Events Calendar

Now viewing: January 17–30, 2016

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
17 18 19 20 January 21
  1. 5:00pm 2016-01-21T21:00-06:00
    Federalism Conference

    January conference that is sparked, but not necessarily “about" Professor Sanford Levinson's forthcoming book An Argument Open to All: Reading The Federalist in the 21st Century.

    Thursday, January 21, 2016 Keynote speaker will feature at 5:30. A lecture by Noah Feldman drawn from a forthcoming intellectual biography of James Madison.

    Friday, January 22, 2016 Panel One: Federalism. Panel Two: The United States and the international political/military system. Lunch featuring discussion as Noah Feldman and Jack Rakove will review An Argument Open to All Panel Three: Representation Panel Four: Executive Power

    Saturday, January 23 Discussion on "What, if anything, can/should be learned from Publius by foreign readers in the 21st century?"

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/21/20670/

  2. 5:00pm 2016-01-21T18:00-06:00
    1L Alumni Mentoring Program Kickoff Rece

    All 1Ls and their alumni mentors are invited to come meet each other in person and informally mingle to mark the official kickoff of the mentoring program.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/21/21464/

  3. 6:00pm 2016-01-21T19:30-06:00
    Austin Alumni Reception

    Please join us for a Texas Law Austin Alumni Reception

    Thursday, January 21, 2016

    6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

    JW Marriott, 110 E 2nd St, Austin, TX

    Register at http://law.connect.utexas.edu/ATX16

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/21/21466/

January 22
  1. 8:00am 2016-01-22T17:00-06:00
    Federalist in the 21st Century Conferenc

    Conference that is sparked, but not necessarily “about" Professor Sanford Levinson's forthcoming book An Argument Open to All: Reading The Federalist in the 21st Century.

    Thursday, January 21, 2016 Keynote speaker will feature at 5:30. A lecture by Noah Feldman drawn from a forthcoming intellectual biography of James Madison.

    Friday, January 22, 2016 Panel One: Federalism. Panel Two: The United States and the international political/military system. Lunch featuring discussion as Noah Feldman and Jack Rakove will review An Argument Open to All Panel Three: Representation Panel Four: Executive Power

    Saturday, January 23 Discussion on "What, if anything, can/should be learned from Publius by foreign readers in the 21st century?"

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/22/21504/

  2. 6:30pm 2016-01-22T20:30-06:00
    LLM Class Reunion

    LLM Class Reunion

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/22/21733/

January 23
  1. 8:00am 2016-01-23T12:00-06:00
    Federalist in the 21st Century Conferenc

    A conference that is sparked, but not necessarily “about" Professor Sanford Levinson's forthcoming book An Argument Open to All: Reading The Federalist in the 21st Century.

    Thursday, January 21, 2016 Keynote speaker will feature at 5:30. A lecture by Noah Feldman drawn from a forthcoming intellectual biography of James Madison.

    Friday, January 22, 2016 Panel One: Federalism. Panel Two: The United States and the international political/military system. Lunch featuring discussion as Noah Feldman and Jack Rakove will review An Argument Open to All Panel Three: Executive Power. Panel Four: Representation.

    Saturday, January 23 Discussion on "What, if anything, can/should be learned from Publius by foreign readers in the 21st century?"

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/23/21505/

24 25 January 26
  1. 11:45am 2016-01-26T13:00-06:00
    The Decline of the American Trial

    ***FREE CHICK-FIL-A***

    Judge Jennifer Elrod, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir., discusses the effects of arbitration and administrative agency adjudication on the decline of the american trial.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/26/21765/

January 27
  1. 5:30pm 2016-01-27T19:00-06:00
    San Antonio Alumni Reception

    Please join us for a Texas Law Alumni Reception

    Wednesday, January 27, 2016

    5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.

