10 posts from

February 2010

  

Erin Riley Quoted in Yahoo Article on Resumes

February 28, 2010 by | Faculty

Erin Riley, Assistant Director of Career Services, was quoted in an article on Yahoo’s HotJobs section among other “industry insiders” on how to get your resume read. “Be results-oriented. … Whenever possible, quantify your accomplishments.” Read more here …

Professor Rosenthal Featured in National Panel

February 25, 2010 by | Faculty

Professor Lawrence Rosenthal was featured on a live national panel discussion on constitutional rights sponsored by the American Bar Association Section of State and Local Government Law and the ABA Center of Continuing Legal Education. Read more…

Professor Rosenthal on ABA Panel on Gun Control

February 25, 2010 by | Faculty

Professor Rosenthal will be one of the panelists on American Bar Association program: “Beyond Gun Control:  McDonald v. City of Chicago and Incorporation of the Bill of Rights.” Other panelist will include Michael Kent Curtis, Judge Donald L. Smith Professor in Constitutional and Public Law at Wake Forest University School of Law, Winston-Salem, N.C., and

Professor Rosenthal Published on Wrongful Convictions

February 23, 2010 by | Faculty

Professor Rosenthal has published “Second Thoughts on Damages for Wrongful Convictions” in the Chicago-Kent Law Review as part of a symposium on criminal procedure in which scholars from around the country were invited to give their views on pressing issues in the administration of criminal justice.

Professor Wilson Featured on Mother Nature Network

February 22, 2010 by | Faculty

Professor of law and economics Bart Wilson was featured on a “Science Nation” segment of the Mother Nature Network discussing the innate sense of equity and fairness in humans and its relationship to the behaviors of non-human primates. “I’m interested in how people make decisions in strategic and social interactions.” Watch or read a transcript

Dean Eastman Receives Support from Conservative Leaders

February 22, 2010 by | Faculty

Former Chapman Law Dean and state attorney general hopeful John Eastman received considerable support from national conservative leaders, who hosted a fundraising event for Eastman at the Capitol Hill Club. “My native state of California has suffered so much from attorney general Jerry Brown’s malfeasance that I am especially delighted by the news that constitutional

Professor Rotunda Publishes Article on Judicial Disqualification

February 18, 2010 by | Faculty

Professor Ronald Rotunda published an article in the Syracuse Law Review titled “Judicial Disqualification in the Aftermath of Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co.”  “What we do know from this case is that laws that require judges to recuse themselves when a party (or a lawyer to a party) contributes more than a certain amount

Professor Rotunda Discusses Technology in Litigation

February 4, 2010 by | Faculty

For the American Bar Association’s Law Day 2010, Professor Ronald Rotunda, The Doy & Dee Henley Chair and Distinguished Professor of Jurisprudence, offered his insights as a Leader in Law on the most significant or interesting challenge that confronts law in the 21st century. “Technology is transforming-and will continue to transform-the practice of law, particularly

Librarian Geitner Publishes Article on First Amendment

February 2, 2010 by | Faculty

Lorin Geitner, Reference Lawyer/Libarian, published an article in Orange County Lawyer Magazine titled “The First Amendment and the Problems of Alienation.”  It surveys the different orientations of law and religion in world history, and set out how the religion clauses in the First Amendment define the relation between the two institutions in our own culture

Dean Canova Publishes Editorial on Public Transportation

February 2, 2010 by | Faculty

Dean Timothy Canova wrote an editorial in the Pacific Progressive Blog about reviving the economy through investments in public transportation. “The truth is that state and local governments are not primarily to blame for the collapse of financial markets, the weak U.S. economy, and the crisis in public finances. It was the federal government that

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