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CALL FOR PAPERS SPRING 2013 ISSUE ON MEDIA LAW
The University of Florida Journal of Law and Public Policy (JLPP), celebrating its 25th anniversary, is organizing a special issue on media law for spring 2013. Papers submitted for consideration in this issue may include articles, essays and book reviews and should focus on topics related to media law, including First Amendment, defamation, privacy or intellectual property. Submission guidelines: Please submit any papers you would like to be considered for publication in our special issue in Word document format to kcarnley@ufl.edu by January 15, 2013. For more information about our Journal and our submission requirements, visit our page on the submissions guidelines. Symposium: Authors invited to publish in the special issue on media law may also be invited to participate in the spring 2013 media law symposium, hosted by the Journal at the UF Levin College of Law.
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WIPIP 2013 at Seton Hall Law School
Seton Hall University School of Law and the Gibbons Institute of Law, Science and Technology at the Law School are pleased to host the Annual Works in Progress Intellectual Property (WIPIP) conference on Friday and Saturday, February 22-23, 2013. The conference will begin with lunch at noon on Friday and conclude before dinner on Saturday. The conference provides intellectual property scholars with a forum to present their work in progress and receive early feedback from their colleagues. Presentation is not required for participation. Seton Hall Law School is located in Newark, New Jersey, which is a fifteen minutes train ride from New York City. Participants can stay in hotels located in either New York City or Newark. Information regarding hotel accommodations will be posted on the conference website at http://law.shu.edu/About/News_Events/wipip/index.cfm. Participants are responsible for their travel and accommodation expenses. Conference meals will be provided by Seton Hall Law School. The deadline for requests to present and requests to participate without presenting is December 17, 2012. Please email your institutional affiliation and If you would like to present you should also include a title and an abstract. Please email requests to present, requests to participate without presenting or any other inquiries about the conference to Rosa Alves at rosa.alves-ferreira@shu.edu. She can also be reached at (973) 642-8187. From IP and IT Conferences
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Aging, Law & Society — Law and Society Annual Meeting — Boston, MA
The Aging, Law & Society Collaborative Research Network (CRN) invites proposals for presentations at the Law and Society Annual Meeting in Boston, May 30 to June 2, 2013. The submission deadline is November 25, 2012. Aging, Law & Society is an international forum where scholars and researchers can come together to collaborate and workshop ideas related to the relationship between law and aging. Specific questions include how the law responds to the needs of people as they age, as well as how the law shapes the aging experience. If you are interested in presenting, please email a 400-500 word abstract to nknauer@temple.edu no later than November 25, 2012.
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New Directions in Global Thought: Institute for Global Law and Policy at Five — Harvard Law School
On June 3-4, 2013, the Institute for Global Law and Policy (IGLP) at Harvard Law School will convene its first biannual international conference on New Directions in Global Thought. All submissions must be received no later than March 1, 2013.
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Civil Right to Counsel 50 Years After Gideon — Washington, DC
The University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law seeks submissions for its 2013 Annual Law Review Symposium, Expanding the Civil Right to Counsel: 50 Years After Gideon, which will take place in March 2013. Abstracts are due by noon Nov. 15, 2012. This Symposium seeks to explore the legal and societal implications of creating a civil right to counsel. Panelists may also address the approaches to providing counsel to civil litigants that have been adopted in U.S. and international jurisdictions, and the impact to litigation outcomes in those jurisdictions. Symposium submissions may examine the relative merits of creating a right to counsel in civil cases legislatively, through court rules, or pursuant to state constitutions. Participants in the Symposium will address the challenges to creation and implementation of a civil right to counsel through these mechanisms, as well as creation of a civil right to counsel through the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Law Review also seeks articles discussing the history of the Lassiter case and the prospects for a civil right to counsel under the U.S. Constitution. Panels may address discrete issues ranging from creation and implementation challenges to jurisdictional comparisons to constitutional construction of the right to counsel. As an institution dedicated to promoting the study and practice of law in pursuit of social justice, we at the UDC Law Review seek to set the stage for an expansion of the right to counsel for civil litigants. Articles presented during the symposium will be collected for publication in the annual symposium issue of the UDC Law Review. Please submit abstracts to UDC Law Review Symposium Editor Megan Challender at mchallender [at] gmail.com no later than 11:59 p.m. on November 15, 2012. Include an e-mail address, phone number, and mailing address where you can be reached. To be eligible for consideration, submissions must not be published elsewhere. The Symposium will take place at a date to be determined in March 2013.
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