Money and Markets: Trends and Risks for Retail Investors

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Join the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the University of Georgia School of Law for a FREE virtual panel discussion. Experts from the SEC, FINRA, CFTC and UGA Terry College of Business will discuss emerging trends and risks for retail investors, including investment strategies and related technology, social media’s influence on investors, and the growing cryptocurrency market.

Space Law and More with Brian Israel

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Join us on Wednesday, October 13 at 8:00 PM for a virtual happy hour with Brian Israel, who will talk about space law and other topics.

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Since graduating from Berkeley Law in 2009, Brian has served as a State Department official, General Counsel of a venture-backed space company, and Co-founder of a technology startup.

22nd Annual Symposium on Legal Ethics & Professionalism (Virtual)

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Fundamental ethical questions abound in lawyering for the President—Who is the client? How far is too far in terms of advocating a legal position? When, if ever, is it appropriate to follow directives from the President? What is the proper balance between privileged communications and the public’s right to know? This Symposium will examine how lawyers—public and private—dealt (or should have dealt) with these and other difficult questions in relation to various administrations. 

COMPLETE OUTAGE of campus Internet access and campus information systems

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EITS will conduct network maintenance that will result in complete outages of campus Internet access and campus information systems on Saturday, October 23, 2021, from 6:00 a.m. until 11:59 p.m. 

Please make note that unlike previous planned network maintenances where there were intermittent outages, this maintenance will result in a complete outage of access to services.

Business as Usual: Inequality and Health Litigation during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazil with Natalia Pires de Vasconcelos

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Brazil's active judicial system has the power to define the constitutional content of the country's healthcare policy by forcing the government to embrace equal protection of the right to health. In this talk, I present the results of an upcoming chapter in which I compare the pandemic’s effect on the judicial protection of the right to health for those incarcerated and those who are free. In both cases, courts had serious incentives to take the pandemic seriously and consider its disproportionate impact on marginalized communities.

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