LEGAL HISTORY COLLOQUIUM
Schedule for Spring Semester 2003
Attached is the spring schedule for the Legal History Colloquium, which meets every Wednesday from 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. in Vanderbilt Hall, Room 202. Papers are distributed the week before they are discussed (and are also available in Room 308) and need to be read in advance of any session, since there is never any presentation.
January 15 -- Larry D. Kramer, Professor of Law, NYU, The People Themselves: Popular Constitutionalism and Judicial Review (chapters 1-4)
January 22 -- Larry D. Kramer, Professor of Law, NYU, The People Themselves: Popular Constitutionalism and Judicial Review (chapters 5-8)
January 29 -- Robert J. Kaczorowski, Professor of Law, Fordham University, The Rehnquist Court and Congress's Power to Enforce Fourteenth Amendment Rights: The History of Federal Civil Remedies the Court Overlooked
February 5 -- William E. Nelson, Professor of Law, NYU, Grutter v. Bollinger: A Celebration of Marbury's 200th Anniversary?
February 12 -- James C. Oldham, Professor of Law, Georgetown University, Determining Damages: The Seventh Amendment, the Writ of Inquiry, and Punitive Awards
February 19 -- Edward A. Purcell, Professor of Law, New York Law School, The Courts, Federalism, and the Federal Constitution, 1920-2000
February 26 -- Curtis A. Bradley, Professor of Law, University of Virginia, and Martin S. Flaherty, Professor of Law, Fordham University, Executive Authority and Constitutional Competition in Foreign Affairs
March 5 -- Eric Tepper, Law Student, NYU, The Evolution of Wilsonianism
March 12 -- Assaf Likhovski, Golieb Fellow, NYU, Helvering v. Gregory and the History of Tax Avoidance Adjudication
March 19 -- NYU Spring Recess - no Colloquium session
March 26 -- Nathan Newman, Golieb Fellow, NYU, The Subversion of the Enlightenment: The Fundamentalist Challenge to Public Schools
April 2 -- Lucy Salyer, Professor of History, University of New Hampshire, Pledging Allegiance: American Naturalization Policy in the early 20th century
April 9 -- Bernard K. Freamon, Professor of Law, Seton Hall University, The Origins of the Anti-Segregation Clause in the New Jersey Constitution
April 16 -- Allegra Hogan, Golieb Fellow, NYU, The New England Way: Pre-Trial Criminal Procedure in Early Connecticut
April 23 -- Felice Batlan, History Graduate Student, NYU, New York's Epidemics of 1892: Law, Gender, and Discourses of Disease
April 30 -- Walter Johnson, Professor of History, NYU, The Land Pirate, the Lynch Mob, and the Spatial Reorganization of Slavery: Life and Death on the Cotton Frontier
May 7 -- Anne M. Kornhauser,
Golieb Fellow, NYU, The Rule of Law, Democracy, and the Postwar Critique
of the Administrative State