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Conference: Association of American Law Schools Meeting (2-5 Jan, 2020), Washington D.C

January 2, 2020 - January 5, 2020

The Association of American Law Schools Annual Meeting will be taking place in Washington D.C on January 2-5, 2020, in Washington. The full program, including registration information, is available here: https://am.aals.org.
This year, Matthew Erie, Islamic law scholar and SHARIAsource editor, will be speaking on the panel “Challenges to the Rule of Law: Lessons from and for Asia, East Asian Law & Society, Co- Sponsored by Comparative Law.” Please find more information on this panel, as well as the full Comparative Law Section Program below.

Comparative Law Section Program at the AALS Annual Meeting

“Reflections on a Distinguished Career: Mark Tushnet’s Contributions to Comparative Law,” featuring distinguished scholars commenting on Professor Tushnet’s vast and important body of work in comparative law. Our program is scheduled for Sunday, January 5, from 8:30am to 10:15am in Virginia Suite C. The panelists are Erin Delaney (Northwestern), Vicki Jackson (Harvard), David Landau (Florida State), Sanford Levinson (Texas), and Katharine Young (Boston College). Professor Tushnet, who will retire from Harvard Law School in June 2020, will be present for the panel.

Program

I.               MAIN PROGRAM: Comparative Law, Co-Sponsored by Constitutional Law

This program will feature reflections from a diverse group of scholars on the contributions of Mark Tushnet to the field of comparative law. Tushnet, currently the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, will retire from the faculty in June 2020. This panel offers an opportunity for scholars who are new to his work in comparative law to learn about his vast body of scholarship and also for those familiar with his work to situate his contributions in the larger field. A substantial portion of the program will be reserved for discussion and comments from the floor. The program will end with the presentation of the First Annual “Mark Tushnet Prize,” created by the Chair and Executive Committee of the Section to recognize scholarly excellence in any subject of comparative law by an untenured scholar at an AALS Member School.

Date and Time

Sunday, January 5, 8:30am to 10:15am
Room: Virginia Suite C
Floor: Lobby Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

 

Speakers

Moderator: Richard Albert, The University of Texas School of Law

Speaker: Erin F. Delaney, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law
Speaker: Vicki C. Jackson, Harvard Law School
Speaker: David E. Landau, Florida State University College of Law
Speaker: Sanford Levinson, The University of Texas School of Law
Speaker: Katharine Young, Boston College Law School

II.            Challenges to the Rule of Law: Lessons from and for Asia, East Asian Law & Society, Co- Sponsored by Comparative Law 

 

From the frontal assault by Duterte’s regime in the Philippines, to the increasing interference by the Chinese government in Hong Kong, to the Abe administration’s undermining of the constitution in Japan, Asia is experiencing serious challenges to the rule of law, one of the main pillars of liberal democracy.. Through the lens of this global challenge, this panel explores what can be learned from the Asian experience and how events elsewhere in the world might inform our understanding of the challenges in Asia.. Business meeting at program conclusion. ​

Date and Time

Saturday, January 4, 1:30pm to 3:15pm

Room: Roosevelt 4
Floor: Exhibition Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel
Speakers

Speaker: Mr. Matthew S. Erie, University of Oxford

Speaker: Professor Shitong Qiao, The University of Hong Kong

Speaker: Robert J. Rhee, University of Florida Fredric G. Levin College of Law

Moderator: Margaret Y. Woo, Northeastern University School of Law

 

III.          The Place of East Asian Law Scholars and Teachers in American Law Schools, East Asian Law & Society, Co- Sponsored by Comparative Law 

This round-table discussion will explore the challenges and opportunities of faculty members who specialize in East Asian law.. The conversation will include challenges and opportunities in teaching and scholarship.. We anticipate everyone attending will be part of the discussion.

Date and Time

Saturday, January 4, 3:30pm to 5:15pm ​
Room: Roosevelt 4
Floor: Exhibition Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

