Archive for April, 2004
Noonan @ Yale (4/22/04)
Date: 4/22/2004
Title: Conscience and the Constitution: What is a Federal Judge Bound By?
Speaker: Hon. John T. Noonan Jr.
Location: Yale Law School
Presentation type: Streaming video (Real Player)
Judge Noonan gives the Dean’s Lecture at Yale.
April 22, 2004
From the archives: Inaugural Baker & McKenzie International Law Lecture @ Georgetown
Date: 4/19/2004
Title: Applying United States Securities Regulation Abroad (1:19:30)
Speaker(s): Donald Langevoort, Daniel Goelzer
Location: Georgetown
Presentation type(s): Streaming video (Real Player)
April 19, 2004
From the archives: Bolling v. Sharpe at 50 @ Georgetown (2004)
Date: 4/15/2004
Title: Bolling v. Sharpe at 50
Speaker(s): T. Alexander Alenikoff, James Forman Jr., Charles Lawrence, William Taylor, Susan Low Bloch, Judge Louis H. Pollak, Roger Wilkins, James Nabrit III, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Daniel Ernst, Jack Balkin, Michael Klarman, Elizabeth Patterson, Wendell Prichett, Mark Tushnet, David Bernstein, Richard Primus, Peter Rubin
Location: Georgetown
Presentation type: Streaming video (Real Player)
- Panel I : Educational Policy Today: In the Shadow of the Desegregation Cases
(Aleinikoff, Forman, Lawrence, Taylor) - Keynote Address
(Pollak) - Panel II: Bolling Remembered
(Bloch, Wilkins, Nabrit, Norton) - Panel III: Bolling in Historical Context
(Ernst, Balkin, Klarman, Patterson, Prichett) - Panel IV: Bolling and Substantive Due Process
(Tushnet, Bernstein, Primus, Rubin)
April 15, 2004
From the archives: Dan Kahan’s Inaugural Dollard Chair Lecture
Date: 4/13/2004
Title: The Logic of Reciprocity: A Theory of Collective Action and Law (1:32:07)
Speaker: Dan Kahan
Location: Yale Law School
Presentation type: Streaming video (Real Player)
Dean Anthony Kronman introduces Professor Dan Kahan for his inaugural lecture as the Elizabeth K. Dollard Professor of Law at Yale. His talk explores a theory of collective action based on reciprocity (which contrasts with the conventional theory based on rational behavior and incentives), and implications for regulation.
See, e.g., Kahan’s 2002 paper, The Logic of Reciprocity: Trust, Collective Action, and Law (at SSRN)
Kahan’s prepared talk starts at 12:22, and ends at 56:35, w/ the remainder of the time spent on more interactive discussion with the students and faculty in the audience.
April 13, 2004
