Our faculty are leaders in scholarship, teaching and service, as detailed in our faculty profiles. Here are highlights of their recent achievements:
Director of the Law Library Carol A. Watson presented "Maximizing Your Faculty's Scholarly Impact: Techniques to Increase Findability" at the American Association of Law Libraries Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., with co-presenters T.J. Striepe, associate director for research services, UGA Law Library; and C. Osborne, associate professor and director of the Law Library, West Virginia University College of Law.
Associate Director for Research Services Thomas "T.J." Striepe presented "Maximizing Your Faculty's Scholarly Impact: Techniques to Increase Findability" at the American Association of Law Libraries Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., with co-presenters Carol Watson, director of the UGA Law Library; and C. Osborne, associate professor and director of the Law Library, West Virginia University College of Law.
Associate Professor Nathan S. Chapman has received a McDonald Distinguished Fellowship from the Emory University Center for the Study of Law and Religion. This internationally recognized center seeks to promote and produce "innovative research and scholarship, exemplary teaching and training, robust public engagement and generous support of individual faculty initiatives at the intersection of law and religion."
Woodruff Chair in International Law Diane Marie Amann was featured on Politifact regarding whether or not a president can be indicted once he or she leaves office. The article titled "Could Trump (or any president) be indicted after leaving office? Mueller, legal experts say yes" was written by Bill McCarthy and published 7/26/19.
Hosch Associate Professor Kent Barnett's co-authored article "Chevron in the Circuit Courts" (116 Michigan Law Review 1 (2017)) was cited by the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in the case Braeburn Inc. v. FDA (D.D.C. July 22, 2019).