A UVA Law Innocence Project client walked free from prison last week after 30 years behind bars, though his name has not yet been cleared. Check out pictures and read more about his incredible story. http://bit.ly/2s3FwJ0
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@uvalawteach
A UVA Law Innocence Project client walked free from prison last week after 30 years behind bars, though his name has not yet been cleared. Check out pictures and read more about his incredible story. http://bit.ly/2s3FwJ0
The University of Virginia School of Law's Environmental and Regulatory Law Clinic worked on cases involving clean energy, global warming, water pollution and the Atlantic Coast pipeline this year. http://bit.ly/2qT08XC
A new pilot program between the University of Virginia School of Law and the UVA Darden School of Business hopes to give graduates from both schools an edge in the business world. http://bit.ly/2psui2r
UVA Law Professor Kim Ferzan works through a hypothetical case involving hearsay analysis with her Evidence class. During their analysis, students propose theories of relevance using hearsay rules under the Federal Rules of Evidence. (University of Virginia School of Law, March 30, 2017) bit.ly/2pdxeRI
UVA Law's tax faculty are stars in their field due to their range of experiences and scholarly pursuits. http://bit.ly/2p1dNHo
The Innocence Project Clinic at the University of Virginia School of Law is investigating new evidence in two high-profile criminal cases they say bolsters their clients’ innocence claims. bit.ly/2od5esK
Flipping the traditional method of teaching legal ethics, a new Professional Responsibility class at the University of Virginia School of Law asks students to play a game to see how they might respond to ethical challenges. bit.ly/2naWzaW
The city of Charlottesville’s recently retired police chief is teaching a new class on how law enforcement use-of-force cases tend to unfold. bit.ly/2kjxPOu
In his January term class Legal Practice and the Startup Company: An Inside Look — co-taught with UVA Law professor Quinn Curtis — Rob Masri discusses the characteristics of successful entrepreneurs. Besides lecturing at UVA Law, Masri maintains a private law practice in Charlottesville. He has also started several businesses, including Cardagin, a mobile marketing company that helps businesses maintain customer rewards programs. bit.ly/2kb5ASi
A University of Virginia School of Law lecturer who has been teaching the same course for more than half a century says it would be a crime to miss a year. bit.ly/2hcyKjd
UVA Law Professor J.H. "Rip" Verkerke delivers a lecture to mark his appointment as T. Munford Boyd Professor of Law and director of the Program for Employment and Labor Studies. He discusses how to "introduce a richer framework for evaluating the law of vicarious liability" that addresses the risks of employing "tort-prone" workers while minimizing the inefficiencies caused by excessive employee screening and high worker turnover. (University of Virginia School of Law, October 26, 2016) Watch: http://bit.ly/2enT1zd Listen: http://bit.ly/2fEwAYJ
The Supreme Court Litigation Clinic at the University of Virginia School of Law is celebrating 10 years of involvement in some of the nation’s most important cases. http://bit.ly/2dH5vEf
University of Virginia School of Law alumni who earned the dual-degree J.D.-M.A. in history said it paid off with a deeper understanding of the law. http://bit.ly/2ccI4iy
A new study has ranked the University of Virginia School of Law as among the most influential in the nation for cited legal scholarship that influences judicial decisions. http://bit.ly/2bzitNJ
Professor Molly Bishop Shadel, Vice Dean George Geis and Professor Toby Heytens give first-year students advice about studying and acclimating to law school life as they head into their first week of classes. (University of Virginia School of Law, Aug. 19, 2016) https://youtu.be/FD2c6vAw4KI
UVA Law professor Leslie Kendrick, who is teaching Torts, Constitutional Law II: Speech and Press, and First Amendment Theory this year, joined the faculty in 2008, just two years after she graduated from the school. Before law school, she received her master's and doctorate in English literature at the University of Oxford, where she studied as a Rhodes Scholar. After law school she clerked for Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III '72 of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and for U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter.
Where are you from originally? I’m from East Point, Kentucky, in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. The Law School does an Alternative Spring Break to Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 6 miles from where I grew up. I highly recommend it to everyone, in part because you have a high probability of running into my dad.
What's the best way for a student to develop professional relationships/increase their number of professional references while in law school? One of the best relationships students can develop is with the great people at Career Services. They are wonderful at advising students on developing relationships according to their particular needs and interests. I would trust their advice much more than my own.
When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up? When I was a kid, I wanted to be a teacher. I feel very lucky!
What have you learned from a student that still sticks with you? Students have all sorts of personal experiences that can bear on class, particularly something like torts or property. They've worked at ski resorts, driven trucks, designed things as engineers, used chainsaws and power tools, and had crazy medical experiences. They've had bad landlords, or bad co-tenants, or lease conflicts. These are experiences that influence their intuitions, and in class we try to make these intuitions into arguments. They already know a great deal that is useful for that enterprise.
What one class should every law student take? Torts. It's the ultimate common law class. Luckily everyone has to take it.
What's your favorite spot in Charlottesville? I love a lot of places in Charlottesville. Before I started teaching here, I lived here as a law student and as a judicial clerk. Micah [Schwartzman] and I got married here, and now we’re here with three small kids. The great thing about this area is that it has something for everybody, at every stage in life. But one thing I never noticed before having kids is how great the Charlottesville parks system is. I drove right by parks that we now spend a lot of time in. One of our favorites is Riverview Park. You can walk or ride your bike, you can walk your dogs, and it’s all along the river. It’s very pretty. It was sitting there all the time I was a student, and I didn’t know.
More in this series
University of Virginia School of Law faculty share advice aimed at making students' first year of law school more successful. http://bit.ly/2aHWrb5