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by Duke University School of LawAcademic Lectures, Panels, Conferences, Symposia
Recent podcasts
School Integration: Shifting the Policy Discussion After Parents Involved
06/09/2007
Sep 06, 2007 - Join Wake County lawyer Ann Majestic, education litigator Audrey Anderson (Hogan & Hartson), and other speakers for a panel moderated by policy professor Charlie Clotfelter on the policy impacts of the Supreme Court's recent decision on school integration. Sponsored by Hogan & Hartson, the American Constitution Society, the Federalist Society, the Education Law & Policy Society, and the Program in Public Law.
School Integration: Legal Implications of Parents Involved
05/09/2007
Sep 05, 2007 - Professor Erwin Chemerinsky, Professor Neil Siegel, Anurima Bhargava of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and Roger Clegg of the Center for Equal Opportunity discuss the legal implications of the Supreme Court's recent decision on school integration. Sponsored by the American Constitution Society, the Federalist Society, the Education Law & Policy Society, and the Program in Public Law.
Hoop Dreams: How Sonny Vaccaro Revolutionized the Business of Basketball
12/04/2007
Apr 12, 2007 - Sonny Vaccaro, the trailblazing shoe company executive who created the high school summer basketball scene and signed many of the game's greatest stars - including Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant - to endorsement contracts, discusses his career and future goals. Vaccaro, who has worked for Nike, Adidas, and Reebok, highlights the structure of endorsement deals as well as his plans to launch a national basketball academy.
Challenges for the Americas and the Role of the OAS
09/04/2007
Apr 09, 2007 - Duke Law hosts the Katherine and S. Davis Phillips International Lecture. This lecture commemorates the 40th anniversary of the founding of the Duke Center for International Studies. Jose Miguel Insulza, Secretary General of the Organization of American States presents "Challenges for the Americas and the role of the OAS".
From Pan Am to Gaddafi
03/04/2007
Apr 03, 2007 - From shelter animals being passed off as trained security dogs, to travels to Libya, London, and Paris to negotiate the $10 million per family settlement with the Libyan government. Meet the lawyers who first handled the conventional litigation against the airline and then, under the newly amended Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, sued the Libyan government in groundbreaking, "anything but conventional" litigation.