Santa Clara University School of Law Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Bradley Joondeph was interviewed by NBC Bay Area News about Friday’s Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage.
Santa Clara University School of Law Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Bradley Joondeph was interviewed by NBC Bay Area News about Friday’s Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage.
Margaret Russell spoke to KGO radio about the Supreme Court’s upcoming decision on same-sex marriage. Listen to the clip.
Deep Gulasekaram was a featured expert on KLIV and several spots on KTVU TV news discussing the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on Obamacare. He was also interviewed by ABC7 about the Supreme Court case on same-sex marriage. The story ran on several additional stations including KFSN.
Senior Fellow Bill Woodward was selected to be a member of the Equal Justice Works National Advisory Committee (NAC). Founded by law students in 1986, Equal Justice Works is a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating a just society by mobilizing the…
Eric Goldman and Sandee Magliozzi were both quoted in a new report by Robert Half Legal titled Future Law Office 2020: Redefining the Practice of Law. The report examines key trends affecting the legal field today, and discusses expected changes…
David Sloss wrote an op-ed that ran in the San Francisco Daily Journal, about how extraditions granted based on evidence granted through torture undermine treaty terms between nations.
Santa Clara University School of Law faculty members Margalynne Armstrong and Stephanie Wildman co-authored an editorial on issues of racial identity related to recent questions about the topic in the media.
Sandee Magliozzi was quoted in a story in prawfsblog on providing practical skills for law students.
Marina Hsieh discussed with CBS5 the move by former Kleiner Perkins employee Ellen Pao to link her appeal with a request for legal fees from the firm that defeated her discrimination case.
Colleen Chien wrote an op-ed for Politico urging lawmakers not to gut an important patent-review law, which garnered 6,000 readers its first day, as well as more than 400 shares on social media.