    Hotel Valencia Riverwalk, 150 E. Houston St., San Antonio, TX

    Please register at http://law.connect.utexas.edu/SA2016

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/27/21467/

January 28
  1. 8:00am 2016-01-28T17:00-06:00
    11th Annual TJOGEL Symposium

    The two-day event will feature dynamic speakers and leaders from various sectors of the energy industry. The Symposium will take place in the Etter-Harbin Alumni Center, located on the University of Texas campus, at 2110 San Jacinto Boulevard, Austin, Texas 78712. Please see the attached program for details.

    Pending approval from UT CLE, the Symposium will provide 13.5 CLE credits, including 2.0 hours of ethics. If you have any questions, please email the Symposium Director, Cody Dreibelbis, at TJOGELSymposium@gmail.com.

    The Journal looks forward to seeing you in January 2016!

    For more information, please contact our Symposium Director at tjogelsymposium@gmail.com

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/28/21735/

  2. 6:00pm 2016-01-28T00:00-06:00
    Rob Nixon event CANCELLED

    Please join us for the first event in the Rapoport Center's spring Human Rights Speaker Series. Rob Nixon, Thomas A. and Currie C. Barron Family Professor in Humanities and Environment at Princeton University, will present "Environmental Justice and the Anthropocene." The talk is co-sponsored with the Texas Institute for Literary & Textual Studies and the Department of American Studies.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/28/21795/

January 29
  1. 8:00am 2016-01-29T18:00-06:00
    Texas Law Review Symposium

    The Texas Law Review at the University of Texas in Austin will be hosting a symposium January 28–30, 2016, Thursday evening to Saturday luncheon, tentatively titled “The Constitution and Economic Inequality.” While the general topic of economic inequality has recently attracted a huge wave of popular and scholarly attention, legal scholars are only now beginning to explore the problem’s constitutional dimensions. This Symposium will change that. We will examine the emerging, many-sided problem of economic inequality in constitutional theory, history, and political economy.

    The Texas Law Review is working with Professors Joseph Fishkin and William Forbath to design this event, which will bring together a high-powered group of legal scholars, historians, and other academics to focus on the relationship between the Constitution and our political economy, including arguments that the Constitution depends on preventing oligarchy and preserving a broad, accessible middle class. We are inviting scholars to think about inequality and unequal opportunity in a variety of substantive areas. The proceedings of the symposium will be published in the Texas Law Review.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/29/21143/

  2. 8:00am 2016-01-29T14:00-06:00
    11th Annual TJOGEL Symposium

    The two-day event will feature dynamic speakers and leaders from various sectors of the energy industry. The Symposium will take place in the Etter-Harbin Alumni Center, located on the University of Texas campus, at 2110 San Jacinto Boulevard, Austin, Texas 78712. Please see the attached program for details.

    Pending approval from UT CLE, the Symposium will provide 13.5 CLE credits, including 2.0 hours of ethics. If you have any questions, please email the Symposium Director, Cody Dreibelbis, at TJOGELSymposium@gmail.com.

    The Journal looks forward to seeing you in January 2016!

    For more information, please contact our Symposium Director at tjogelsymposium@gmail.com

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/29/21737/

January 30
  1. 8:15am 2016-01-30T13:00-06:00
    Texas Law Review Symposium

    The Texas Law Review at the University of Texas in Austin will be hosting a symposium January 28–30, 2016, Thursday evening to Saturday luncheon, tentatively titled “The Constitution and Economic Inequality.” While the general topic of economic inequality has recently attracted a huge wave of popular and scholarly attention, legal scholars are only now beginning to explore the problem’s constitutional dimensions. This Symposium will change that. We will examine the emerging, many-sided problem of economic inequality in constitutional theory, history, and political economy.

    The Texas Law Review is working with Professors Joseph Fishkin and William Forbath to design this event, which will bring together a high-powered group of legal scholars, historians, and other academics to focus on the relationship between the Constitution and our political economy, including arguments that the Constitution depends on preventing oligarchy and preserving a broad, accessible middle class. We are inviting scholars to think about inequality and unequal opportunity in a variety of substantive areas. The proceedings of the symposium will be published in the Texas Law Review.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/01/30/21168/