Deep Gulasekaram had an op-ed in The Hill about the 50th Anniversary of the 1965 Immigration and Naturalization Act.
Deep Gulasekaram had an op-ed in The Hill about the 50th Anniversary of the 1965 Immigration and Naturalization Act.
Santa Clara University School of Law faculty Robert Peterson published an article, “Assisted Driving is Taking Over,” on Insurance Thought Leadership. The article examines the possible ramifications of public policy surrounding assisted driving features and was featured in Insurance Thought Leadership’s weekly “6…
Santa Clara University School of Law faculty Margaret M. Russell, Evangeline Abriel and Lynette Parker are the recipients for the Santa Clara University Ignatian Center for Jesuit Education 2015-2016 Bannan Grants.
Tyler Ochoa spoke on Recent Developments in U.S. Copyright Law at the Annual Institute on Intellectual Property Law, sponsored by the Houston Intellectual Property Law Association (HIPLA) and the University of Houston. Read more.
Santa Clara University School of Law professor Pratheepan Gulasekaram has co-authored an editorial with Karthick Ramakrishnan for the Washington Post. The editorial, “Forget border walls and mass deportations.
Ron Katz spoke to the New York Times about the Tom Brady case. He also blogged about the case for Forbes, and spoke to NBC about Aldon Smith joining the Raiders.
Ellen Kreitzberg spoke to KLIV and KQED about the federal challenge to the death penalty case in California. The various stories ran multiple times on multiple stations nationwide including KPCC and Capital Public Radio.
Jerry Uelmen spoke to the Mercury News for a widely reprinted story about strategies being used in a disputed San Jose police shooting.
Margaret Russell spoke to NBC Bay Area about some key Supreme Court free-speech cases. She also was interviewed on Here and Now on NPR, about her work on exposing criminal acts from the Jim Crow era. She also was a guest expert in an NBC Bay…
David Ball spoke to the San Francisco Chronicle about changes to California’s solitary confinement policies, and to Ars Technica and Findlaw about a case of prosecution against two teens for “sexting.”