Events Calendar
Career Services Interview Suite (TNH 3.122) & virtually via TEX
The Fall Interview Program welcomes employers to recruit 2Ls, 3Ls, domestic and foreign-trained LL.M.s, and recent graduates (up to one year after graduation) for summer clerkships or postgraduate positions.
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/78334/TNH 2.111 (Sheffield-Massey Room)
Book Launch: “The Constitution of the War on Drugs” (Oxford University Press, 2024) Participants:
David Pozen, Columbia University | Presenter Jennifer Laurin, The University of Texas at Austin | Discussant Richard Albert, The University of Texas at Austin | Moderator
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/77907/TNH 2.111 (Sheffield-Massey Room)
A conversation with David Pozen, Charles Keller Beekman Professor of Law at Columbia University, on his new book “The Constitution of the War on Drugs” (Oxford University Press), with comments from Jennifer Laurin, William B. Bates Chair for the Administration of Justice at the University of Texas at Austin.
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/78453/TNH 3.128 (Simmons Seminar Room)
Please join the Catholic Law Student Society in praying the Rosary. All are welcome!
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/78795/TNH 2.124
Please join Texas Law Students for Life on Monday, October 7, at 11:50 a.m. in TNH 2.124 as Dr. John Seago of Texas Right to Life addresses common concerns about pro-life laws and their impact on women's health—particularly in cases involving miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, or medical emergency.
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/79299/TNH 2.114 (Francis Auditorium)
*
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/78030/TNH 2.111 (Sheffield-Massey Room)
This speaker series considers the criminalization of reproduction—historical and contemporary, local and global—largely through the lens of reproductive justice.
Abstract: Over the past four years, three of the largest Latin American countries have made significant strides toward the decriminalization of abortion: Argentina in December 2020, Colombia in February 2022, and Mexico in September 2023. The changes are the result of strategic rights-based litigation, cultural work, and national and regional coalition building, largely on the part of feminists who came of age in the 1990s and 2000s. These feminists had long worked for incremental change, using the Courts as allies for reform. Contrasting their strategies with those deployed today by younger feminists in the region, who not only are more inclined to use social networks and direct action but are also more focused on issues of violence and individual harm, I argue for the need to bridge gaps between old and new feminisms to continue to work toward reproductive justice.
Isabel Cristina Jaramillo Sierra is Professor of Law and Director of the Jurisprudence Department at Universidad de los Andes in Bogotá, Colombia. She also acts as general coordinator of the Latin American Network of Feminist Legal Scholars- RED ALAS (www.redalas.net). She has written extensively on feminist legal reform and its impact on women, with particular attention to reforms related to quotas, abortion, and violence. Relevant works in English include “The New Colombian Law on Abortion" in International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics (2022) and "Abortion Reform in Colombia: From Total Prohibition to Decriminalization up to Week Twenty-Four" in The South Atlantic Quarterly (2023). She has worked as a consultant for the National Government and the Judicial Branch on gender and human rights issues; served as an expert before the Congress of the Republic; and worked as an Ad Hoc Judge for the Constitutional Court and the State Council. In 2017, she was nominated (but not elected) by President Juan Manuel Santos to the Constitutional Court. She earned her S.J.D. from Harvard Law School and an LL.B. with Honors from Universidad de los Andes.
Co-sponsored by Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies and the Latin America Initiative at Texas Law
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/78332/TNH 2.137 (Gayle Classroom)
Please join the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab (PJIL) for a film screening and panel discussion about “Solitary Confinement in Prison” on Monday, October 7, from 5:15 – 6:45 pm at the Law School (TNH 2.137). We are screening the 2023 short film “The Box: 27 Years in Solitary,” which explores the use of solitary confinement in prison. It focuses on the case of Dennis Hope, a man who spent 27 years in solitary confinement in a Texas prison and who took a lawsuit about his situation to the US Supreme Court. After the screening will be a panel discussion with Jeremy Young, Senior Producer for Fault Lines, Al Jazeera’s current affairs news program, and the producer of the film; Molly Petchenik, an attorney with the Texas Civil Rights Project which represented Dennis Hope in his Supreme Court challenge; Chanel Jones from the Lioness Justice Impacted Women's Alliance who has lived experience in solitary in a Texas women's prison, and Robert Lilly from Grassroots Leadership, also with lived experience in solitary. The panel will be moderated by UT LBJ/Law professor and PJIL Director Michele Deitch. The event is organized by the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the LBJ School of Public Affairs and is co-sponsored by the William Wayne Justice Center for Public Interest Law at the Law School. Please register for the event and help spread the word about it. Open to the Austin community.
For more information visit https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2024/10/07/79251/