To facilitate conversation and promote ACS on campus for Constitution Day I'd like to table in the atrium with coffee and donuts and give interested students an ACS pocked constitution.
WashU Law: Constitution Day - SCOTUS Review
Please join us in celebrating Constitution Day with a panel-style SCOTUS Review featuring Professors Greg Magarian, Susan Appleton, Andrea Katz, Karen Tokarz, and other legal scholars.
This panel will break down the Court’s key rulings on topics ranging from criminal law and civil rights to administrative power and reproductive freedom.
Whether you closely follow the Court or simply want to better understand how these decisions shape the legal and political landscape, this event will offer valuable insights into the trends influencing constitutional law today.
Lunch will be served!
William & Mary Supreme Court Review
In anticipation of the Institute of Bill of Rights Law's annual Supreme Court Preview at William & Mary Law School, the ACS Student Chapter at William & Mary will be hosting a Supreme Court Review. The event will be a panel discussion featuring three of William & Mary's distinguished faculty members: Professor Neal Devins, Professor Aaron-Andrew P. Bruhl, and Professor Jonathan H.Adler. The panel will discuss some of the most important cases to come out of the last term, as well as the Trump administration's use of the Emergency (Shadow) Docket early in his second term.
Constitution Day
Swing by B1 for a donut and a pocket constitution to celebrate Constitution Day!
Constitution Day 2025--The Value of an Independent Judiciary
Four law professors (Raff Donelson, Hal Krent, Mark Rosen and Carolyn Shapiro) from Chicago-Kent College of Law discussed the importance of independent courts in protecting constitutional principles.
Constitution Day Celebration: Living Under Two Constitutions: Why? And How Does It Work?
Upper Seven Law, the Friends of the Montana Constitution, and Model United Nations presents:
Living Under Two Constitutions: Why? And How Does It Work?
Join convention Delegate Mae Nan Ellingson, former Governor Marc Racicot, UM Law Professor Constance Van Kley, and Upper Seven Law's Executive Director Rylee Sommers-Flanagan for an engaging discussion about the purpose and power of constitutions, how the state and federal constitutions interact, and why the Montana Constitution serves as a landmark constitution for democratic republics across the nation and the world.