Events Calendar

Now viewing: February 8–14, 2026

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8 February 9
  1. 11:30am 2026-02-09T13:15-06:00
    Job Talk

    Note: This event’s full details are restricted to Texas Law faculty and staff members only.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/09/85440/

  2. 11:50am 2026-02-09T12:50-06:00
    Becoming a Pro-Life Legal Advocate

    Kevin Theriot, Senior Counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom, will discuss his work defending pro-life speech, conscience protections for medical professionals, and religious liberty. Drawing on Supreme Court litigation including NIFLA v. Becerra and Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, Theriot will examine how attorneys can engage in pro-life advocacy while navigating professional, ethical, and constitutional challenges. Lunch will be provided. The event will also be offered virtually.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/09/86423/

  3. 11:50am 2026-02-09T12:50-06:00
    Navigating Public Interest Applications

    Join CHLLSA for lunch and a panel on how to navigate Public Interest applications.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/09/86424/

  4. 3:45pm 2026-02-09T17:45-06:00
    Law & Economics Workshop: Daniel Hemel

    Law & Economics Workshop: Daniel Hemel, New York University School of Law

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/09/85857/

February 10
  1. 11:30am 2026-02-10T13:15-06:00
    Journal Fair 2026

    1Ls and 2Ls interested in participating in the Write-On Competition in May are encouraged to visit the Journal Fair to learn more about the various student-run publications at Texas Law. Each journal will have representatives tabling during the lunch hour. Come say hi!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/10/86597/

  2. 11:50am 2026-02-10T12:50-06:00
    Bowden Fellows Series: Mark Storslee

    Government Religious Speech, the Ten Commandments, and the Establishment Clause

    Recently, several states have passed laws requiring display of the Ten Commandments in public-school classrooms. Professor Mark Storslee (UNC-Chapel Hill Law) will explore the debate over these laws, their similarities and differences, and what the puzzle might tell us about the meaning of the Establishment Clause and the Supreme Court’s evolving Religion Clause jurisprudence.

    Lunch will be served. Please RSVP. We hope you join us!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/10/82823/

February 11
  1. 8:00am 2026-02-11T09:00-06:00
    TLVA Weekly Wednesday Coffees

    Join The Law Veterans Association for coffee and conversation every Wednesday from January 14 to April 22 in the Tom Clark Lounge. A great way to connect with fellow veterans, build community, and start your day with good company and caffeine. All Texas Law veteran students, alumni, and friends welcome.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/85261/

  2. 8:30am 2026-02-11T10:30-06:00
    With Love, From SAO & SBA

    Stop by the Atrium for Creature Coffee and a muffin!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86276/

  3. 11:50am 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    GRITS Planning Meeting

    GRITS is a student-run, public interest law conference that focuses on the difficulties and constraints inherent to social justice work in the South, and the unique strategies that legal practitioners and other public interest workers have developed to meet those needs. The conference emphasizes innovative, progressive, and even radical approaches to building community among students, practitioners, and community activists in the South to bring about social change. The conference is an opportunity for law students, lawyers, and activists to build coalitions, share strategies for progressive lawyering, and develop new approaches for the future. Please join us for a brainstorming and planning session! Come with ideas or just to hear others—all that's required is a desire to move the law forward in a progressive manner. This meeting will take place in TNH 3.125 from 11:50 to 12:50.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/85909/

  4. 11:50am 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    TIPLJ/IPLS: Perkins Coie Lunch Panel

    Join Perkins Coie IP Litigation Partner Janice Ta for a lunch and learn on intellectual property practice!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86058/

  5. 11:50am 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    Law Outside of Big Law Panel

    Join APALSA for a panel with Lee Roy Calderon (UT System), Natasha Malik (Texas Appleseed), and Drew Harris (Office of the Attorney General). Lunch will be provided.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86176/

  6. 11:50am 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    Mandatory Write-On Info Session #1

    1Ls and 2Ls interested in participating in Texas Law Review's Multi-Journal Write-On Competition are invited to attend this info session. Attendance at an info session is mandatory to enroll in the Write-On process, which takes place after finals and qualifies you for consideration by all Texas Law journals. The info sessions are scheduled for February 11 and 17.

    Members of the Texas Law Review will answer questions and discuss their experiences with the Write-On Competition and TLR. Lunch will be provided.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86598/

  7. 11:50am 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    Alternative Curriculum Civ Pro

    Civil procedure is often framed as a neutral system of rules governing access to the courts. But to what extent is it truly class or race-neutral? Join Professor Dickerson and LS4BL for an alternative curriculum discussion examining the relationship between civil procedure, race, class, and power. The conversation will explore how procedural doctrines shape access to justice and how due process protections have been threatened in majority-Black communities.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86656/

  8. 12:00pm 2026-02-11T12:50-06:00
    Catholic Law Student Society Meeting

    Weekly meeting for the Catholic Law Student Society (CLSS). Events include prayer, discussions, Bible studies, and social gatherings.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86122/

  9. 3:45pm 2026-02-11T17:30-06:00
    Workshop in Business Law: Eric Talley

    Eric Talley presenting an original paper in the Business Law Seminar.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/11/86496/

February 12
  1. 9:00am 2026-02-12T17:00-06:00
    Public Service Career Fair

    Hosted annually by the Texas Law CSO, the Public Service Career Fair (PSCF) is the largest public sector recruitment program available to 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, domestic and foreign-trained LL.M.s, and recent graduates (up to one year after graduation) from participating law schools in Texas. PSCF provides both public interest and government employers the opportunity to conduct interviews for paid and unpaid summer and/or part-time internships, as well as postgraduate positions. This two-day career fair features an interview program, an informational webinar, an in-person table networking event, and concludes with an in-person happy hour.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/85599/

  2. 11:50am 2026-02-12T00:00-06:00
    Book Talk: Rebouché and Roseman

    Join us for a book talk with Rachel Rebouché and Mindy Jane Roseman, editors of "Accessing Abortion: Global and Comparative Perspectives."

