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Home > SPECIAL_COLLECTIONS > Living_Archive > Speakers

Who's Who: Elizabeth Battelle Clark Legal History Series Speakers

 

The Elizabeth Battelle Clark Legal History Series brings several distinguished historians of law to campus each year to lecture and talk with students and faculty.

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  • The People's Champ: Legal Aid from Slavery to Mass Incarceration or Renegade at Law: How Our Legal Industry Creates, Justifies, and Compounds Inequality by Shaun Ossei-Owusu

    The People's Champ: Legal Aid from Slavery to Mass Incarceration or Renegade at Law: How Our Legal Industry Creates, Justifies, and Compounds Inequality

    Shaun Ossei-Owusu, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

    November 18, 2024

  • On the Development of the Local Criminal Legal Systems in Puerto Rico & American Samoa by Emmanuel Hiram Arnaud

    On the Development of the Local Criminal Legal Systems in Puerto Rico & American Samoa

    Emmanuel Arnaud, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

    November 11, 2024

  • The Twelfth Amendment and the ERA by Stephen Sachs

    The Twelfth Amendment and the ERA

    Stephen Sachs, Harvard Law School

    November 4, 2024

  • The Unraveling: What Dobbs May Mean for Contraception, Liberty, and Constitutionalism by Martha Minow

    The Unraveling: What Dobbs May Mean for Contraception, Liberty, and Constitutionalism

    Martha Minow, Harvard Law School

    October 7, 2024

  • History and Authority: The Uses of History in Constitutional Interpretation by Jack Balkin

    History and Authority: The Uses of History in Constitutional Interpretation

    Jack Balkin, Yale Law School

    October 1, 2024

  • Legal Realignment by Richard Re

    Legal Realignment

    Richard Re, University of Virginia School of Law

    September 30, 2024

  • The New Consumer Law by Rory Van Loo

    The New Consumer Law

    Rory Van Loo, Boston University School of Law

    September 23, 2024

  • We the People: A History of the U.S. Constitution by Jill Lepore

    We the People: A History of the U.S. Constitution

    Jill Lepore, Harvard University

    September 19, 2024

  • Rahimi, the Second Amendment, Domestic Violence, and "Originalism" After Bruen by Reva Siegel

    Rahimi, the Second Amendment, Domestic Violence, and "Originalism" After Bruen

    Reva Siegel, Yale Law School

    April 16, 2024

    Photo Credit: Harold Shapiro

  • Federal War-Time Prosecutions Based on "Implied" Presidential Powers and "The Law of Nations" - Without Any Federal Statutes, 1790s by Matthew Boutros and Jed Shugerman

    Federal War-Time Prosecutions Based on "Implied" Presidential Powers and "The Law of Nations" - Without Any Federal Statutes, 1790s

    Matthew Boutros, Boston University School of Law, and

    Jed Shugerman, Boston University School of Law

    April 11, 2024

  • Historical Fact by Ryan Williams

    Historical Fact

    Ryan Williams, Boston College Law School

    April 4, 2024

  • Demand the Impossible: One Lawyer's Pursuit of Equal Justice for All by Robert L. Tsai and Stephen Bright

    Demand the Impossible: One Lawyer's Pursuit of Equal Justice for All

    Robert Tsai, Boston University School of Law, and

    Stephen Bright, Southern Center for Human Rights

    March 28, 2024

  • Haitian Revolution and French Translations of American Constitutions in the 1790s and/or A History of Campus Speech and Institutional Neutrality in the 1960s by Malick Ghachem

    Haitian Revolution and French Translations of American Constitutions in the 1790s and/or A History of Campus Speech and Institutional Neutrality in the 1960s

    Malick Ghachem, MIT History

    March 21, 2024

  • Vice Patrol: Cops, Courts, and the Struggle Over Urban Gay Life Before Stonewall by Anna Lvovsky

    Vice Patrol: Cops, Courts, and the Struggle Over Urban Gay Life Before Stonewall

    Anna Lvovsky, Harvard Law School

    March 7, 2024

  • Birthright Citizenship in the Empire: Chinese-Filipino Intimacies and Race-making in U.S. Colonial Philippines, 1912-1947 by Jilene Chua

    Birthright Citizenship in the Empire: Chinese-Filipino Intimacies and Race-making in U.S. Colonial Philippines, 1912-1947

    Jilene Chua, Boston University History Department

    February 29, 2024

  • The Constitutional Bind: How American Came to Idolize a Document That Fails Them by Aziz Rana

    The Constitutional Bind: How American Came to Idolize a Document That Fails Them

    Aziz Rana, Boston College Law School

    February 15, 2024

  • "Most Blessed of the Patriarchs": Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination by Peter Onuf

    "Most Blessed of the Patriarchs": Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination

    Peter Onuf, University of Virginia

    February 8, 2024

  • Building Presidential Administration by Noah A. Rosenblum

    Building Presidential Administration

    Noah Rosenblum, New York University School of Law

    February 1, 2024

  • The Nation at Sea: The Federal Courts and American Sovereignty, 1789-1825 by Kevin Arlyck

    The Nation at Sea: The Federal Courts and American Sovereignty, 1789-1825

    Kevin Arlyck, Georgetown Law

    January 18, 2024

    Photo Credit: Brent Futrell/Georgetown Law

  • Lien on Me: Property Tax Delinquency Laws and Urban Inequality by Andrew Kahrl

    Lien on Me: Property Tax Delinquency Laws and Urban Inequality

    Andrew Kahrl, University of Virginia

    April 23, 2018

  • The Long History of Insanity: Forgiveness and Defenses in New England to 1840 by Cornelia Dayton

    The Long History of Insanity: Forgiveness and Defenses in New England to 1840

    Cornelia Dayton, The Cocoran Department of History, University of Connecticut

    April 9, 2018

  • The Framer's Coup: The Making of the United States Constitution by Michael Klarman

    The Framer's Coup: The Making of the United States Constitution

    Michael Klarman, Harvard University School of Law

    March 26, 2018

  • The Emancipation and its Challenges in the South Carolina Sea Islands by Cynthia Nicolleti

    The Emancipation and its Challenges in the South Carolina Sea Islands

    Cynthia Nicolleti, University of Virginia School of Law

    March 12, 2018

  • Race, Disability and the Vote by Rabia Belt

    Race, Disability and the Vote

    Rabia Belt, Stanford University School of Law

    February 20, 2018

  • The Birth of the Business Corporation East and West: Eurasian Trade Institutions and their Migration 1400-1700 by Ron Harris

    The Birth of the Business Corporation East and West: Eurasian Trade Institutions and their Migration 1400-1700

    Ron Harris, The Buchmann Faculty of Law, Tel-Aviv University

    February 3, 2018

  • The Rise of Federal Title by Gregory Ablavsky

    The Rise of Federal Title

    Gregory Ablavsky, Stanford University Law School

    April 1, 2017

  • The Legal Revolution of Land Reform and the Changing Language of Property, 1820-1917 by Jo Guldi

    The Legal Revolution of Land Reform and the Changing Language of Property, 1820-1917

    Jo Guldi, Southern Methodist University, Dedham College of Humanities and Sciences

    March 2, 2017

    Photo Credit: Brown University

  • The Second Bill of Rights: A Reconsideration by Samuel Moyn

    The Second Bill of Rights: A Reconsideration

    Samuel Moyn, Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professor of Law and Professor of History, Harvard University

    February 16, 2017

  • The Emergence of a Notion of Sovereignty over Territory in Roman Public Law by Clifford Ando

    The Emergence of a Notion of Sovereignty over Territory in Roman Public Law

    Clifford Ando, David B. and Clara E. Stern Professor of Classics, History and Law, University of Chicago

    February 2, 2017

  •  by Amalia D. Kessler

    Amalia D. Kessler, Stanford University

    January 1, 2017

  •  by Nara Milanich

    Nara Milanich, Barnard College

    January 1, 2017

    Photo Credit: Barnard College

  • Owning Inventions (Chapter from <em>Owning Ideas: The Intellectual Origins of American Intellectual Property 1790-1909</em>) by Oren Bracha

    Owning Inventions (Chapter from Owning Ideas: The Intellectual Origins of American Intellectual Property 1790-1909)

    Oren Bracha, Howrey LLP and Arnold, White & Durkee Centennial Professor, University of Texas School of Law

    April 7, 2016

  • Administrative Constitutionalism at the Borders of Belonging by Karen Tani

    Administrative Constitutionalism at the Borders of Belonging

    Karen Tani, Assistant Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley, Boalt Hall School of Law

    March 24, 2016

  • "No Person May Go Armed": A Forgotten Chapter in the History of Gun Regulation by Saul Cornell

    "No Person May Go Armed": A Forgotten Chapter in the History of Gun Regulation

    Saul Cornell, Paul and Diane Guenther Chair in American History, Fordham University

    March 17, 2016

  • The Sporting Life: Democratic Culture and the Historical Origins of the Scottish Right to Roam by Gregory S. Alexander

    The Sporting Life: Democratic Culture and the Historical Origins of the Scottish Right to Roam

    Gregory Alexander, Professor of Law, Cornell Law School

    February 25, 2016

  • The Law of Nations in Global History: An Introduction to the Thought of Charles Henry Alexandrowicz (1902-75) by David Armitage and Jennifer Pitts

    The Law of Nations in Global History: An Introduction to the Thought of Charles Henry Alexandrowicz (1902-75)

    David Armitage, Lloyd C. Blankfein Professor of History, Harvard University, and Jennifer Pitts, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago

    February 11, 2016

    Photo Credit: © Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, University of Chicago

  • Chinese Eurasians: Mixed Families and Dependent Citizenship During the Era of Chinese Exclusion by Emma Teng

    Chinese Eurasians: Mixed Families and Dependent Citizenship During the Era of Chinese Exclusion

    Emma Teng, T.T. and Wei Fong Chao Professor of Asian Civilizations & MacVicar Faculty Fellow, MIT School of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences

    January 28, 2016

  • Presumption of Innocence / Presumption Against Punishment: Two Western Modes of Justice by James Q. Whitman

    Presumption of Innocence / Presumption Against Punishment: Two Western Modes of Justice

    James Q. Whitman, Ford Foundation Professor of Comparative and Foreign Law, Yale Law School

    November 19, 2014

  • Protection, the Imperial Constitution, and the British Global Order, 1790-1850 by Lauren A. Benton

    Protection, the Imperial Constitution, and the British Global Order, 1790-1850

    Lauren A. Benton, Professor of History and Silver Professor, New York University

    November 12, 2014

  • Defining Imperial Spaces: How South America became a Contested Territory by Tamar Herzog

    Defining Imperial Spaces: How South America became a Contested Territory

    Tamar Herzog, Monroe Gutman Professor of Latin American Affairs and Radcliffe Alumnae Professor, Harvard University

    October 29, 2014

  • Revulsions of Capital: The Political Law of Slavery in the Epoch of the Turner Rebellion, Virginia, 1829-1832 by Christopher L. Tomlins

    Revulsions of Capital: The Political Law of Slavery in the Epoch of the Turner Rebellion, Virginia, 1829-1832

    Christopher L. Tomlins, Professor of Law, University of California, Boalt Hall School of Law

    October 15, 2014

  • The Personnel Power by Joshua Chafetz

    The Personnel Power

    Joshua Chafetz, Professor of Law, Cornell University School of Law

    October 1, 2014

  • The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution by William E. Forbath

    The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution

    William E. Forbath, Lloyd M. Bentsen Chair in Law, University of Texas, Austin School of Law

    September 26, 2014

  • <em>National League of Cities v. Usery</em> and the Return of Constitutional Federalism by Logan E. Sawyer III

    National League of Cities v. Usery and the Return of Constitutional Federalism

    Logan E. Sawyer III, Assistant Professor, University of Georgia School of Law

    December 20, 2012

  • Adultery and the Law in Fifteenth Century France by Sara McDougall

    Adultery and the Law in Fifteenth Century France

    Sara McDougall, John Jay College, CUNY, History Department

    November 14, 2012

  •  by Ariela Gross

    Ariela Gross, University of Southern California Gould School of Law

    September 19, 2012

  • Jews, Law, and Identity Politics by William Forbath

    Jews, Law, and Identity Politics

    William Forbath, The University of Texas at Austin School of Law

    January 1, 2012

  • History of Environmental Law and Politics by Jebediah Purdy

    History of Environmental Law and Politics

    Jebediah Purdy, Duke Law School

    January 1, 2012

    Photo Credit: Photo: Columbia Law School

  • The Creation of the Department of Justice: Professionalization without Civil Rights or Civil Service by Jed Shugerman

    The Creation of the Department of Justice: Professionalization without Civil Rights or Civil Service

    Jed Shugerman, Fordham University School of Law

    January 1, 2012

    Photo Credit: Fordham Law School

  • Reproductive Medicine in the Legal Shadows: Artificial Insemination, 1890-1945 by Kara Swanson

    Reproductive Medicine in the Legal Shadows: Artificial Insemination, 1890-1945

    Kara Swanson, Northeastern University Law School

    November 30, 2011

  • Birth, Belief, and Blood: Allegiance during the American Civil War by Michael Vorenberg

    Birth, Belief, and Blood: Allegiance during the American Civil War

    Michael Vorenberg, Brown University, History Department

    November 16, 2011

    Photo Credit: Brown University

  • The Baseball Trust: Baseball's First Antitrust Crisis, 1912-1916 by Stuart Banner

    The Baseball Trust: Baseball's First Antitrust Crisis, 1912-1916

    Stuart Banner, UCLA School of Law

    October 28, 2011

  • The Last Days of the Warren Court by Laura Kalman

    The Last Days of the Warren Court

    Laura Kalman, University of California Santa Barbara History Department

    October 12, 2011

  • Exits: Forming International Rules on Expatriation by Lucy Salyer

    Exits: Forming International Rules on Expatriation

    Lucy Salyer, University of New Hampshire, History Department

    September 28, 2011

    Photo Credit: copyright University of New Hampshire

  • Can "Necessitous Men" Ever be Free? Exigency, Security, and the American Political Constitution by Thomas P. Crocker

    Can "Necessitous Men" Ever be Free? Exigency, Security, and the American Political Constitution

    Thomas P. Crocker, University of South Carolina Law School; Visiting Fellow at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2010-11)

    November 17, 2010

  • The Bomb-Proof Power by Michele Landis Dauber

    The Bomb-Proof Power

    Michele Landis Dauber, Stanford Law School

    October 27, 2010

  • Recasting the Canon of Family Law by Jill Hasday

    Recasting the Canon of Family Law

    Jill Hasday, University of Minnesota Law School

    October 20, 2010

    Photo Credit: Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Law School

  • Selections from <em>The People's Courts: The Rise of Judicial Elections and Judicial Power in America</em> by Jed Shugerman

    Selections from The People's Courts: The Rise of Judicial Elections and Judicial Power in America

    Jed Shugerman, Harvard Law School

    October 6, 2010

    Photo Credit: Fordham Law School

  • The Enclosure of Justice: Courtroom Architecture, Due Process, and the Dead Metaphor of Trial by Norman Spaulding

    The Enclosure of Justice: Courtroom Architecture, Due Process, and the Dead Metaphor of Trial

    Norman Spaulding, Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law, Stanford Law School

    September 22, 2010

  • The Mind in Issue: Consciousness and Liability in the Nineteenth-Century American Courtroom by Susanna Blumenthal

    The Mind in Issue: Consciousness and Liability in the Nineteenth-Century American Courtroom

    Susanna Blumenthal, University of Minnesota School of Law

    November 18, 2009

    Photo Credit: Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Law School

  • Sexing <em>Skinner</em> by Ariela Dubler

    Sexing Skinner

    Ariela Dubler, Columbia Law School

    November 4, 2009

  • Melville W. Bigelow: The Origins of Historical Legal Science in America by David Rabban

    Melville W. Bigelow: The Origins of Historical Legal Science in America

    David Rabban, University of Texas School of Law

    October 16, 2009

  • Universal International Law: Nineteenth Century Histories of Imposition, Appropriation, and Circulation by Arnulf Becker Lorca

    Universal International Law: Nineteenth Century Histories of Imposition, Appropriation, and Circulation

    Arnulf Becker Lorca, Visiting Fellow, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University

    October 7, 2009

  • "The Great Constitutional Question": Judicial Review and the Origins of an Independent Judiciary in Virginia by Scott Gerber

    "The Great Constitutional Question": Judicial Review and the Origins of an Independent Judiciary in Virginia

    Scott Gerber, Ella & Ernest Fisher Chair in Law, Ohio Northern University College of Law

    September 23, 2009

  • The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr: Law, Politics, and the Character Wars of the New Nation by R. Kent Newmyer

    The Treason Trial of Aaron Burr: Law, Politics, and the Character Wars of the New Nation

    R. Kent Newmyer, University of Connecticut Law School

    November 21, 2008

  • Understanding the End of Entail: Information, Institutions, and Slavery in the American Revolutionary Period by Claire Priest

    Understanding the End of Entail: Information, Institutions, and Slavery in the American Revolutionary Period

    Claire Priest, Northwestern Law School

    November 12, 2008

  • Staging <em>The Octoroon</em> in Reconstruction New Orleans by Diana Williams

    Staging The Octoroon in Reconstruction New Orleans

    Diana Williams, Wellesley College, History Department

    October 29, 2008

  • Becoming White in Washington, D.C.: The Passing of the Wall Family, 1870-1910 by Daniel Sharfstein

    Becoming White in Washington, D.C.: The Passing of the Wall Family, 1870-1910

    Daniel Sharfstein, Vanderbilt University School of Law

    October 15, 2008

  • Marriage, Immigration, and the Settlement of the West: The Case of the Mercer Girls by Kerry Abrams

    Marriage, Immigration, and the Settlement of the West: The Case of the Mercer Girls

    Kerry Abrams, University of Virginia School of Law

    October 8, 2008

  • Defoe and the Written Constitution by Bernadette Meyler

    Defoe and the Written Constitution

    Bernadette Meyler, Cornell Law School

    September 24, 2008

  •  by Sarah Barringer Gordon

    Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania School of Law

    April 24, 2008

  • Saving Our Kids: Child Protection in America by Michael Grossberg

    Saving Our Kids: Child Protection in America

    Michael Grossberg, Indiana University Department of History & School of Law

    April 14, 2008

  • The Pluralist Corporation by Dalia Tsuk Mitchell

    The Pluralist Corporation

    Dalia Tsuk Mitchell, George Washington University School of Law

    April 7, 2008

  • Constitutional Conservatism in the <em>National Review</em>, 1955-1964 by Ken I. Kersch

    Constitutional Conservatism in the National Review, 1955-1964

    Kenneth Kersch, Boston College, Political Science Department

    March 17, 2008

  • Hume on the Origins of Law by Aaron Garrett

    Hume on the Origins of Law

    Aaron Garrett, Boston University, Philosophy Department

    March 3, 2008

    Photo Credit: Freepik, licensed under CC BY 3.0

  • Administration and "The Democracy": Administrative Law from Jackson to Lincoln, 1829-1861 by Jerry Mashaw

    Administration and "The Democracy": Administrative Law from Jackson to Lincoln, 1829-1861

    Jerry Mashaw, Yale Law School

    February 25, 2008

  • The Twist of Long Terms: Disasters, Elected Judges, and American Tort Law by Jed Handelsman Shugerman

    The Twist of Long Terms: Disasters, Elected Judges, and American Tort Law

    Jed Handelsman Shugerman, Harvard Law School

    February 20, 2008

    Photo Credit: Fordham Law School

  • "Equality in Theory" or "Equality in Fact"? Reviving the Equal Rights Amendment in the Reagan Era by Serena Mayeri

    "Equality in Theory" or "Equality in Fact"? Reviving the Equal Rights Amendment in the Reagan Era

    Serena Mayeri, University of Pennsylvania School of Law

    April 1, 2007

  • Lawyers, Guns & Public Monies: The U.S. Treasury, World War I, and the Administration of the Modern Fiscal State by Ajay K. Mehrotra

    Lawyers, Guns & Public Monies: The U.S. Treasury, World War I, and the Administration of the Modern Fiscal State

    Ajay K. Mehrotra, Associate Professor of Law, Maurer School of Law, Indiana University -- Bloomington

    April 1, 2007

  • Objecting to the Wartime State: Conscientious Objectors and the Meanings of Citizenship in the United States, 1917-1918 by Christopher Capozzola

    Objecting to the Wartime State: Conscientious Objectors and the Meanings of Citizenship in the United States, 1917-1918

    Christopher Capozzola, Professor, MIT

    February 23, 2007

    Photo Credit: Allegra Boverman

  • Cows, Crops, Courts and Voters (Closing the Range, 1870 to 1900, and the Language of Property Rights) by Ellen D. Katz

    Cows, Crops, Courts and Voters (Closing the Range, 1870 to 1900, and the Language of Property Rights)

    Ellen D. Katz, University of Michigan

    April 7, 2006

  • BACKLASH! Political Backlash Against Supreme Court Decisions: <em>Brown</em> and <em>Lawrence</em> (and <em>Goodridge</em>) by Michael Klarman

    BACKLASH! Political Backlash Against Supreme Court Decisions: Brown and Lawrence (and Goodridge)

    Michael Klarman, James Monroe Distinguished Professor of Law and Professor of History, University of Virginia

    March 23, 2006

  • Contradictory Commitments to Gender Apartheid and Academic Merit: A Comparative Study of Harvard Law School and Boston University School of Law, 1870-1950 by Mary Elizabeth Basile

    Contradictory Commitments to Gender Apartheid and Academic Merit: A Comparative Study of Harvard Law School and Boston University School of Law, 1870-1950

    Mary Elizabeth Basile, Visiting Assistant Professor of Law, Boston University

    November 18, 2005

    Photo Credit: Lili Engelhardt Fine Art

  • "Righteous Fathers, Vulnerable Old Men and Degraded Creatures": Southern Justices on Miscegenation in the Antebellum Will Contest by Bernie D. Jones

    "Righteous Fathers, Vulnerable Old Men and Degraded Creatures": Southern Justices on Miscegenation in the Antebellum Will Contest

    Bernie D. Jones, University of Massachusetts - Amherst, Department of Legal Studies

    April 15, 2005

  • Collective Criminality, Sexual Deviance, and Constructing a National Criminal Law in Turkey by Ruth Miller

    Collective Criminality, Sexual Deviance, and Constructing a National Criminal Law in Turkey

    Ruth Miller, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Massachusetts, Boston

    March 18, 2005

    Photo Credit: Mount Holyoke: Image courtesy of Ruth Miller '97

  • Victorian Tort Liability for Workplace Injuries: The Judges versus the Wounded Soldiers of Industry by Michael Stein

    Victorian Tort Liability for Workplace Injuries: The Judges versus the Wounded Soldiers of Industry

