News
- Congratulations to the 176 Colorado Law students receiving their JD, LLM, and MSL degrees. Meet just a few of our talented, motivated, and innovative graduates.
- The University of Colorado Law School’s pre-tenure faculty are making waves, placing articles in top law journals and national publications, organizing workshops and conferences on cross-cutting issues, and presenting their research and scholarship at the local, national, and international levels.
- The percentage of 2018 graduates employed in long-term, full-time, non-school funded jobs for which bar passage was required or a JD degree was an advantage 10 months after graduation is the highest of any class in 11 years.
- The American Association of Law Libraries Technical Services Special Interest Section Awards Committee has awarded Karen Selden, metadata services librarian and interim head of technical services at the William A. Wise Law Library, with its 2019 Renee D. Chapman Memorial Award for Outstanding Contributions in Technical Services Law Librarianship.
- The Peggy Browning Fund has selected 2L Amanda Klitzke ('20) to serve as a 2019 fellow. She will receive a stipend to pursue a 10-week summer fellowship at the International Union of Electronic, Electrical, Salaried, Machine and Furniture Workers-Communications Workers of America (IUE-CWA) in Dayton, Ohio.
- Harry Surden and Margot Kaminski, associate professors at the University of Colorado Law School, are leaders in exploring the future of AI and how technologies using computer-based decision making offer major prospects for breakthroughs in the law—and how those decisions are regulated. They are organizing a May 3 conference titled "Explainable Artificial Intelligence: Can We Hold Machines Accountable?"
- Earlier this month, the University of Colorado Law School’s Technology Law and Policy Clinic presented at the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights—the third time they've done so.
- A new white paper authored by Sustainable Community Development Clinic student-attorneys Daniel Franz ('20) and Fripp Prioleau ('20), under the supervision of Professor Deborah Cantrell, seeks to understand the roadblocks to solar development on the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ’s campus and serve as a roadmap to guide future proponents of solar on campus.
- In an April 18 talk at Colorado Law, Yale Law School's Harold Hongju Koh analyzed the state of international law under the Trump administration.
- This spring break, 13 students in Professors Ann England and Colene Robinson’s Comparative Criminal Law class looked at the law through a different lens in Buenos Aires, Argentina.