We had an amazing time at today’s TLR Symposium: Competition/Regulation: Controlling Corporate Power in the Digital Economy. Our panel of antitrust experts spent the day discussing solutions-focused and public policy, regulation of tech platforms, algorithmic bias and much more.
Join Temple Law Review and antitrust experts across the country to discuss the importance of antitrust law, regulation, and administrative agencies in restoring competition. Learn more and register here: https://t.co/otOSmj2buo
In our upcoming issue, @dandrashu explores the worldwide change to remote work in a post COVID-19 world and the necessity for evidence-based examination of disability accommodations to evaluate what is feasible and reasonable. Read her upcoming article at the link in our bio!
"This will mean long hours at high intensity. Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade." Elon Musk, sent out a letter to Twitter's existing employees that they will need to work for long hours at high intensity to keep their jobs or take severance and leave.
Musk's new demand of his employees conflicts with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) which requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations to disabled employees. While Twitter's non-compliance with employment law is the most evident, it highlights a larger problem.
Terrific keynote by @Nanjala1 discussing the border crisis in the digital age.
The border is “the place where the state projects power,” she says and a “millstone around the necks of foreigners” w/ surveillance compounding and accelerating this crisis.
@TempleLaw@TempleiLIT
At @TempleLaw for the @TempleiLIT symposium on “Sovereign Identity Crisis: State, Self, and Collective in a Digital Age.”
I‘lol discuss my @TempleLawReview symposium piece on possible authoritarian abuses of collective data rights in post-communitarian data governance societies.
Temple Law’s Business Law magazine, Temple 10-Q, recently sat down with @KominskyRandy (LAW '79) to discuss his post-graduate experience with clerkships, working in-house, and leaving law for business.
Read a summary of the interview on the TLR Blog: https://t.co/3nXlvoitYr
“It’s just theater to pretend that if people knew that the federal government was paying for these syringes at the legal needle exchange, somehow that would be encouraging drug use," said @scottburrisphlr in this latest article in @rollcall
Read more: https://t.co/PWSbHlIDZD
Great to be together again with @TempleLawReview for our symposium on reimagining the criminal legal system to support #healthequity.
Missed the event? Never fear — all sessions are being recorded and we’ll share here ASAP!
Registration is now open for the upcoming symposium sponsored by CPHLR and @TempleLawReview. Explore the schedule and panelist information for this discussion about the current landscape of the criminal justice system.
Register now: https://t.co/7IR10N5GH0
Interested in health equality and the future of policing? Send your ideas for a workshop hosted by @TempleLawReview and @PHLR_Temple! Details are here: https://t.co/LR1eiJCGU3
Join us for a fascinating conversation!
📢 Call for Abstracts! 📢
We're hosting a symposium Nov 12 with the @TempleLaw Law Review focused on reimagining the criminal legal system in support of health equity. Abstracts are due July 15! #phlaw#LEPH
SUBMIT: https://t.co/6xzRIq9UNS
Here is the final Article from Volume 93, Issue 3: "The (De)mystification of Environmental Injustice: A Dramatistic Analysis of Law" by Jeff Todd. Available here: https://t.co/4rfIkiLW4Z