Apply to become a Clinton Global Initiative University volunteer
Beginning Jan. 16, students can apply to be a volunteer during the Clinton Global Initiative University (CGI U), to be held at Washington University in St. Louis April 5-7, 2013. Volunteer roles include: serving as on-campus hosts and ushers, assisting with the production and logistics of the event,
helping CGI staff with press and media, and supporting CGI’s program
staff. Students with skills in photography, video, and social
media are encouraged to apply. In addition to working Friday and
Saturday, volunteers are required to attend two evening training
sessions April 1 and 4.
Who pays? The wage-insurance trade-off and corporate religious freedom claims
Corporations’ religious freedom claims against the
Affordable Care Act’s contraception coverage mandate miss a “basic fact
of health economics: health insurance, like wages, is compensation that
belongs to the employee,” says Elizabeth Sepper, JD, health law expert
and associate professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis.
Sepper’s scholarship explores the interaction of morality, professional
ethics, and law in medicine.
“A View From the Federal Circuit: A Conversation With Chief Judge Randall R. Rader” Jan. 18
The Hon. Randall R. Rader, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, will present “A View From the Federal Circuit: A Conversation With Chief Judge Randall R.
Rader,” including a panel discussion with members of local bar associations, from
3-4:15 p.m. Friday, Jan.18. The event will be in the Bryan Cave Moot Courtroom (Anheuser-Busch Hall, Room 310); a reception will follow in the Janite Lee Reading Room. To RSVP for the event, visit http://law.wustl.edu/faculty/forms/rsvpform.asp?BookingID=234714.
Privacy law expert comments on Bork’s legacy
Robert Bork was a major figure in the history of
American law, and of the Supreme Court, says Neil Richards, JD,
professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis and former law
clerk for Supreme Court Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist. “There is a great irony to Bork’s death this week, a
day after the House of Representatives voted to relax the privacy
protections in the so-called “Bork Bill,” the federal law that protects
the privacy of our video records.”
New consortium of leading universities will move forward with transformative, for-credit online education program
Today, a group of the nation’s leading universities announced plans to launch a new, innovative program that transforms the model of online education. The new online education program, Semester Online, will be the first of its kind to offer undergraduate students the opportunity to take rigorous, online courses for credit from a consortium of universities. The program is delivered through a virtual classroom environment and interactive platform developed by 2U, formerly known as 2tor.
WUSTL leads effort to launch transformative Semester Online program
Washington University in St. Louis has taken a
leadership role in helping to shape the future of online education by
being a catalyst to bring together a consortium of the nation’s leading
colleges and universities that plans to launch Semester Online.
This program is a transformative new model for online education,
offering undergraduate students the opportunity to take rigorous, online
courses for credit from consortium schools.
Social media auto-overshare to meet its demise in 2013, says privacy law expert
Everyone knows someone who overshares on social media,
from constant updates about daily minutiae to an automatically generated
stream of songs listened to, articles read, games played and other matters blast-broadcast through various applications. Intentional
over-sharers may be a necessary nuisance in our wired world, but the
days of the auto-generated social media stream may be numbered, says
Neil Richards, JD, privacy law expert and professor of law at Washington
University in St. Louis.
Pressure mounting to add women to U.S corporate boards
Despite evidence supporting boardroom diversity as a driver of corporate performance, “the percentage of women directors on U.S. boards stagnated some years ago and remains at or near 12 percent, with fewer than 10 percent of boards having three or more women,” says Hillary A. Sale, JD, the Walter D. Coles professor of law at Washington University School of Law. “The pressure to add women directors is, however, growing.” Sale discusses options to grow board diversity.
Celebrating 50 years of teaching
The WUSTL community recently honored David M. Becker, JD, associate dean for external relations and the Joseph H. Zumbalen Professor Emeritus of the Law of Property, on his 50th year of teaching at the School of Law.
Religious holiday displays – three wise men and a heap of legal troubles
The upcoming holiday season brings with it the
annual gaze upon religious displays — and the legal issues that come
with them. “The Supreme Court’s approach to public religious displays
under the Establishment Clause has been less than clear,” says John
Inazu, JD, expert on religion and the constitution and professor of law
at Washington University in St. Louis.“Some commentators have
described it as the ‘three plastic animals rule’ –a Christian nativity
scene on public property passes muster if it is accompanied by a
sufficient combination of Rudolph, Frosty, and their friends.” Inazu
says that future litigation will likely press against this
line-drawing, but even apparent victories for religious liberty may come
at a significant cost.
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