Deborah Moss West JD ’94 will receive 2021 Minority Bar Coalition Unity Award on November 9, 2021. These annual awards honor member bar association attorneys for being exemplary in promoting the cause of diversity in the legal profession and the …
Deborah Moss West JD ’94 will receive 2021 Minority Bar Coalition Unity Award on November 9, 2021. These annual awards honor member bar association attorneys for being exemplary in promoting the cause of diversity in the legal profession and the …
Nick Serafin‘s forthcoming article on the 13th amendment, “Redefining the Badges of Slavery,” received an honorable mention in the 2022 Scholarly Papers Competition sponsored by the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). Read more about the competition.
Judge Eugene Hyman JD ’77 wrote an opinion piece for the Mercury News about how America is neglecting its missing indigenous women. In the article, Judge Hyman discusses why the likes of Gabby Petito receive our attention while others like…
Gary Spitko gave a webinar on vaccine mandates through the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics. Watch the webinar below.
Ellen Kreitzberg spoke with NBC news about non-verbal communication in the trial of former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes, specifically Ms. Holmes appearing daily in the courtroom with her mother, husband, father-in-law and other family members. “Jurors notice that,” said Ellen…
Congratulations to Ernest Fok JD ’21 , who recently received the AIPLA Past Presidents Award from the American Intellectual Property Law Association. The Past Presidents Award recognizes law students who best exemplify excellence in the field of intellectual property law…
Margaret Russell was a guest on KQED Forum discussing the Supreme Court hearing challenges to the restrictive Texas abortion law.
As part of Santa Clara University’s Grand Reunion Weekend, Santa Clara University School of Law welcomed over 100 alumni, along with family and friends, back to campus for a Friday evening reception on Panetta Plaza outside the front entrance of…
Across the country, dozens of states have enacted “second chance” legislation, designed to help individuals with criminal records shorten or downgrade their past convictions, clean their criminal records, and/or regain the right to vote, while legislatures have passed laws meant…
Margaret Russell spoke with NPR about the University of Florida barring professors from testifying in a voting rights case against the state. “When professors are hired, they are hired for their expertise in teaching, in research,” she said, “They’re not…