Page 26 - NYLS Magazine • 2016 • Vol 35, No. 1
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Presented a speech at
the Constitutional Law Symposium at Drake University Law School
in Des Moines, Iowa, titled, “Beyond the Fourth Amendment: Additional Constitutional Guarantees that Mass Surveillance Violates.” The Symposium topic was “Eyes and Ears Everywhere? Privacy in an Age of Government and Technological Intrusion” (April 2015).
Delivered the annual
Riley Lecture in Women’s and Gender Studies at Alfred University in Alfred, New York. Her lecture was titled, “Sex, Gender and Civil Liberties on American College Campuses” (March 2015).
Presentations
Presenter at the Central States Area Legal Writing Conference: “Gateway
to the Future of Legal Education,” held at Saint Louis University School of Law in St. Louis, Missouri. Her presentation was titled, “Opening the Door to Experiential Learning in the First-Year of Law School: Integration of Legal Writing, Research and Interactive Lawyering Skills” (September 2015).
Presented at the Centre
for Legal Education’s
2015 Conference,
“Legal Education and Access to Justice,” held
at Nottingham Law School, Nottingham Trent University, in England. Her
presentation was titled, “Access to Justice for Crime Victims, the Accused, and theCommunity:Teaching Law Students About the Role of the Prosecutor in Advancing Social Justice”
( June 2015).
Attended the New York State 2015 High School Mock Trial Tournament semi-finals held at the James T. Foley federal courthouse in Albany, New York, and served as a bailiff in one of the rounds (May 2015).
Appointments
Was appointed a member of the Executive Committee of the AALS Section on Economic Globalization and Governance ( January 2015).
Awards and Recognition
Winner of 2015
NYLS Otto L. Walter Distinguished Writing Award for full-time faculty for her book, Globalizing Transitional Justice: Contemporary Essays (Oxford University Press, May 2014).
Presentations
Chaired the Institute on Global Law, Justice, and Policy panel on “Economic Accomplices to Argentine Dictatorship,” in New York (October 2015).
Publications
Transitional Justice and Judicial
Activism—A Right to Accountability?, Cornell International Law Journal (Spring 2015).
Transitional Justice in Unified Korea (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015) (Co-edited with B. Suk Baek).
Media References
and Appearances Quoted in “A&P
union battle expected
in bankruptcy court,” lohud: The Journal News (December 2015).
Appointments
Became one of a number of founding members of the Federal Bar Council’s (FBC) Intellectual Property Committee. The FBC is an organization where practitioners in the Second Circuit can meet, network, and share ideas (May 2015).
Presentations
Spoke at “TECH TALK: Privacy, Surveillance,
and New Technology,”
a discussion of personal privacy in an age of invasive technology, hosted by the American
Constitution Society, the Federalist Society, and the Institute for Information Law and Policy at NYLS (March 2015).
Delivered a talk at the annual Works in Progress IP conference sponsored by George Washington University Law School and held at the United States Patent and Trademark Office in Alexandria, Virginia. The talk was titled, “Social Networks and the Line Between Public and Private in IP Law” (February 2015).
Advocacy and Expert Testimony
His article, “Exceptions: The Criminal Law’s Illogical Approach to HIV-Related Aggravated Assaults,” was quoted in United States v. Gutierrez, a unanimous decision by the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces, the military’s highest court. His work was also cited by amici on the case (February 2015).
Media References and Appearances Was quoted widely in the media on the topic of online cyberbullying (2015).
Advocacy and Expert Testimony Worked with Deborah N. Archer (counsel of
record) and Stephen J. Ellmann on the amicus
curiae brief the NYLS Racial Justice Project
filed in the United States Supreme Court in the case of Fisher v. The University of Texas at Austin. The case is a challenge to University of Texas at Austin’s consideration
of race as one factor of one component of its admissions program (October 2015).
Worked with Deborah N. Archer (through the NYLS Racial Justice Project and the Voting Rights and Civic Participation Project) on comments submitted to the Census Bureau urging the Bureau to change the “usual residency” rule
to count incarcerated people at their home address, rather than at the correctional facility where they are located on Census Day ( July 2015).
Presentations
Spoke at a panel discussion sponsored by the Women’s Law Association at Harvard Law School titled, “Pursuing Careers in Legal Journalism,” in Cambridge, Massachusetts (April 2015). •
Lynn Boepple Su
Ruti G. Teitel
Marshall Tracht
Ari Ezra Waldman
Erika L. Wood
Michelle Zierler
a full listing
of faculty activities can be found at www.nyls.edu/ FacultyNews
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