Historicizing and Protecting Birthright Citizenship

Please join us for a panel on protecting birthright citizenship. Our panel will include Shane Ellison, Clinical Professor of Law and Supervising Attorney of the Immigrant Rights Clinic here at Duke, Amanda Frost, Professor of Law at UVA and Director of the Immigration, Migration, and Human Rights program, and Hannah Steinberg, an attorney with the ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project working on cases challenging Trump's executive order attempting to end birthright citizenship for certain groups. This event will examine the legal underpinnings of birthright citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment, its historical context, and its critical role in fostering inclusion and equality in the United States.

ACS at Boston University School of Law Presents… First Things First: A Discussion on the First Amendment, Free Speech at Universities, & the Rule of Law

The rights protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution are essential for the proper functioning of a responsive democracy. Too frequently, the First Amendment’s core freedoms are ignored or weaponized to suit the political and policy priorities of those in power. The U.S. Supreme Court inconsistently applies longstanding First Amendment jurisprudence, ignoring precedents they deem inconvenient. The Administration targets those whose speech it disfavors, from law firms to private individuals. State and local governments are quick to criminalize protected protest activity to stifle dissent and chill social movements. These actions raise important questions as to whether our legal and political systems can safeguard First Amendment rights for all, or whether skewed and selective application of these freedoms will become the norm. Join ACS at Boston University School of Law for a discussion on Free Speech at Universities with Professor Brian Soucek, Professor of Constitutional Law from UC Davis School of Law. Professor Soucek will speak about freedom of speech in the university and the tension between professors' speech rights and students' equality rights. A noteworthy and topical example is the context of trans students' choice of honorifics and pronouns.

This event is not open to the public.

Beyond The Doctrine: Intellectual Property as Labor Law

Join ACS for a Beyond the Doctrine talk with Professor Xiyin Tang, a series that explores open questions within current legal doctrine.

Professor Tang will discuss how intellectual property law has traditionally centered creative outputs rather than creators, and how that doctrinal focus shapes bargaining power, compensation, and firm concentration in creative markets. Drawing on her article Intellectual Property as Labor Law, she explores what it would mean to understand IP as allocating rights between workers and firms, much like labor law, and how this perspective brings into focus open questions in IP doctrine, particularly as generative AI alters the conditions of creative production.