    Michael Stein, William and Mary College of Law; Human Rights Fellow, Harvard Law School

    November 19, 2004

  • The Limits of Sovereignty: Legislative Confiscation in the Union and Confederacy by Daniel W. Hamilton

    The Limits of Sovereignty: Legislative Confiscation in the Union and Confederacy

    Daniel W. Hamilton, Professor of Law, Chicago-Kent College of Law

    October 22, 2004

  • The Variegated Life of the Self-Informing Jury by James C. Oldham

    The Variegated Life of the Self-Informing Jury

    James C. Oldham, St. Thomas More Professor of Law and Legal History, Georgetown University Law Center

    September 24, 2004

    Photo Credit: Georgetown Law

  • Corporate Personality Discourse at the Turn of the 20th Century: Germanic Clans, British Trade Unions, and American Big Business by Ron Harris

    Corporate Personality Discourse at the Turn of the 20th Century: Germanic Clans, British Trade Unions, and American Big Business

    Ron Harris, Tel Aviv University; Visiting Professor of Law, Boalt Hall

    April 8, 2004

  • Law and the Modern Mind: The Problems of Consciousness in American Legal Culture, 1800-1930 by Susanna Blumenthal

    Law and the Modern Mind: The Problems of Consciousness in American Legal Culture, 1800-1930

    Susanna Blumenthal, Professor of Law, University of Michigan

    March 18, 2004

    Photo Credit: Courtesy of the University of Minnesota Law School

  • Face to Face: Rediscovering the Right to Confront Prosecution Witnesses by Richard Friedman

    Face to Face: Rediscovering the Right to Confront Prosecution Witnesses

    Richard Friedman, Ralph W. Aigler Professor of Law, University of Michigan

    October 17, 2003

  • Adventures in Legal History by Sir John Baker

    Adventures in Legal History

    Sir John Baker, Downing Professor of the Laws of England, University of Cambridge

    September 26, 2003

  • The Many Laws of the Market: The Contrasting Constitutions of Capitalism and Early American Localism by Christine Desan

    The Many Laws of the Market: The Contrasting Constitutions of Capitalism and Early American Localism

    Christine Desan, Professor of Law, Harvard University

    March 28, 2003

  • The Passion of William Werner by John Fabian Witt

    The Passion of William Werner

    John Fabian Witt, Associate Professor of Law, Columbia University

    February 28, 2003

  • The Duke and the Lady: <em>Helvering v. Gregory</em> and the History of Tax Avoidance Adjudication by Assaf Likhovski

    The Duke and the Lady: Helvering v. Gregory and the History of Tax Avoidance Adjudication

    Assaf Likhovski, Senior Lecturer, Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law

    January 24, 2003

  • As the Alligator Knows: Trials of Racial Identity in America by Ariela Gross

    As the Alligator Knows: Trials of Racial Identity in America

    Ariela Gross, Professor of Law and History, University of Southern California

    April 19, 2002

  • The Construction of Constitutional Regimes by Keith Whittington

    The Construction of Constitutional Regimes

    Keith Whittington, Professor of Politics, Princeton University

    April 5, 2002

  • Mormon Polygamy and Legal Change by Sarah Barringer Gordon

    Mormon Polygamy and Legal Change

    Sarah Barringer Gordon, Professor of Law and History, University of Pennsylvania

    March 15, 2002

  • "The Fall, Without a Whimper, of an Empire": <em>Loving v. Virginia</em> and the Politics of Race and Sex in America by Jane Dailey

    "The Fall, Without a Whimper, of an Empire": Loving v. Virginia and the Politics of Race and Sex in America

    Jane Dailey, Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University

    November 13, 2001

  • The Culture of Violence, the Discourse of English Colonizing, and the Refusals of American History by Christopher Tomlins

    The Culture of Violence, the Discourse of English Colonizing, and the Refusals of American History

    Christopher Tomlins, American Bar Foundation

    April 6, 2001

 
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