April 25 - CANCELED
2021 Hutcheson Moot Court THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELED. If in doubt, verify with the web-based events calendar. The Thad T. Hutcheson First-Year Moot Competition is a 64-person, single-elimination tournament for first-year law students at the University of Texas. Details will be announced at a later date. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/25/57021/
| April 26 - CANCELED
2021 Hutcheson Moot Court THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELED. If in doubt, verify with the web-based events calendar. The Thad T. Hutcheson First-Year Moot Competition is a 64-person, single-elimination tournament for first-year law students at the University of Texas. Details will be announced at a later date. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/26/57022/ - 12:00pm 2021-04-26T12:45-05:00
Inns of Court Info Session for Students Monday, April 26 from noon to 12:45 via Zoom
Learn about becoming a 2021-22 student member of one of the Austin Inns of Court! The Inns provide excellent opportunities for law students to meet and be mentored by local judges and practicing attorneys across a range of fields. Each Inn meets monthly, fall through spring. Students are assigned to a team of attorneys and judges, which meets to prepare and then present a program at one of the Inn meetings. This is an excellent opportunity for students to socialize with and be mentored by practicing attorneys and judges.
The Inns will hold an information session for law students on Monday, April 26 from noon to 12:45 via Zoom. The meeting will include short panel discussion and breakout sessions with Inn members. Register by April 25 to receive a link to the Zoom meeting. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
Registration link: https://utexas.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAucOqtqjouH9ahqiZSYCJA4iEAVdgtdfvZ
For more information about the Austin Inns of Court and how to apply to be a student member, visit: https://law.utexas.edu/publicinterest/austin-inns-of-court-2/
Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/26/60485/ - 12:00pm 2021-04-26T13:30-05:00
Women of Color Discussion Group Throughout the semester, the GSC offers a series of weekly free and confidential groups for students. Click the link for more about such groups as Finding Our Voice: Women of Color Discussion Group, Trans Thursdays, Feminist Friday, Queer Voices Discussion Group, and more.
Finding our Voice: A Women of Color Discussion Group meets weekly on Mondays and all graduate students are welcome. This free and confidential group is open to the entire UT student community. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/26/60626/ - 4:15pm 2021-04-26T18:15-05:00
Law and Economic Seminar - Talia Gillis
| April 27 - 11:15am 2021-04-27T12:45-05:00
Summer Judicial Internship Orientation - 5:00pm 2021-04-27T18:00-05:00
Distinguished Lecture with Scott W. Tink
| April 28 - 12:00pm 2021-04-28T13:00-05:00
Constitutional Studies | Moran & Brinks - 6:30pm 2021-04-28T20:00-05:00
CLS Bible Study
| April 29 - 8:00am 2021-04-29T09:00-05:00
TLWCF Bible Study - 11:30am 2021-04-29T13:00-05:00
Trans Thursdays - 11:45am 2021-04-29T13:15-05:00
Faculty Colloquium - Abe Wickelgren - 12:00pm 2021-04-29T13:00-05:00
2021 Beck Awards - 4:00pm 2021-04-29T17:30-05:00
Summer Nonprofit & Govt Internship Orien Hoping to receive academic credit this summer for an internship with a government agency or nonprofit organization?
Academic credit is available through the law school’s 3-credit summer session government and nonprofit internship courses. Students must apply for instructor approval to register, and must attend an orientation session with the Texas Law instructors via Zoom on Thurs., April 29, from 4 to 5:30 pm. Students will receive an invitation to the Zoom orientation once they have applied for approval to register for the program, or they contacted the instructor interest. (An audio recording will be made available to students who have a class conflict.)
Applications for approval to register are available online at:
Government Internship: https://law.utexas.edu/internships/government-internship/
Nonprofit Internship: https://law.utexas.edu/internships/nonprofit-internship/
Students who begin internships before obtaining instructor approval to register and attending the orientation will be precluded from enrolling in this course.
Questions? Contact Prof. Helen Gaebler at hgaebler@law.utexas.edu or Prof. Lucy Wood at lwood@law.utexas.edu.
Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/29/60665/
| April 30 - 12:00pm 2021-04-30T14:00-05:00
Policing in Schools Growing evidence regarding persistent disparities in school discipline poses serious implications about the impact of the educational experience for youth. Statewide, Black students in Texas are approximately two times more likely to experience in-school suspensions (I.S.S.), nearly three times more likely to experience out-of-school suspensions (O.S.S) and are admitted to either alternative or juvenile justice education programs at higher rates than white students. Join IUPRA’s moderated panel discussion around this issue with a focus on equity and school- community solutions.
Moderator: Brion Oaks, Chief Equity Officer, City of Austin
Panelists:
Kevin Foster Ph.D., School Board Member, Austin Independent School District
Andrew Hairston, Director, Justice Education Project, Texas Appleseed
Natosha Daniels, Round Rock Black Parents Association
Farah Muscadin, Director, Office of Police Oversight, City of Austin Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/04/30/60685/ - 1:00pm 2021-04-30T14:00-05:00
Feminist Friday
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2 | May 3 - 12:00pm 2021-05-03T13:30-05:00
Women of Color Discussion Group Throughout the semester, the GSC offers a series of weekly free and confidential groups for students. Click the link for more about such groups as Finding Our Voice: Women of Color Discussion Group, Trans Thursdays, Feminist Friday, Queer Voices Discussion Group, and more.
