Events Calendar

Now viewing: April 3–9, 2016

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3 April 4
  1. 11:45am 2016-04-04T13:00-05:00
    Textualist Theory of the 14th Amendment

    Prof. Jonathan Mitchell (Stanford Law) and Prof. Sanford Levinson (Texas Law) discuss Prof. Mitchell's textualist theory of the Fourteenth Amendment.

    Prof. Mitchell currently teaches at Stanford Law. He formerly taught at Texas Law. He was the Texas Solicitor General from 2010–2015, a Justice Scalia clerk, and a University of Chicago School of Law alumnus.

    ***FREE RAISING CANE'S!***

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/04/04/22040/

5 6 April 7
  1. 3:00pm 2016-04-07T19:00-05:00
    Conference: "Inequality & Human Rights"

    This year's conference will explore inequality and human rights, addressing questions related to what we know of global, domestic, and regional inequality, and how various forms of and theories about inequality affect human rights work. A cross-regional, interdisciplinary group of activists, policymakers, and academics will work together to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the human rights movement’s efforts to address the issue.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/04/07/21374/

April 8
  1. 8:30am 2016-04-08T17:00-05:00
    Conference: "Inequality & Human Rights"

    This year's conference will explore inequality and human rights, addressing questions related to what we know of global, domestic, and regional inequality, and how various forms of and theories about inequality affect human rights work. A cross-regional, interdisciplinary group of activists, policymakers, and academics will work together to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the human rights movement’s efforts to address the issue.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/04/08/21377/

April 9
  1. 8:30am 2016-04-09T12:30-05:00
    Conference: "Inequality & Human Rights"

    This year's conference will explore inequality and human rights, addressing questions related to what we know of global, domestic, and regional inequality, and how various forms of and theories about inequality affect human rights work. A cross-regional, interdisciplinary group of activists, policymakers, and academics will work together to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the human rights movement’s efforts to address the issue.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2016/04/09/21725/