Professor Renee Nicole Allen was a virtual panelist at the University of California, Irvine School of Law's second annual Dress to Transgress, an event where law students are encouraged to dress as they would if the concept of "professionalism" fully embraced their identities and communities. She presented her article, Contextualizing the Triggering Event: Colonial White Supremacy, Anti-Blackness, and Black Lives Matter in Italy and the United States, at Temple University Beasley School of Law's faculty colloquium and as part of the Marshall M. Criser Distinguished Faculty Workshop at the University of Florida Levin College of Law. Professor Allen was also an invited panelist at a virtual program on scholarship and self-promotion at Suffolk University School of Law
Congratulations to Professor Robin Boyle, who is joining the International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA) Studies Board of Directors. Her essay, "Human Trafficking, Cults, & Coercion: The Use of Drugs as a Tool," appears in the peer-reviewed International Journal of Coercion, Abuse, & Manipulation. It summarizes Professor Boyle's online presentation at ICSA's 2022 annual conference.
Professor Ned Cavanagh spoke at the American Bar Association Antitrust Section's Annual Spring Meeting in Washington, D.C. on Single Firm Conduct Under Section 2 of the Sherman Act. He also participated in a panel discussion on the Future of Baseball's Antitrust Exemption, sponsored by the New York City Bar Association and its Sports and Entertainment Law Committees.
For your next run, walk, or commute: What does it mean to have a religiously diverse workplace in 21st century America? Professors Marc DeGirolami and Mark Movsesian weigh in as they co-host the latest episode of their Legal Spirits podcast.
Professor Mark C. Niles is publishing his article, "Deliberate Indifference: Respondeat Superior Liability for Municipalities in Civil Rights Cases as an Alternative to Qualified Immunity Reform," in the N.Y.U. Journal of Legislation & Public Policy.
Professor Rosemary Salomone was quoted extensively in a University World News story about the rapid expansion of China's language and cultural centers—known as Confucius Institutes—in Africa.
Professor Eva Subotnik's newest article, "Copyright’s Capacity Gap," will appear in the U.C. Davis Law Review. Co-authored with Willamette University College of Law Professor Andrew Gilden, the paper considers the broader copyright law implications of the Britney Spears conservatorship and ways the law might better protect vulnerable creators. The paper was also accepted for the upcoming Eighth Copyright Scholarship Roundtable hosted by University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, and for the Fourth Annual Art Law Works-in-Progress Colloquium hosted by New England Law.