Finding our Voice: A Women of Color Discussion Group meets weekly on Mondays and all graduate students are welcome. This free and confidential group is open to the entire UT student community. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/03/60627/
| May 4 - 12:00pm 2021-05-04T13:00-05:00
Digital Inclusion and Equity in Texas Join us for a discussion on the current state of broadband and computer access, adoption, and affordability in Texas, and policy responses that will help close the digital divide in our state.
Speakers include Hon. Rudolph “Rudy” Metayer, President of the Texas Black Caucus Foundation, Thomas Marshall III, Education Policy Fellow at IDRA (Intercultural Development Research Association), Nora Belcher, Executive Director of Texas e-Health Alliance and other policy experts. Introducing the talk will be Ranjana Natarajan, Clinical Professor at the University of Texas School of Law.
The webinar is co-sponsored by the Texas Black Caucus Foundation and the Civil Rights Clinic at the University of Texas School of Law, who jointly published a report on this issue using data analyzed by Prof. Sharon Strover: https://law.utexas.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2021/04/2021-CvRC-Digital-Inclusion.pdf. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/04/60725/
| 5 | May 6 - 11:30am 2021-05-06T13:00-05:00
Trans Thursdays
| May 7 - 10:00am 2021-05-07T00:00-05:00
UT Remembers Lowering of the Flags Ceremony
Rescheduled 2020 UT Remembers Ceremony
As a part of this ceremony, the names of those being remembered will be read aloud and, in tribute, the Tower bell will toll once following each name.
This ceremony will honor former law student Zach Smith. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/07/60745/ - 1:00pm 2021-05-07T14:00-05:00
Feminist Friday
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9 | May 10 - 12:00pm 2021-05-10T13:30-05:00
Women of Color Discussion Group Throughout the semester, the GSC offers a series of weekly free and confidential groups for students. Click the link for more about such groups as Finding Our Voice: Women of Color Discussion Group, Trans Thursdays, Feminist Friday, Queer Voices Discussion Group, and more.
Finding our Voice: A Women of Color Discussion Group meets weekly on Mondays and all graduate students are welcome. This free and confidential group is open to the entire UT student community. Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/10/60628/
| 11 | 12 | 13 | May 14 - 1:00pm 2021-05-14T14:00-05:00
Feminist Friday
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16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | May 27 - 1:00pm 2021-05-27T14:30-05:00
Beyond Inequality: Case Studies The Rapoport Center and the Harvard Institute for Global Law and Policy have gathered a team of international and interdisciplinary scholars over the past year for a book project rethinking the future of work through methods of racial capitalism, world-systems, and critiques of distribution. This panel highlights case studies from the book about precarity in sites ranging from the Austin construction and Vermont dairy industries in the U.S. to Jordanian apparel factories and Colombian palm plantations.
Helena Alviar García
Professor, Sciences Po Law School
&
Jorge Gonzalez
Professor, Universidad de los Andes Law School, Colombia
Jennifer Bair
Professor of Sociology & Department Chair, University of Virginia
Karen Engle
Minerva House Drysdale Regents Chair in Law & Founder and Co-Director, Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice, University of Texas at Austin School of Law
&
Samuel Tabory
PhD Student, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University
Jennifer Gordon
Professor of Law, Fordham University School of Law
Vanja Hamzić
Reader in Law, History and Anthropology and an Associate Director of Research, SOAS University of London
Neville Hoad
Associate Professor of English & Co-Director, Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice, University of Texas at Austin
Kerry Rittich
Professor of Law, Women and Gender Studies, and Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto
Moderated by David Kennedy
Manley O. Hudson Professor of Law & Director of the Institute for Global Law and Policy, Harvard University
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Care Work, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/98600632307 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/27/60805/
| May 28 - 1:00pm 2021-05-28T14:00-05:00
Capitalism on Edge: A Conversation Albena Azmanova’s latest book, Capitalism on Edge, provocatively insists: “Capitalism is not on its deathbed, utopia is not in our future, and revolution is not in the cards. And yet, the time is ripe for radical progressive change.” In conversation with Jamie Galbraith, Azmanova discusses these claims and more – from the rise of global precarity to the future of capitalism.
Albena Azmanova
Reader (Associate Professor), Brussels School of International Studies, University of Kent
&
James Galbraith
Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government and Business Relations & Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Care Work, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/95760614356 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/05/28/60825/
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30 | 31 | June 1 - 1:00pm 2021-06-01T14:30-05:00
Worker Advocacy Organizations Leading advocates for workers in a variety of formal and informal sectors – from care work and construction to digital platforms and the arts – compare the challenges they see to the future of work and organizing in their respective fields and global contexts.
