Announcing Washington University’s Spring 2014 Assembly Series
The Washington University in St. Louis Assembly Series turned 60 in 2013, and to mark such an august occasion, it’s fitting to remember why the lecture series was conceived in the first place. The Assembly Series launched during the institution’s centennial celebration in 1953 as a way to involve the broader St. Louis community in the robust intellectual life on campus.
Sixty years of the Assembly Series: spring 2014 schedule released
The WUSTL Assembly Series turned 60 in 2013, and to mark the anniversary, we revisit why the lecture series was conceived in the first place. The Assembly Series launched during the institution’s centennial celebration in 1953 as a way to involve the broader St. Louis community in the robust intellectual life on campus.
WUSTL privacy law expert says Obama’s surveillance reforms a good but incomplete start
3.5 out of 12 — That is the score the Electronic Frontier Foundation gave President Obama’s highly anticipated address on NSA spying last week. And while lauding Obama for recognizing the dangers of government surveillance and the importance of discussing it, Washington University in St. Louis privacy law expert Neil Richards agrees that the president did not quite go far enough to protect individual privacy.
Norwood to lead panel discussion of her book, ‘Color Matters,’ Jan. 29 (NEW TIME)
Kim Norwood, JD, professor of law and of African and African-American Studies, in Arts & Sciences, will lead a panel discussion of her new book, “Color Matters: Skin Tone Bias and the Myth of a Postracial America,” at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 29, in Olin Library’s Gingko Room. Joining Norwood will be two contributors to the book, Vetta S. Thompson, PhD, an associate professor in the Brown School, and Richard Harvey, PhD, an associate professor of psychology at Saint Louis University. Books will be available for sale and signing at the event.
Recent immigration agency chief counsel criticizes House leadership for stalling immigration reform
“The House leadership’s procedural excuses for blocking
a vote on critical immigration reform make little sense,” says Stephen
Legomsky, professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis and the recent Chief Counsel of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
in the Department of Homeland Security. In that position he worked
intensively with White House and DHS officials and played a major role
on comprehensive immigration reform. “It’s now been 7 months since the
Senate passed a bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform bill.
Speaker Boehner should allow the people’s elected representatives in the
House to consider it without further delay,” Legomsky argues.
Law lecture series continues with leaders in racial justice and immigration
Federal appellate judge Bernice Donald, JD, president
of the American Bar Foundation, and Thomas Saenz, JD, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, will be the next speakers for the 16th annual School of
Law Public Interest Law & Policy Speakers Series.
Cordells endow visiting professorship in School of Law
Washington University School of Law alumni Joseph E. and Yvonne L. Cordell have made a $1 million gift commitment to establish and endow the Cordell & Cordell Visiting Professorship in the law school.
Wash U Experts: Obama child and sick leave directive more inclusive for low-income families — including men
President Barack Obama signed a memorandum Jan. 15
directing agencies to allow federal workers to take six weeks of paid
sick leave to help with a new child or a sick relative. The
president also asked Congress to pass the Healthy Families Act, which
would grant Americans seven days a year of paid sick time. Augmenting
the Family and Medical Leave Act is one place Congress might
start if it wants to combat sex-role stereotypes and advance women’s
equal employment opportunity, as well as supporting families in times of
illness, say experts at Washington University in St. Louis.
Work, Families and Public Policy series begins Monday, Feb. 3
Faculty and graduate students from St. Louis-area universities with an interest in labor, households, health care, law and social welfare are invited to take part in the continuing series of Monday brown-bag luncheon seminars held biweekly on the Danforth Campus beginning through April 14. The series begins Monday, Feb. 3, with Sean H. Williams, JD, professor at the University of Texas School of Law. His topic is “Dead Children: Tort Law and Parental Investments in Child Safety.”
Wash U Expert: Time to raise the gasoline tax?
Falling oil and gasoline prices have prompted some in Congress to debate about increasing the federal fuel tax, which helps fund highway and bridge construction, among other projects. Increasing
the tax, which hasn’t been raised since 1993 and isn’t tied to
inflation, to help offset revenue lost through lower prices at the pump
may seem like a good idea in theory, but it’s much more difficult in
practice, says tax law expert Adam Rosenzweig, JD, of Washington University in St. Louis.
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