    Mindy Jane Roseman is the Director of International Law Programs and Director of the Gruber Program for Global Justice and Women’s Rights at Yale Law School. Rachel Rebouché is the G. Rollie White Chair in Law and a Professor of Law, and the faculty lead of the Sissy Farenthold Reproductive Justice Defense Project at Texas Law’s Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/86178/

  3. 11:50am 2026-02-12T12:50-06:00
    TIPLJ/IPLS: Midsized IP Firm Panel

    Join TIPLJ for a discussion with three midsized IP firms to discuss practice beyond biglaw!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/86536/

  4. 11:50am 2026-02-12T12:50-06:00
    The Law of Equal Dealing

    ACS hosts Professor Erik Encarnacion for a talk on antidiscrimination in contract law.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/86678/

  5. 11:50am 2026-02-12T12:50-06:00
    Should Immigration Stops use Ethnicity?

    Texas Federalist Society is hosting a debate on whether it is proper for law enforcement authorities to use ethnicity when making immigration stops. We will host James Rogers from America First Legal and Professor Maria Ponomarenko from the University of Texas School of Law to discuss this issue. Chick-fil-a will be provided!

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/86720/

  6. 12:00pm 2026-02-12T12:50-06:00
    Public Service Loan Forgiveness

    Register online. As part of the Public Service Career Fair, you are invited to attend this practical and engaging presentation featuring attorney and advocate Heather Jarvis and covering: All the latest student loan updates Public Service Loan Forgiveness from A to Z; expert tips for navigating the student loan system; and a Q&A. Sponsored by Career Services and the William Wayne Justice Center for Public Interest Law.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/12/86817/

February 13
  1. 8:15am 2026-02-13T16:00-06:00
    Eurasia Policy Forum

    The Strauss Center, in partnership with the University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Law and Democracy, Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, and Clements Center for National Security, will host the “Eurasia Policy Forum: Contemporary Political Myth and Reality in Eurasia” on February 13, 2026 at the LBJ School of Public Affairs’ Bass Lecture Hall.

    Eurasian states face mounting challenges amid growing polarization, gaps between social needs and political responses, and disinformation blurring myth and reality. Further, Eurasian states face additional pressures from a legacy of authoritarian rule, active conflict and irredentism, and political mobilization of social divisions across the region. Yet Eurasian countries also have unique strengths in navigating these challenges, with strong national identities, robust civic engagement, bursts of democratic progress, and deep cultural traditions.

    The conference explores the complicated social and political myths and realities shaping the contemporary Eurasian region, as they are poised to either discourage democratic progress or inspire civil society to action. Academic disciplines have each made progress in understanding the complex dynamics in their area of social, political, legal, or cultural study, yet these lessons are often stove-piped. Meanwhile, states—and students training to work in those states—must grapple with the intersection of challenges across all of these areas. This conference tackles this by bridging disciplines, bridging academic and policy spheres, and bridging policy and cultural studies to critically examine these pressing issues in Eurasia. Panels will be designed to foster discussion among experts from cultural studies, history, law, linguistics, policymaking, political science, sociology, and other fields.

    The conference will be deeply interdisciplinary, fostering creative engagement on a diverse range of critical topics from state-building and democratic backsliding to construction of national heroes and majority-minority identities to technology’s role in the spread of these narratives.

    Conference co-hosts include the Center for European Studies, the Center for Law and Democracy, the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies, the Center for Women’s and Gender Studies, the Clements Center for National Security, the Department of Communication Studies, the Department of Government, the Department of Religious Studies, the Program in Comparative Literature, the Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice, and the Strauss Center for International Security and Law.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/13/85981/

  2. 9:00am 2026-02-13T17:00-06:00
    Public Service Career Fair

    Hosted annually by the Texas Law CSO, the Public Service Career Fair (PSCF) is the largest public sector recruitment program available to 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, domestic and foreign-trained LL.M.s, and recent graduates (up to one year after graduation) from participating law schools in Texas. PSCF provides both public interest and government employers the opportunity to conduct interviews for paid and unpaid summer and/or part-time internships, as well as postgraduate positions. This two-day career fair features an interview program, an informational webinar, an in-person table networking event, and concludes with an in-person happy hour.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/13/85600/

  3. 11:15am 2026-02-13T12:15-06:00
    Public Service Table Talk

    Representatives from dozens of public interest organizations and government agencies will be on hand to answer questions about what they do. Find out about volunteer opportunities, summer internships, and paid positions with a variety of nonprofits, legal services providers, and government agencies. All Texas Law students are encouraged to attend.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/13/86818/

  4. 4:30pm 2026-02-13T18:00-06:00
    Public Service Happy Hour

    Public service employers and public service students are invited to take part in a happy hour as part of this year's Public Service Career Fair which will provide an opportunity for employers and students to mingle in a casual setting.

    Full event information: https://law.utexas.edu/calendar/2026/02/13/86819/

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