Join the ACS Student Chapter at Berkeley Law as we host a panel on Civil Rights and Structural Racism featuring: Executive Director of the Henderson Center Savala Trepczynski, Professor Bertrall Ross, and Professor Seth Davis.
ACS Minneapolis-St.Paul: “No One Succeeds Alone”: The Critical Importance of Role Models in Empowering Women of Color to Succeed in the Legal Field
Justice Anne McKeig is the first Native American to serve on the state’s highest court and the first Native woman to serve on the supreme court of any state. Her ascendance to the Supreme Court seemed unimaginable growing up in the northern Minnesota town of Federal Dam (pop. 106) on the Leech Lake Indian Reservation. A member of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe, she grew up in the small town with her mom and dad and four brothers.
Join the ACS Minneapolis-St. Paul, Arkansas, Bay Area, Chicago, DC, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia Lawyer Chapters, the St. Louis University School of Law, the University of North Dakota School of Law, and the University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law ACS Student Chapters, the Minnesota Asian Pacific American Bar Association, the Minnesota Association of Black Lawyers, the Minnesota Hispanic Bar Association, the Somali American Bar Association, and the Minnesota Women Lawyers, Inc. as we welcome Justice McKeig who will share her experience navigating the legal profession as a Native American woman and the importance of people of color engaging in the profession. She will talk about her life’s work to improve the lives of Native children and her efforts to bridge the gap between state and tribal courts/nations. A trailblazer in her own right, she will discuss her personal experience as an example of why representative mentoring structures are imperative for women of color within the legal community.
Featuring:
Hon. Anne K. McKeig, Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
Check out Justice McKeig's recent essay, "No One Succeeds Alone," here.
1.0 hour of California CLE credit is available for this event.
For reading materials click here, find the evaluation form, certificate of attendance, and record of attendance here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Speaker bio:
Justice McKeig has committed over 25 years to serving Minnesota’s most vulnerable children and families in a number of capacities. As an assistant Hennepin County attorney and a Hennepin County District Court judge, she played a pivotal role in developing both state and national protocols and programs for child protection and Indian child welfare.
She attended St. Catherine University for her undergraduate degree, and received her law degree from Hamline University. She served as an assistant Hennepin County Attorney for 16 years, handling child protection cases and adoption matters with a specialty in cases that fall under the provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act. She then served as a district court judge in Hennepin County for almost 9 years before her nomination to the Minnesota Supreme Court.
Justice McKeig is a member of the Speakers Bureau for the Zero Abuse Project, board member of Minnesota Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome ("Proof'), Division of Indian Work, the Infinity Project, a trustee for St. Catherine University, and a member of the State/Tribal Court forum. She is also on several national committees addressing domestic violence, child abuse, and diversity.
Justice McKeig co-authored law school curriculum entitled Child Abuse and the Law, which she currently teaches at St. Thomas School of Law as an Adjunct Professor. She has spoken at numerous national conferences and conventions regarding child protection, domestic violence, family law, diversity, inclusion, tribal communities, as well as a multitude of other topics. She is a proud mother of five and a Johnny Cash super fan.
Federal Courts and Progressive Ideals: A Historical Perspective on the Current State
Historically, the federal courts have been an important safeguard of people's rights and were instrumental in enforcing and bolstering the ideals expressed in landmark legislation. Join the NYU Law ACS Student Chapter for a discussion on the valuable civil rights legacy of the federal courts, how it has slipped from that mission over the past few decades, and its current state, as well as how federal courts can and should be engines of progress and what we can do to encourage this.
Panelists:
- Brooke Coleman, Associate Dean of Research & Faculty Development, Professor of Law, Seattle University School of Law
- Deepak Gupta, Supreme court and Appellate Advocate, Founder, Gupta Wessler
- Marin Levy, Director of Program in Public Law, Professor of Law, Duke Law
- Alexander Reinert, Max Freund Professor of Litigation & Advocacy, Director of Center for Rights and Justice, Cardozo Law
To attend this event, please register here and find the zoom link here.
Federal Courts and Progressive Ideals: A Historical Perspective
Historically, the federal courts have been an important safeguard of people's rights and were instrumental in enforcing and bolstering the ideals expressed in landmark legislation. Join the NYU ACS Student Chapter to discuss the valuable civil rights legacy of the federal courts, how it has slipped from that mission over the past few decades, and its current state. We will discuss as how federal courts can and should be engines of progress and what we can do to encourage this.
Panelists:
- Brooke Coleman, Associate Dean of Research & Faculty Development, Professor of Law, Seattle University School of Law
- Deepak Gupta, Supreme court and Appellate Advocate, Founder, Gupta Wessler
- Marin Levy, Director of Program in Public Law, Professor of Law, Duke Law
- Alexander Reinert, Max Freund Professor of Litigation & Advocacy, Director of Center for Rights and Justice, Cardozo Law
To attend this event, please register here.
Equality Act
Join the Michigan State Law ACS Student Chapter for a chance to discuss the Equality Act with Professor Frank S. Ravitch and Professor Michael A. Lawrence.
To attend this event please use the zoom information listed here below:
Zoom ID: 997 9461 1969
Zoom code: 376644
Rule of Law, Misinformation, and the Digital Age
Join the UPenn Law ACS Student Chapter on Wednesday, April 14th from 5:30 to 6:30 PM EST for a special event on the “Rule of Law, Misinformation, and the Digital Age.” This event will be an informal discussion with Professor Anita L. Allen and Professor Claire Finkelstein.
We have seen the tangible, potentially deadly results that misinformation can sow over the past few years, from “fake news” and “Pizzagate” to the rise of white nationalism and the insurrection at the Capitol. The proliferation of this radicalized rhetoric has been spread over social media, with seemingly little oversight.
This event will examine the role of institutions such as the news media, social media, regulatory agencies, and legislative bodies in combating radicalization and the spread of misinformation, and explore how should society respond to this using the tools of technology, politics, and the law?
To attend this event, please click here.