The Rodino Center offers research and technology services for the @SetonHallLaw community. Home to SHLS's Library, IT Department, and The Rodino Archive.
What we do with this account:
-Notices about the Rodino Center IT and Library services
-Highlight cool and useful research tools
-Highlight Faculty Scholarship
-Highlight Seton Hall Law School happenings and events
-Retweet interesting legal history facts and dates
Thanks again to my guest Elkan Abramowitz for joining me to discuss "12 Angry Men" on @LawOnFilm podcast, and for sharing his insights into how the jury system in the U.S. has--and hasn't--changed in the decades since this classic courtroom drama was made.
https://t.co/8zja2eOxWV
Very true! That is why in our new @NEJM article, @DrZackaryBerger & I explain to physicians the importance of keeping in mind biases re #LongCovid & other less visible disabilities + how to help long Covid patients receive accommodations in the workplace➡️ https://t.co/pGScWXkQ3o
Thrilled to have @kevinjonheller join me to talk about the classic film “Judgment at Nuremberg” and international criminal law on the latest episode of @LawOnFilm podcast. The episode is now up here:
https://t.co/hNkZGtovYE
Stanley Kramer's classic 1961 film, "Judgment at Nuremberg,” grapples with the enduring tension between individual and collective guilt in war crimes prosecutions. @kevinjonheller and I break this down in @LawOnFilm podcast (minute marker 16:21)
https://t.co/hNkZGtnY96
When "Judgment at Nuremberg" first aired on TV in 1965, ABC interrupted the broadcast to show footage of the beating of civil rights marchers in Selma. Juxtaposing Holocaust images and Jim Crow segregation boosted support for voting rights.
For more: https://t.co/hNkZGtnY96
[FACULTY PUBLICATION] Prof. Stephen Lubben, "We Got the Kingdom, We Got the Key: Corporate Bankruptcy and Cryptocurrency, published Stanford Journal of Blockchain Law & Policy, June 25, 2023 https://t.co/hVx1CL70Oq
Fantastic article by @robertiafolla via @bloomberglaw suggesting a crack in a years long trend: more courts approve remote work as an accommodation. With insights from @nicolebporter @ArleneKanter @weparmet @dandrashu Bob Dinerstein & myself. #CripTheVote https://t.co/kKqU3E5D2E
An honor to present today on the challenges and opportunities for international criminal law posed by Ukraine at #ANZSIL2023 conference in Wellington, NZ @ANZSIL
Thanks to my co-panelists, Daley Brickett & Melody Yang, and our panel chair, @MarnieLloydd
Wonderful to join my co-panelists today @ICON__S for a comparative discussion of reproductive rights in New Zealand, Japan, Taiwan, Canada, and the U.S. #iconswellington
My interview with Nora Young on CBC (Canadian Public Radio) and the article featuring it are now out. We talked about “Unwired:” how despite our best intentions we cannot put our phones down, and what can be done about it. @CambridgeUP@SetonHallLaw
https://t.co/2iqcUfRn1z
We've released thousands of BRAND NEW pages from the @LawLibCongress collection of historical legal reports for transcription today!⚖️
Select "Needs Review" or "Not Started" to transcribe these new reports 📝: https://t.co/2EJed206EG
Click to read Professor Ilya Beylin's article on ESG-linked swaps and the new governance school of regulatory scholarship. Learn how incorporating environmental, social, and governance factors can impact financial instruments and regulatory policies. https://t.co/c0QeRV7Sl7
There is no good reason to restrict households to the nuclear family—yet laws across the U.S. still do exactly that, @michaelwwaters writes: https://t.co/sG9D4UF6X8
Thanks again to Professor Solangel Maldonado for joining me on @LawOnFilm podcast for a deep dive into family law via “Kramer v. Kramer”& “Marriage Story”
https://t.co/RJJwnwHK08
Next week, legendary defense attorney Elkan Abramowitz joins to talk about “12 Angry Men”
Help make #RevWarVets pensions easier to find and read!
Join @USNatArchives and @NatlParkService on a special project to transcribe Revolutionary War Pension Files.
https://t.co/0ICKFgwDY8