Please note that all CLE credits for Reunion Panels will be transitional, professional practice with the exception of Panel II, which will offer two transitional, ethics credits. In an effort to conserve resources, we will have a very limited supply of printed CLE materials at Reunion available by request, first-come, first-serve.
Panel I: The Middle East after the Arab Spring
The following links lead to websites outside of the NYU School of Law website.
Egypt's Constitution Swings Into Action - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (March 2013)
Islam in Egypt's New Constitution - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (December 2012)
Egypt's Constiution Conundrum - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (December 2012)
Egypt Tries to Reconstitue Itself - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (September 2012)
Cairo's Judicial Coup - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (June 2012)
Egypt's Judges in a Revolutionary Age - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (February 2012)
Panel II: Keeing Them Honest-- In Government and Business
The following CLE materials have been obtained from Thomson Reuters WestLaw® with permissions from Harvard Law Review, William & Mary Business Law Review, and Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics.
Congress Expands Incentives for Whistleblowers to Report Suspected Violations to the SEC - Harvard Law Review, May 2011 (PDF)
Does Sarbanes-Oxley Protect Whistleblowers? - William & Mary Business Law Review, April 2010 (PDF)
Panel III: Money and Democracy: Campaign Finance Reform Today
On Political Corruption - Harvard Law Review, 2010 (PDF)
Panel IV: Is Tax Reform Possible?
Tax Reform is Very Much Alive and Doable - The Wall Street Journal (April 2013)
1986-Style Tax Reform: A Good Idea Whose Time Has Passed - Tax Notes (May 2011)
