7 posts from

January 2011

  

Professor Rosenthal Publishes Article on First Amendment

January 30, 2011 by | Faculty

Professor Rosenthal’s latest article, “First Amendment Investigations and the Inescapable Pragmatism of the Common Law of Free Speech,” has appeared in the Winter 2011 issue of the Indiana Law Journal. It uses the example of a government investigation triggered by the content of a suspect’s constitutionally protected speech, such as an investigation of an individual

Professor Caso Quoted in Article About Public Pension

January 26, 2011 by | Faculty

Professor Anthony Caso was quoted in an article in The Recorder about the polarizing issue of pensions for government workers. Professor Caso, who represented as amicus the Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence in a case before the Second District Court of Appeal, discussed the Constitutional requirement of voter approval of unfunded liabilities.  “The bigger problem of this

Professor Kochan on Panel on International Law

January 16, 2011 by | Faculty

Professor Donald Kochan was a panelist on a unique internet conference, The Rise of Lawfare, the Politicization of International Law and the Challenges to U.S. Sovereignty, (American Freedom Alliance International Conference of the Air), discussing implications for sovereignty from lawsuits based on claims of international law violations. The Audio is available here, with Professor Kochan’s

Professor Bazyler Spoke at Convention on Genocide

January 15, 2011 by | Faculty

Professor Michael Bazyler spoke at the Armenian Bar Association’s Las Vegas Convention this January.  He moderated the discussion of “Legal Remedies, Restitution or Monetary Compensation for the Dispossession of Armenians of pre-Genocide Communal and Private Property in Their Homeland.” Read more about Professor Bazyler’s role in the ArmenBar Conference here.

Wall Street Journal Publishes Professor Eastman’s Op-Ed

January 13, 2011 by | Faculty

The Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by Former Dean John Eastman about Birthright Citizenship. In his op-ed, entitled, “The 14th Amendment and Children of Illegal Migrants,” Former Dean Eastman discusses the meaning of the Citizenship Clause as it might have been intended by its authors. “The Citizenship Clause actually codifies the Lockean view of

Washington Post Quotes Professor Eggert

January 7, 2011 by | Faculty

The Washington Post quoted Professor Kurt Eggert in an article about a foreclosure case that recently went before the Massachusetts Supreme Court. Professor Eggert discussed the problems with the legal argument the banking industry had been using to reassure investors and the public that everything was okay. “The banking industry has dismissed problems such as

USC Graduates Choose Chapman Law

January 5, 2011 by | General News

Every fall hundreds of USC alumni matriculate to various law schools across the nation.  Chapman Law was recently listed among the top schools that were chosen by USC graduates. Find the top thirty law schools chosen by USC graduates here.

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