Videos tagged with Panels

  • Moderator: Col. Adam Oler, USAF, National War College
    Professor Laurie Blank, Emory University, School of Law
    Mr. David Graham, U.S. Army JAG School
    Dr. Aurel Sari, University of Exeter
    Ms. Rita Siemion, Human Rights First, International Legal Counsel

  • A celebration of Black History Month with a panel discussion on influential Black attorneys who inspired the career paths of four Duke Law professors: Guy-Uriel Charles, Darrell A.H. Miller, Trina Jones, and James E. Coleman, Jr.

    Sponsored by the American Constitution Society.

  • The Duke Law Journal hosted their 46th Annual Administrative Law Symposium on February 12, 2016. Experts from a range of disciplines discussed "Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law." The symposium assessed the impact and desirability of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's growing authority over intellectual property. Sponsored by Duke Law Journal.

    Session 2: Patent Office Cohorts

    Conference titled: Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law

  • The Duke Law Journal hosted their 46th Annual Administrative Law Symposium on February 12, 2016. Experts from a range of disciplines discussed "Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law." The symposium assessed the impact and desirability of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's growing authority over intellectual property. Sponsored by Duke Law Journal.

    Session 1: PTO & Chevron Deference

    Conference titled: Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law

  • The Duke Law Journal hosted their 46th Annual Administrative Law Symposium on February 12, 2016. Experts from a range of disciplines discussed "Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law." The symposium assessed the impact and desirability of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's growing authority over intellectual property. Sponsored by Duke Law Journal.

    Session 3: CBA at the PTO

    Conference titled: Intellectual Property Exceptionalism in Administrative Law

  • The Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum held their annual symposium on February 5, 2016. A range of experts contributed to the discussion about water law and policy.

    Coal Ash Panel

    Appearing:

    Moderator: Michelle Nowlin (Supervising Attorney, Environmental Law & Policy Clinic; Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University School of Law)

  • The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Plenary: Race, Culture and Media

    Moderator: Mark Anthony Neal (Duke University, Department of African & African American Studies)
    Panel: Devon W. Carbado (UCLA School of Law), Tanisha C. Ford (Haute Couture Intellectualism, University of Massachusetts Amherst), Russell Robinson (University of California, Berkeley School of Law), Goldie Taylor (Editor-at-Large, The Daily Beast)

  • The Past and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Plenary: Criminal Justice Reform and Mass Incarceration

    Moderator: Mario Barnes (University California, Irvine, School of Law)

    Panel: Daryl Atkinson (Southern Coalition for Social Justice), Devon W. Carbado (UCLA School of Law), Michael Pinard (University of Maryland School of Law) , Cheryl Harris (UCLA School of Law), Thena Robinson-Mock (Advancement Project)

  • The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Plenary: Race, Political Participation, and the Roberts Court

    Moderator: Kerry Haynie (Duke University, Department of Political Science)

    Panel: Ari Berman (The Nation), Richard Delgado (University of Alabama School of Law), Luis Ricardo Fraga (University of Notre Dame, Institute for Latino Studies), Pamela Karlan (Stanford Law School), Taeku Lee (University of California Berkeley Department of Political Science), Neil Siegel (Duke Law School)

  • 16:00 Concurrent Panel (1 of 5)

    Moderator: Darrell A.H. Miller (Duke Law School)
    Ralph Richard Banks (Stanford Law School)
    Katharine T. Bartlett and Mitu Gulati (Duke Law School)
    Michael Selmi (George Washington University Law School)
    Sandra F. Sperino (University of Cincinnati College of Law)

    Recorded on November 20, 2015

  • The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Introduction: Trina Jones (Duke Law School) & Ana Apostoleris '16 (Duke Law School - Student)

    Plenary: Reflections on the Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements

    Moderator: Angela Onwuachi-Willig (University of Iowa College of Law)

  • The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Plenary: Trends in Immigration Law and Policy

    Welcome: Dean David F. Levi (Duke Law School)

    Moderator: Cristina Rodriguez (Yale Law School)

    Panel: Leisy Abrego (UCLA, Department of Chicana/o Studies), Jennifer Chacón (University of California, Irvine, School of Law), Alejandra Gomez (Living United for Change in Arizona – LUCHA), Marielena Hincapie (National Immigration Law Center), Robin Lenhardt (Fordham University School of Law), Hiroshi Motomura (UCLA School of Law)

  • The Present and Future of Civil Rights Movements: Race and Reform in 21st Century America

    Plenary: Developments and Ongoing Challenges for LGTB Communities

    Moderator: Holning Lau (University of North Carolina School of Law)

    Panel: Bernadette Brown (Duke University, Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity), Chinyere Ezie (Southern Poverty Law Center), Holiday Simmons (Lambda Legal), Juan Session-Smalls & Gee Session-Smalls (Juan & Gee Enterprises)

  • 2015 marks the 150th anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment, commemorated here with a panel discussion on its history and contemporary relevance. Panelists include Professor Darrell Miller (Duke Law), Professor Laura Edwards (Duke History), and Professor George Rutherglen (Virginia Law).

