|
November 24, 2009
(*CHANGE OF DATE)
Gender Identity and the Constitution
David B. Cruz, Visiting Scholar, The Williams Institute,
Professor, USC Gould School of Law
Works-in-Progress Series
UCLA School of Law, Room 2326
12:20 - 1:40 pm
December 1, 2009
World AIDS Day 2009: Public
Health, Human Rights, and HIV/AIDS
UCLA School of Law
Room 1430
12:20-1:40 pm
In observation of World AIDS Day, the Williams Institute
is hosting panel on current developments in HIV/AIDS law
and public policy. Topics discussed will include
HIV/AIDS policy under the Obama administration, the
impact of state budget cuts on HIV/AIDS prevention and
services in Los Angeles County and California, and HIV
treatment and prevention in the California prison
system.
Click here
for more information.
December 4, 2009
Gay Rights and Religious Liberty Conference
*By Invitation Only
Princeton University
Co-sponsored by:
James Madison Program in American Ideals and
Institutions
December 17, 2009
The Higher Cost of Being Gay: Life, Death, and
Taxes
Urban Institute
Washington, DC
12:00 to 1:30 pm
Click here for more information.
Co-sponsored by Tax Policy Center with funding
for study by Merrill Lynch.
January 30, 2010
6th Annual Williams Institute Moot
Court Competition, Preliminary Rounds
UCLA School of Law
Teams from ABA-accredited law schools across the United
States will gather at UCLA School of Law to compete.
Participants will address the question of religious
liberty and LGBT Rights.
Click
here for more information.
Co-sponsored by the UCLA Law Moot Court Executive
Board
February 18, 2010
A Primer on Empirical Research on
LGBT Issues and Populations
By Application Only
Presented annually by the Williams Institute's M.V.
Lee Badgett and Gary J. Gates, this training is directed
at graduate students who are or will be conducting
empirical research on sexual orientation. The two-day
workshop provides participants with the skills to
identify the principal ways in which sexual orientation
is identified on surveys; critically examine data that
include identification of sexual orientation; and
identify and access existing empirical data, including
U.S. Census data, that permit the identification of
sexual orientation. Susan Cochran, professor of
Epidemiology, UCLA School of Public Health will also be
presenting.
For more information or to apply, click
here.
February 19-20, 2010
9th Annual Update: Sexuality and Gender Law:
Assessing the Field, Envisioning the Future
Co-sponsored by UCLA Law Review
Both in scholarship and
in judicial opinions, issues related to sexuality and
gender constitute one of the most dynamic and vibrant
fields in American law. Yet there has been no sustained
examination or critique of the field itself and of its
importance to constitutional theory more generally. This
conference will bring together leading scholars from
both inside and outside the field to reflect on how
sexuality and gender has changed the law, and how the
field itself is likely to change. The program will
include the Final Round of the Annual Williams Institute
Moot court competition.
March 12-13, 2010
4th Annual CRS Symposium & Reunion:
Intersectionality: Challenging Theory, Reframing
Politics, Transforming Movements
Presented by UCLA Law Critical Race Studies
Program
UCLA School of Law
Since the publication of Kimberlé Crenshaw's formative
articles - Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race &
Sex (1989), and Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality,
Identity Politics & Violence Against Women of Color
(1994) - the concept of intersectionality has traversed
more than a dozen academic disciplines and transnational
and popular political discourse, generated multiple
conferences, monographs, and anthologies, and animated
hundreds of articles and essays. In the twenty years
since Crenshaw introduced intersectionality, critiques
of identity politics and multiculturalism and, more
recently, claims of a "post-racial" era have blossomed.
In 2010, we will re-visit the origins of
intersectionality as a theoretical frame and site of
legal interventions and consider its still unfolding
potential for unmasking subordination and provoking
social change.
Click
here for information about submitting papers,
registration fees, and conference logistics.
Presenting Co-sponsor: The Williams Institute
|