Speakers

Speaker: Donald C. Clarke, The George Washington University Law School

Speaker: Virginia Harper Ho, University of Kansas School of Law

Moderator: David S. Law, University of California, Irvine School of Law

Speaker: Tahirih V. Lee, Florida State University College of Law

Speaker: John K.M. Ohnesorge, University of Wisconsin Law School

IV.          Civil Rights, Co-Sponsored by Comparative Law

Civil rights law is increasingly globalized, as states around the world borrow from one another, and from international conventions, in defining the rights of individuals and groups to be free from discrimination and oppression. The future of the field of comparative civil rights finds itself at the crossroads of global forces, pushing on one side toward further integration of nation states (e.g. projects like the currently defunct FTAA in which “integration” means the harmonization of national legal differences to facilitate foreign direct investment often at the expense of democratic accountability and substantive civil rights). On the other side, we see forces pushing for the disintegration of previously established transnational arrangements charged with the progressive development and incorporation of human rights norms (e.g. projects of withdrawal from the EU, the ICC, and other international bodies, like U.S. withdrawal from the Human Rights Council). Put bluntly, the globalization of civil rights law is caught between forces seeking to unleash a “race to the bottom” and forces seeking to promote a “race to the top.” In this context, teaching comparative civil rights presents new challenges. It is as much a question of why teach it as a question of how. Why and how do we learn the civil rights laws of multiple jurisdictions, and more specifically, identify the areas of comparison most relevant to properly evaluating competing projects of legal harmonization and national difference? How does our engagement with comparative civil rights laws uncover the conditions of possibility for promoting a race to the top or exacerbate the forces pushing us further toward the bottom? How do we teach in this challenging field? Are team teaching methods particularly useful? Is this a rich area for experiential learning? Can we leverage the power of the internet to teach more effectively?

 

Date and Time

Saturday, January 4, 3:30pm to 5:15pm
Room: Delaware Suite B
Floor: Lobby Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

 

Speakers

Speaker: Franciska A. Coleman, Washington University in St. Louis School of Law
Speaker: Lauren Fielder, The University of Texas School of Law
Moderator and Speaker: Elizabeth M. Iglesias, University of Miami School of Law
Moderator and Speaker: David B. Oppenheimer, University of California, Berkeley School of Law
Speaker: Madeleine M. Plasencia, University of Miami School of Law

V.             International Law, Co-Sponsored by Comparative Law

This program features the Foreign and International Reference Librarians from the Law Library of Congress. With approximately 2.9 million volumes, the Law Library of Congress constitutes the largest legal collection in the world. The collection is also the most comprehensive, covering all of the approximately 260 jurisdictions as well as many former nations and colonies. The Foreign and International Reference Librarians will explain how to use the collection both in person and remotely. The Law Library of Congress is an amazing institution that is constantly improving access to its collection for researchers who are outside the DC area.
Date and Time

Saturday, January 4, 3:30pm to 5:15pm
Room: Maryland Suite A
Floor: Lobby Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

Speakers

Speaker: Ms. Barbara Bavis, Law Library of Congress
Speaker: Mr. Peter Roudik, Law Library of Congress
Moderator: Mark E. Wojcik, UIC John Marshall Law School

VI.          Art Law, Co-Sponsored by Comparative Law and Constitutional Law

As regimes change and public values evolve, controversial public monuments often warrant reexamination. Our panel will explore the complex considerations involved in decisions to change or remove public monuments. The panel will bring together experts from law, history, and art to explore and compare how different countries have handled this controversial topic. Our panelists will share their expertise on how Germany and South Africa dealt with monuments of defeated regimes and compare their treatment with that of confederate monuments in the United States.

Date and Time

Sunday, January 5, 10:30am to 12:15pm
Room: Maryland Suite C
Floor: Lobby Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

Speakers

Moderator: Irene Calboli, Texas A&M University School of Law
Speaker: Deborah Gerhardt, University of North Carolina School of Law
Speaker: Dr. Paul Jaskot, Duke University
Speaker: Mark S. Kende, Drake University Law School
Speaker: Sanford Levinson, The University of Texas School of Law
Speaker: Dr. William Sturkey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

VII.        International Legal Exchange, Co-Sponsored by Clinical Legal Education, Comparative Law, and Teaching Methods

Within the U.S. legal community, our legal system is often viewed as inherently worthy of emulation. Concepts such as due process and the right to a jury trial in criminal matters are so inherently appropriate that we may not recognize that other aspects of our system may be viewed as historic anachronisms or simply inequitable or inefficient. Various examples will be offered by panelists.

Date and Time

Sunday, January 5, 3:30pm to 5:15pm
Room: Virginia Suite B
Floor: Lobby Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

Speakers

Speaker: Mr. Charles Altman, New York University
Speaker: William V. Dunlap, Quinnipiac University School of Law
Moderator: Gabrielle L. Goodwin, Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Speaker: Lara Gose, Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Speaker: Carwina Weng, Indiana University Maurer School of Law

VIII.      Law and South Asian Studies, Co-Sponsored by Comparative Law and East Asian Law and Society

Data privacy has become a central issue in regulating a host of issues such as e-commerce, access to government services, and national security amongst others. This session will examine data privacy regulation comparatively and will focus on a recent Supreme Court of India decision (and associated proposed reforms), the EU’s GDPR, and developments elsewhere.

Date and Time

Thursday, January 2, 3:30pm to 5:15pm

Room: Washington 2
Floor: Exhibition Level
Hotel: Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel

Speakers

Moderator: Vikramaditya S. Khanna, The University of Michigan Law School
Speaker: Mr. Vivek Krishnamurthy, Foley Hoag, LLP

Details

Start:
January 2, 2020
End:
January 5, 2020
Event Category:
Website:
https://am.aals.org/