Judges and the Press: Why Access Matters

Online - Zoom

75 minutes Virtual Join Berkeley Judicial Institute and NPR’s Carrie Johnson as we talk to Judge Joshua Wolson, Washington Post’s James McLaughlin and Bowman and Brooke’s Jodi Munn Schebel about how media access issues play out in the courts. What are the competing concerns? 

Lunch & Learn: What Does the Recent Supreme Court Ruling on the Chevron Doctrine Mean for Climate and Energy Policy?

Virtual (Zoom)

In one of its final decisions of this term, the Supreme Court voted 6-3 to overturn the Chevron Doctrine. The Chevron Doctrine, established forty years ago, stated that courts must defer to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes. Legally, the Chevron Doctrine has been critically important and has been cited in thousands of court decisions, […]

Sustaining Your Professional Relationships

132 Law Building

At our networking presentation on May 30, we talked about building your network through attending events as well as identifying and reaching out to people who do the kind of […]

The Senate’s AI Roadmap: Where Will It Take Us?

Online - B-CLE

B-CLE Webcast Register | Speaker Bios and Contact Information Topical questions to speakers can be sent via their contact information or LinkedIn profiles hyperlinked within the slide deck. After testimony from 150 experts, the Bipartisan Senate Working Group released its Roadmap for AI policy and governance. Will it be influential? And where will it take […]

Law & Literature, Session 1: Albert Camus, The Fall

Online - Zoom

Session 1: Albert Camus | The Fall Virtual/Zoom Berkeley Judicial Institute's virtual law and literature series is smart, engaging, and fun; consider joining us as we introduce our virtual 2024-25 law and literature series. Join for one session or for all six! Using great works as text, these programs provide participants the opportunity to reflect on […]

Reducing Agricultural Methane Emissions from Rice and Manure

Virtual (Zoom)

Methane is responsible for approximately 20 - 30 percent of current global warming, and methane emissions continue to increase worldwide. In the U.S. and China, agriculture is a major source of methane emissions. For both nations, one potential shared avenue for reducing methane is through more sustainable agricultural practices. The U.S. and China are now […]

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