Richard Dobson
Co-Founder and Project Leader, Asiye eTafuleni
Katie Joaquin
Deputy Director, Jobs to Move America
Lenny Sanchez
Co-Founder, Independent Drivers Guild of Illinois (IDG)
Lise Soskolne
Working Artists and the Greater Economy (W.A.G.E.)
Emily Timm
Co-Founder and Co-Executive Director, Workers Defense Project
Moderated by Nicole Burrowes
Assistant Professor of History, Rutgers University
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Artistic Labor and the Humanities, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/96584980049 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/01/60806/ - 4:00pm 2021-06-01T17:00-05:00
What’s Wrong with the Gig-Economy? In the guise of entrepreneurialism and individual freedom the gig-economy was once hailed as the solution to the ills of the degrading work relationships that formed the backbone of the capitalist economy. Legal scholar and activist Veena Dubal considers how organized workers have helped dispel this myth by speaking out about the darker side of the gig-economy. In conversation with legal labor historian William Forbath, Dubal will discuss these issues and more – from the future of the gig-economy to the potential for legal change in the aftermath of California’s Prop 22.
Veena Dubal
Professor of Law and Harry & Lillian Hastings Research Chair, University of California, Hastings
&
William E. Forbath
Lloyd M. Bentsen Chair in Law & Associate Dean for Research, University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Essential Work
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/96278435068 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/01/60826/ - 6:00pm 2021-06-01T19:00-05:00
Autofac: Screening and Viewing Party I
| June 2 - 1:00pm 2021-06-02T14:30-05:00
Sarita Gupta: Workers at the Center Sarita Gupta, nationally recognized leader on labor and economic justice, will present a keynote lecture, followed by a conversation with representatives of each of our five research clusters.
Sarita Gupta
Director, Future of Work(ers), Ford Foundation
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Artistic Labor and the Humanities, Care Work, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/94566578855 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/02/60827/ - 5:30pm 2021-06-02T18:30-05:00
Autofac: Screening and Viewing Party II - 6:30pm 2021-06-02T20:00-05:00
A Conversation with Bruce Sterling This panel takes the Future of Work conversation beyond the bromides of today by meditating on yesterday’s visions of our future, as encapsulated by Philip K. Dick’s classic science fiction story “Autofac” and its recent adaptation for Amazon’s “Electric Dreams” video anthology. Participants include Dr. Simone Browne, Associate Professor in the Department of African and African Diaspora Studies, Director of the Good Systems Critical Surveillance Inquiry (CSI) Research Focus Area, and author of Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness; Nitin Verma, an advanced graduate student in the School of Information whose research concerns political and scientific misinformation and the ethical issues raised by machine learning technology; and the celebrated cyberpunk writer and UT graduate Bruce Sterling.
If you’d like to watch the “Electric Dreams” episode, Autofac, you can join us at one of our two screening parties on June 1 at 6:00pm or June 2 at 5:30pm, or watch on your own with Amazon Prime!
Bruce Sterling
Science Fiction Writer
In conversation with
Samuel Baker
Associate Professor of English, University of Texas at Austin
Simone Browne
Associate Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies, University of Texas at Austin
Neville Hoad
Associate Professor of English & Co-Director, Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice, University of Texas at Austin
Nitin Verma
PhD Student in the School of Information, University of Texas at Austin
Relevant Research Clusters: AI and Technology, Artistic Labor and the Humanities
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/97331719108 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/02/60807/
| June 3 - 1:00pm 2021-06-03T14:30-05:00
The Global Dimensions of Essential Work A pivotal dimension of COVID-19 has been the classification of certain work(ers) as essential. In dialogue with Sara Stevano, lead author of “Essential for What? A Global Social Reproduction View on the Re-organisation of Work during the COVID-19 Pandemic,” respondents will discuss their own research on essential work.
Sara Stevano
Lecturer, Department of Economics, SOAS
In discussion with:
Mechele Dickerson
Arthur L. Moller Chair in Bankruptcy Law and Practice & University Distinguished Teaching Professor, University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Karen Engle
Minerva House Drysdale Regents Chair in Law and Founder and Co-Director, Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice, University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Sam Tabory
PhD Student, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University
Sharmila Rudrappa
Professor of Sociology & Director of the South Asia Institute, University of Texas at Austin
Relevant Research Clusters: Care Work, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/95596121534 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/03/60808/
| June 4 - 1:00pm 2021-06-04T14:30-05:00
Conversations on Caring Building from their work on public health, care work, and racial capitalism, the panelists discuss the lengthy and ongoing crisis in caring labor that has only been exacerbated by the current pandemic.
Carrie Freshour
Assistant Professor of Geography, University of Washington
Libby McClure
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Occupational Safety and Research Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & Data Health Analyst, DataWorks NC.
Snehal Patel
Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin
Sharmila Rudrappa
Professor of Sociology & Director of the South Asia Institute, University of Texas at Austin
Relevant Research Clusters: Care Work, Essential Work, Work Across the Global South
Join via Zoom: https://utexas.zoom.us/j/96706403727 Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2021/06/04/60828/
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