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Throughout the year, Tulane Law School will be posting happenings on or around campus.

 

About TLS Blog

Sometimes, it is all about diversity; especially this Monday.

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Mondays are usually typical days for most people. Not around Tulane Law School, and not for me. I can always count on updates, projects, and exciting news. The day began with the great news that one of our second-year students, Juan Bernal, was elected Regional Director for the South Atlantic region at this year's National Latina/o Law Student Association (NLLSA) Conference. Mr. Bernal is a current member of La Alianza del Derecho here at Tulane Law School. He will now represent the interests of Latina/o law students from the South Atlantic region at NLLSA. La Alianza, under the leadership of its current president, Ms. Ana Rivera, will be quite busy this academic year. They are slated to help host the upcoming spring Moot Court competition for the Hispanic National Bar Association (HNBA) at Tulane Law School, while simultaneously present a proposal to host a future NLLSA conference here at Tulane as well.

Later in the morning I received more wonderful news. Ms. Joy Green, a third-year law student at Tulane, received a financial scholarship from the Louisiana Black Judges Association. Ms. Green accepted the award at a special luncheon held in New Orleans, LA. I'm particularly proud of Ms. Green and her well earned award; positive recognition by judges is always a remarkable accomplishment.

The day culminated with a terrific public lecture by Anita L. Allen, Deputy Dean and Henry R. Silverman Professor of Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Dean Allen discussed the topic "Veiled Women in the American Courtroom: Is the Niqab a Barrier to Justice?" Prior to her lecture, Dean Allen also presented a thought provoking lecture to the faculty about privacy rights and tort remedies -or lack thereof- for LGBT plaintiffs.

Overall, the day was full of excitement and thought provoking issues related to diversity and the law. Let's see what next Monday brings.


Carlos Dávila-Caballero
Assistant Dean for Career Development
& Diversity Initiatives

New Orleans is Home to All Phases of the Judiciary

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As the Assistant Director at the Career Development Office, I spend a majority of my time assisting Tulane students and alumni in their quest for judicial clerkships and internships.  I have been working with many of our current third-year students as they prepare for interviews with federal and state court judges for clerkships following graduation. We are fortunate at Tulane to have our alumni working as judges and law clerks in courts throughout the country, but I am also reminded of what a great city New Orleans is to observe the judicial process.  New Orleans is home to the US District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, which houses both the federal district and bankrupcty courts.  The US Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals is also located in downtown New Orleans, and the court hears appeals from federal district courts throughout Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi.  Right near the federal courts in the historic French Quarter is the Louisiana Supreme Court, and there are state appellate and trial courts throughout the metro area.  With hot-button issues like the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and various multi-district litigation cases argued every day, the courts in Southeast Louisiana are always busy shaping judicial precedent.  Tulane students are encouraged to witness our judicial process at work by observing arguments and trials as they happen, volunteering as summer judicial interns or receiving class credit through the Law School's judicial externship program.  The city is also lucky to welcome judges from across the country to various conventions, like the upcoming National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges and the Association of Administrative Law Judges Education conferences, both happening in New Orleans in October 2010.  Our stellar court system is just another reason why New Orleans is a great place to be a law student, and why Tulane is fortunate to be located in such a wonderful city.
 
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New Orleans, LA  70118
tel 504.865.5930
fax 504.865.6710

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