@PaceLawReview's Symposium, "Bioethics After Dobbs," is less than a month away, featuring @CohenProf speaking on "The Alabama Embryo Decision in Ethics, Law, and Politics," and an incredible lineup of panelists from across the country!
Register here:
https://t.co/o7w2RLAQpa
Also in Issue 2 is Pace Law professor, @egwaldman's piece "Just Extracurriculars?" In this article Prof. Waldman uses two recent SCOTUS cases to explore questions at the intersection of students' constitutional rights and extracurricular activities.
https://t.co/fNJn5IS8s5
@joshchafetz I think it really depends on the specifics. We had an annual clerk brunch at a restaurant (organized by the current clerks) and everyone paid for themselves by venmo’ing one of the current clerks. I would’ve never expected the judge to pay that whole cost every year.
Prof.@egwaldman and @ProfBCrawford have published an essay called “Menstruation in a Post-Dobbs World” in @nyulawreview Online, exploring converging perspectives on the inherent dignity and autonomy interests in being able to manage one’s own body. READ: https://t.co/ldbTNnchCg
In a new essay, @egwaldman & @ProfBCrawford respond to commentary on their 2022 book, Menstruation Matters. Incorporating these new perspectives, they make the case that post-Dobbs, focusing on the intersection of law & menstruation matters more than ever. https://t.co/rtQDKeej2Z
@ProfJErickson Got it! I haven’t felt that way because that was my name throughout law school (& college). So to me, the diplomas reflect those portions of my life. But maybe it also feels less jarring for me bc I still use the “Gold” as part of my professional name.
I’m thrilled that my new article, “Just Extracurriculars?” will be published in @MinnesotaLawRev! I argue that minimizing extracurricular activities as “just” extracurriculars leads to unjust results, esp for students’ constitutional rights. https://t.co/mmv2GVuzkM
“Responding to the notion that menstruation is a private matter, Crawford [@ProfBCrawford] and Waldman [@egwaldman] explore the burgeoning menstrual advocacy movement and consider how law should evolve to take menstruation into account.”
-@LSI_Journal
https://t.co/47Qf48pM61
@GreerDonley Totally agree. I think it’s totally understandable that many people prefer to remain private about these things, but I also think the lack of public discussion about them has kept others from realizing what’s at stake.
@taffyakner Loved the book and show. Question: the Adam/Libby marriage seems in much worse shape (and he seems much angrier at her) on the show than in the book. Was that intentional or did you envision it being equally rocky in the book?