    Sponsored by the Center on Law, Race and Politics, the American Constitution Society, and the Program in Public Law.

  • “The Adjudication of Foreign Official Immunity Determinations in the United States and Beyond Post-Samantar” by Dr. Christopher Totten (Kennesaw State University) and “A U.S. Department of State Perspective on Foreign Official Immunity” by John Bellinger (Arnold & Porter, LLP), with discussant Curtis Bradley (Duke University School of Law).

    From the Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law's 2015 Symposium on Foreign Immunity.

  • “Foreign Official Immunity and the Attribution Puzzle” by Chimène Keitner (University of California, Hastings College of Law), with discussant Laurence R. Helfer (Professor, Duke Law School).

    From the Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law's 2015 Symposium on Foreign Immunity.

  • Introduction by DJCIL Editor-in-Chief Annie Showalter.

    First session: “On the Existence of a Customary Rule Granting Functional Immunity to State Officials and its Exceptions: Back to Square One” by Micaela Frulli (University of Florence), with discussant Arthur Mark Weisburd (University of North Carolina School of Law).

    Second session: “Diplomatic Immunity and Human Trafficking: A Long March to Justice” by Martina Vandenberg (The Human Trafficking Pro Bono Legal Center), with discussant Sarah Adamczyk (Duke University School of Law).

  • 1:30–2:15: “The Sovereign Immunity Underpinnings of Foreign Official Immunity” by Elizabeth Wilson (Seton Hall University), with discussant Laurence R. Helfer (Duke University School of Law).

    This discussion was part of the Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law's 2015 Symposium on Foreign Immunity.

  • “A Comparative Study of U.S. and Chinese Views Towards Foreign Official Immunity” by Julian Ku (Maurice A. Deane School of Law at Hofstra University), with discussant Ralf Michaels (Duke University School of Law).

    Closing Remarks by Ralf Michaels, DJCIL Faculty Advisor

    From the Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law's 2015 Symposium on Foreign Immunity.

  • The Global Health Law and Policy Symposium, held at Duke Law School on Nov. 6, 2015, featured keynote speaker Professor Benjamin Mason Meier, a Scholar at Georgetown Law School's O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law and a Faculty Fellow at UNC's Institute for Global Health and Infectious Disease. The event also featured two panel discussions on lessons from the recent Ebola outbreak and human rights issues in global health governance. Panelists include Dr. Chris Woods, Dr. Cameron R. Wolfe, Prof. Jerome Reichman, Dr. Michael H. Merson, Prof.

  • The Global Health Law and Policy Symposium, held at Duke Law School on Nov. 6, 2015, featured keynote speaker Professor Benjamin Mason Meier, a Scholar at Georgetown Law School's O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law and a Faculty Fellow at UNC's Institute for Global Health and Infectious Disease. The event also featured two panel discussions on lessons from the recent Ebola outbreak and human rights issues in global health governance. Panelists include Dr. Chris Woods, Dr. Cameron R. Wolfe, Prof., Dr. Sulzhan Bali, Dr. Michael H. Merson, Prof.

  • The Honorable Grover Joseph Rees III, former U.S. ambassador to East Timor, and Geoffrey Mock from Amnesty International, discuss the United States' role in the current Middle Eastern and European refugee crisis.

    Sponsored by the Federalist Society.

  • Recently, the use of police force has become a very relevant issue throughout the United States. Technology often comes into play as dash cams, body cams, and bystander videos are able to capture some of the alleged misconduct. What are the legal implications of these videos? Are they admissible as evidence in the court room? How is technology changing the way the law handles these types of cases? The Duke Forum for Law and Social Change and the American Constitution Society present a panel discussion about the use of technology and its implications for law enforcement officers.

  • Richard Thigpen, General Counsel for the NFL's Carolina Panthers, and Billy Traurig, General Counsel for the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes, will compare their experiences serving as the top lawyer for a major professional sports team. Professor Paul Haagen, co-director of the Center for Sports Law and Policy, will moderate.

  • A discussion with Professors Katharine Bartlett and Karla Holloway, based on the controversy surrounding the novels Go Set A Watchman and To Kill a Mockingbird. Moderated by Marcus Benning (Black Law Students Association) and Henry Washington (Black Student Alliance), the discussion explores such questions as: Who is Atticus Finch? What does "he" owe us? What, if anything, does the controversial sequel reveal, teach, or reflect about race in our culture and legal system? What, if anything, does it say about the law, ethics, and politics of Black Lives Matter?