June 12, 2008
AALS Section on Poverty Law Panel Announcement
The AALS Section on Poverty Law has announced the details of the coming AALS panel.
Section on Poverty Law
Program
“Privatization: Promise and Pitfall at the Intersection of Law, Markets and
Poverty”
Friday, January 9, 2009, 3:30-5:15 pm; A meeting of the Section on Poverty Law will immediately follow the session.
This session will explore the challenges and opportunities of market-based
approaches to poverty relief in light of more than a quarter century of
government disinvestment from low-income neighborhoods. The panel will feature
a description of San Diego's Market Creek Plaza, a 10-acre real estate
partnership in a culturally diverse, underinvested neighborhood that represents
one of the first commercial development projects designed, built and
(ultimately) owned by community residents. Panelists will also describe
innovative banking and housing efforts designed to expand tenant ownership and
access to capital and credit in urban communities.
A commentator will encourage panelists and participants to consider practical,
political and philosophical pros and cons of such approaches. Are market-based
approaches the “new urban renewal?” Can the market deliver where the government
has failed? What are some of the unintended consequences of even the most
well-meaning, well-designed programs? What do these projects portend for local
residents who all too often have been the objects of reform but not its
subjects? What lessons can we draw as the country prepares to usher in a new
administration in Washington that might take seriously a renewed anti-poverty agenda?
Moderator
- Susan Bennett, American University Washington College of Law
Panelists:
- Barbara Bezdek, University of Maryland School of Law
- Louise Howells, UDC David A. Clarke School of Law
- Jennifer Vanica, Jacobs Center for Neighborhood Innovation (San Diego)
Commentator:
- Angela Harris, University of California, Berkeley School of Law
-Thanks to Jeff Selbin for the heads up. E.R. erosser@wcl.american.edu
June 12, 2008 in Legal Academy Info | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
May 09, 2008
End of the Semester Blues - a quick link
Academic Aside: If you are in the midst of either taking exams, or grading exams, it is worth checking out this old post from Daniel J. Solove on Concurring Opinions.
-E.R. erosser@wcl.american.edu
May 9, 2008 in Legal Academy Info | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 18, 2008
Harvard announces Zero Tuition for Public Interest Students in their 3L year
HLS announced that it "plans to waive tuition for third-year students who pledge to spend five years working either for nonprofit organizations or the government" from NY Times coverage, the story is here and the HLS press release is here. Though such a program may have little role practically compared with a strong LRAP/LIPP program, it does help build student pre-commitment to public-interest careers.
-E.R. erosser@wcl.american.edu
March 18, 2008 in Legal Academy Info | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 04, 2008
Marion Crain changing schools but Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity staying at UNC
As reported by Brian Leiter, Prof. Marion Crain is moving from UNC to Wash U/St. Louis, but according to Prof. Crain, the Center on Poverty, Work and Opportunity is staying at UNC and the school will be picking a new Director to replace her.
-E.R. erosser@wcl.american.edu
March 4, 2008 in Legal Academy Info | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
December 17, 2007
Query: procedural court losses based on not having a lawyer
A civil procedure professor emailed me requesting that I see if anybody has a good case or story in which someone loses a lawsuit on procedural grounds because they could not afford a lawyer to be included in a civil pro syllabus. If you have particular ideas, email me and I will forward them on.
-E.R. erosser@wcl.american.edu
December 17, 2007 in Legal Academy Info | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack



