Everett; the two currently co-teach a seminar in “Advanced Issues in Criminal Justice” at the Law School. The symposium was sponsored by Judge Coxs law firm, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough.

    Recorded on October 22, 2004.

  • Dean Katharine T. Bartlett interviews Julie Goodridge, plaintiff in the Massachusetts same-sex marriage case

    Produced at Duke University School of Law on April 13, 2004.

  • Recorded on March 31, 2004.

    Rabbi Seymour Siegel Memorial Lecture on Medical-Legal Ethics.

    Appearing: Welcome and introduction by Dean Katharine Bartlett. Speaker: Professor Deborah L. Rhode.

  • The opening remarks and morning panel of the third annual Hot Topics in Intellectual Property Law Symposium, sponsored by the Duke Law Intellectual Property and Cyberlaw Society. Duke Law Intellectual Property and Cyberlaw Society President Grant Yang and Duke Law Dean Katharine Bartlett welcome attendees, and Duke Law Professor David Lange introduces the panelists, who address the latest developments in the mp3 privacy vs. piracy debate and public domain issues.

  • Introduction by Dean Katharine Bartlett. Walter Dellinger talks with Justice Richard Goldstone of the Constitutional Court of South Africa.

    Produced on March 01, 2004.

    Great Lives in the Law Lecture Series.

  • A distinguished panel of scholars discusses race and social change in the United States. They focus on the subject of reparations.

    Appearing: Katharine T. Bartlett (Dean, Duke University School of Law), introductions ; Trina Jones (Duke University School of Law), introductions ; John Hope Franklin, speaker ; William A. Darity (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), speaker ; James A. Joseph (Duke University), speaker.

    Recorded on January 19, 2004.

    Series: Jean E. and Christine P. Mills Conversation Series

  • Robert F. Nagel spoke on "interest assessment" : the weighing by the United States Supreme Court of state interests against the US Constitution. He explored the Court's opinion in Grutter v. Bollinger , which held that the government has a compelling interest in diversity. In so finding, the Court declared that governmental preferences at odds with the Fourteenth Amendment are justified by educators' opinions that diversity is important.

    Recorded on November 13, 2003.

    Series: Brainerd Currie Memorial Lecture 2003.

  • American Bar Association President Dennis Archer called on student to be healers during his talk at the Duke Law School.

    Recorded on November 03, 2003.

    Great Lives in the Law Lecture Series.

    Appearing: Introductions by Dean Katharine Bartlett and Professor James Coleman ; Speaker: Dennis W. Archer, President of the American Bar Association.

  • Panel discussion on foreign trade and public goods. Includes the following short lectures: Peter Drahos, "Economic and Legal Obstacles Raised by IPR to the Provision of Public Goods" and Paul David "Economics of Public Goods in International Perspective." Also includes welcoming address.

    Recorded on April 04, 2003.

    Panel titled: International Provision of Public Goods in the New Regime.

    Conference title: International Public Goods & Transfer of Technology (TRIPS Conference (2003))

  • Jack Valenti Jack Valenti, President and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, delivers the Third Annual Meredith and Kip Frey Lecture in Intellectual Property by appealing to moral principles in protecting intellectual property rights from Internet piracy.

    Recorded on February 24, 2003.

    Series: Meredith and Kip Frey Lecture in Intellectual Property 3rd.

    Appearing: Jack Valenti (Motion Picture Association of America), speaker ; Dean Katharine Bartlett and David Lange, introductions.

  • Dr. Leon Kass delivers the Second Annual Rabbi Seymour Siegel Lecture in Medical Legal Ethics. Welcome and introduction by Dean Katherine Bartlett.

    Recorded on February 04, 2003.

    Full title: Preventing a Brave New World: Why We Should Ban Human Cloning.

    Series: Rabbi Seymour Siegel Memorial Lecture on Medical-Legal Ethics 2nd.

    Appearing: Katherine T. Bartlett, introductions ; Dr. Leon Kass, speaker.

  • Professor Janet Halley delivers the 36th Annual Brainerd Currie Memorial Lecture.

    Titled: A Map of Feminist and Queer Theories of Sexuality and Sexual Regulation

    Recorded on November 07, 2002.

    Brainerd Currie Memorial Lecture.

    Appearing: Katharine T. Bartlett (Duke Law School), introduction; Janet Halley (Harvard Law School), speaker.

  • Recorded on March 29, 2002.

    Conference title: Executive privilege & the Bush administration (Administrative Law Conference (2002))

    Appearing: Speakers: Mark J. Rozell, Terry Sullivan, Louis Fisher, and Christopher Schroeder.

  • Introductory lecture: "The Second Enclosure Movement?" presented by James Boyle.

    Recorded on November 09, 2001.

    Lecture titled: The Second Enclosure Movement?.

    Conference title: Conference on the Public Domain 2001.

    Appearing: Katharine Bartlett (Duke Law School), host/introductions ; James Boyle (Duke Law School), speaker.

  • Recorded on March 26, 2001.

    Series: Brainerd Currie Memorial Lecture 2001.

    Appearing: Introduction: Katharine T. Bartlett; speaker: Robert Post, Professor of Law at UC Berkley.

    Related paper:: Robert Post, Federalism in the Taft Court Era: Can It Be "Revived"?, 51 Duke Law Journal 1513-1639 (2002). Available at: http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/dlj/vol51/iss5/2/

  • A panel discussion on the 50th anniversary of the decision in Griswold v. Connecticut, a landmark case protecting both privacy and reproductive rights. This panel features Professor Neil Siegel (Duke Law), Professor Katharine Bartlett (Duke Law), Professor Maxine Eichner (UNC Law School), and Kristine Kippins (Center for Reproductive Rights) discussing historical and current issues in reproductive justice.