Hosch Professor & Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor Lori A. Ringhand presented "The Shakedown" at the International Society of Public Law's annual ICON-S conference during July.
Stembler Family Distinguished Professor in Business Law Christopher Bruner published "Methods of Comparative Corporate Governance" in Research Handbook on Comparative Corporate Governance (A. Afsharipour & M. Gelter eds.) (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2021).
Associate Dean and Martin Chair of Law Andrea L. Dennis' book Rap on Trial was featured in the New York Law Journal. The article titled "Putting Rap Music on Trial" was written by Brittany Francis, Anjali Pathmanathan and Arielle Reid and was published 6/30/21.
Congratulations to rising third-year student Allison M. Parker for her role in a recent Whitfield County trial. The Daily Citizen-News article titled "Gang member convicted of armed robbery, other charges" was published 7/3/21.
Stembler Family Distinguished Professor in Business Law Christopher Bruner presented "Artificially Intelligent Boards and the Future of Delaware Corporate Law" online as part of the ComplianceNet 2021 conference hosted by University College London during June.
Associate Dean for International Programs & Post Professor Melissa J. "MJ" Durkee published "Interpretive Entrepreneurs" in 107 Virginia Law Review 431 (2021).
Assistant Clinical Professor & Wilbanks Child Endangerment and Sexual Exploitation Clinic Director Emma M. Hetherington was featured in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution regarding her thoughts on the Boy Scouts of America's $850 million agreement with attorneys representing survivors of child sexual abuse. The article titled "Boy Scouts of America reaches $850M agreement with victims" was written by Randall Chase and published 7/2/21.
Congratulations to Kent Barnett, Melissa J. Durkee and Lara Pulliam for their new leadership roles at the School of Law. Barnett is the new associate dean for academic affairs, Durkee is the associate dean for international programs and will serve as director of the Dean Rusk International Law Center, and Pulliam now serves as the interim senior director of law school advancement in addition to her role as chief of staff.
The University of Georgia Alumni Association Board of Directors has elected its 77th president, Yvette K. Daniels (J.D.'89), and approved eight new board members. Their terms began July 1. Also, Dominique Holloman (J.D.'04) will serve as nominating committee chair, while Jody Corry (J.D.'91) will rotate off the board.
As UGA prepares for a full return to normal campus operations this fall, it is also looking back to identify how lessons learned from a year and a half of teaching during the COVID pandemic can enhance the learning environment. The Task Force on the Future of Teaching and Learning at UGA is composed of 27 faculty, staff and students from across the institution and is scheduled to deliver a report on its findings at the end of fall semester. Hosch Professor & Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor Lori A. Ringhand will serve on the task force.
Distinguished Research Professor & Shackelford Distinguished Professor in Taxation Law Emeritus Walter Hellerstein published "Platforms: The Postscript" in 100 Tax Notes State 1365 (2021) (with A. Appleby). This is the fourth in a series of articles he has published in Tax Notes State over the past three years on state tax obligations of online platforms.
University Professor & Kilpatrick Chair of Corporate Finance and Securities Law Usha Rodrigues virtually presented "Optimizing Whistleblowing" as part of the ComplianceNet 2021 conference hosted by the University College London during June.
Callaway Chair Elizabeth Chamblee Burch was featured in a Bloomberg Law article regarding New York's opioid litigation. The article titled "First Opioid Jury Trial Marks High-Stakes Test for Drug Industry" was written by Jef Feeley and published 6/28/21. The article also appeared in outlets such as the Insurance Journal and Northern New York Newspapers.
Callaway Chair Elizabeth Chamblee Burch was featured in The New York Times regarding New York's opioid litigation. The article titled "An Opioid Case Like No Other: N.Y. vs. the Supply Chain" was written by Sarah Maslin Nir and published 6/29/21.
Clinical Assistant Professor & First Amendment Clinic Director Clare R. Norins authored a guest column in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution regarding the recent U.S. Supreme Court Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. decision addressing whether public schools may constitutionally regulate off-campus student speech. Norins argues that the ruling leaves students and their parents in limbo as to when, exactly, schools can reach outside the school house gate to regulate off-premises expression. The article titled "Public Schools can still wrongly punish off-campus student speech" was published on 6/28/21.
Callaway Chair of Law Emeritus Ronald L. Carlson's book Carlson on Evidence (with M. Carlson) was recently cited by the Georgia Court of Appeals in the case Hewell v. State. This citation brings the total to 58 times that this text has been used by Georgia appellate courts to resolve evidentiary issues.
Callaway Chair Elizabeth Chamblee Burch was featured in The Wall Street Journal regarding the latest opioid litigation developments. The article titled "Johnson & Johnson Settles New York Opioid Case for $230 Million" was written by Sara Randazzo and published 6/26/21.
University Professor & Kilpatrick Chair of Corporate Finance and Securities Law Usha Rodrigues was featured in the Financial Times regarding special purpose acquisition companies. The article titled "Dozens of groups brought to market via Spacs to enter key Russell index" was written by Miles Kruppa and Ortenca Aliaj and was published 6/24/21.
Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. is the first U.S. Supreme Court decision addressing whether public schools may constitutionally regulate off-campus student speech. The Supreme Court's prior student-speech decisions involved speech on school grounds, during school-sponsored events or in school-sponsored publications. The Supreme Court's 8-1 recent decision in Mahanoy allows both sides to claim victory, according to Clare Norins, director of the University of Georgia School of Law's First Amendment Clinic, who also serves as an assistant clinical professor.
2021 alumnus Devin Mashman was featured in the Daily Report regarding his winning argument before the Supreme Court of Georgia in the case Harvey v. Merchan. Mashman was a participant in the school's Wilbanks Child Endangerment and Sexual Exploitation Clinic, which was handling the case involving the choice of law and the constitutionality of the state's Hidden Predator Act.