For the seventh year, IJPM is sponsoring the interdisciplinary course Law, Politics, and the Media. Course information and syllabus can be found here.
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Law, Politics, and the Media Informational Meeting
Law, Politics, and the Media . . . and pizza!
The American judicial system today operates in a complex environment of legal principle, political pressure and media coverage. LAW 839/PSC 700/NEW 500: Law, Politics and the Media introduces students to the court system and its environment as a single, integrated subject of study. The course is sponsored by the Institute for the Study of the Judiciary, Politics, and the Media and co-taught by faculty drawn from law, journalism and political science. The course also features dynamic lectures by prominent practitioners from the bench, the bar, media, and the world of policymaking.
Interested? Join us on Thursday, October 30, at 12:00pm in Dineen Hall’s MacNaughton Collaboratory for an informational meeting. Law, Politics and the Media faculty will be there to answer any questions you may have about the course, and pizza will be served.
Sotomayor and the Politics of Justice
“Breaking In: The Rise of Sonia Sotomayor and the Politics of Justice”
Joan Biskupic, Legal Affairs Editor, Reuters
Date: Wednesday, 9/24
Time: 12:00pm-‐12:50pm
Place: Gray Ceremonial Courtroom – Room 020, Dineen Hall, Syracuse University College of Law
Elements of Law, Fall 2014
Building on its record of interdisciplinary legal education, IJPM has designed a new course for undergraduates. For details, visit the Elements of Law course page.
Constitutionalism and the Foundations of the Security State
IJPM Faculty Fellow Lecture
“Rediscovering Shelley v. Kraemer:
Housing and Civil Rights Legal Activism Before Brown“
Jeffrey Gonda
IJPM Faculty Fellow
Assistant Professor History, Maxwell School
Time: 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Date: Monday, February 24, 2014
Location: Heritage Alumni Lounge, College of Law
Lunch will be served.
Please RSVP to Chris Ramsdell at ceramsde@law.syr.edu or 443-9542.
Panel on the Press and the U.S. Supreme Court
American Association of Law Schools Annual Meeting
Friday, January 3, 2014, 1:30p.m-3:15 p.m.
Hilton New York Midtown
Fifty years ago, when the U.S. Supreme Court decided the landmark case of New York Times v. Sullivan, it signaled what many now see as a high-water mark in the protection of and appreciation for the role of a free press in our democracy. In the subsequent five decades, both the press and the Supreme Court have experienced significant change, and each has faced criticism for its treatment of the other.
This panel will investigate the complex dynamic between the U.S. Supreme Court and the media that reports on its work, considering trends in the Court’s depictions of the media and trends in the media’s depiction of the Court.
Media scholars and members of the U.S. Supreme Court press corps will discuss the Supreme Court’s apparently declining perceptions of the press in its opinions and will compare and contrast the individual Justices’ views on the media. They will question the strengths and limitations of the Court’s current policies regarding the press; consider the as-yet rejected proposals to introduce cameras or social media in the courtroom; and investigate ways that the media could improve its coverage of the Court and enhance public knowledge of the institution and its work.
Moderator:
RonNell Andersen Jones, Brigham Young University, J. Reuben Clark Law School
Speakers:
Keith J. Bybee, Syracuse University College of Law
Leslie Kendrick, University of Virginia School of Law
Mr. Adam Liptak, New York Times
Ms. Dahlia Lithwick, Slate Magazine
Mr. Anthony E. Mauro, National Law Journal
Rod Smolla on Massive Online Leaks
“Massive Online Leaks: Prosecuting and Defending Traffickers of
National Security Secrets”
Rod Smolla
Date: Nov. 21, 2013
Time: 12:00pm-1:00pm
Place: Syracuse University College of Law, Room 104.
Rod Smolla is a visiting professor at Duke Law, former President of Furman University in Greenville, SC, and former Dean and Roy L. Steinheimer Professor of Law at Washington and Lee School of Law. He is the author of The Constitution Goes to College (2011).
This lecture is presented by the Institute for the Study of the Judiciary, Politics, and the Media; the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism; and the Peter and Sharon Murphy Kissel Fund for the Study of Civil Liberties.
IJPM Director to Speak at Law Dialog Luncheon
IJPM Director Keith Bybee will speak to College of Law Alumni at a Law Dialog Luncheon in Washington, D.C on Friday, November 8, 2013. His talk is entitled, “The Rule of Law is Dead! Long Live the Rule of Law! Conflicting Public Perceptions of the Courts.”
IJPM Director Appointed to Editorial Board
IJPM Director Keith Bybee has been appointed to the Editorial Board of Law and Social Inquiry. Consistently ranked as one of the top law-and-society journals, LSI is published quarterly by the American Bar Foundation and Wiley-Blackwell.