Alumni Clerkship Panel

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

To learn more about types of judicial clerkships available and the unique experience of clerking, please join our panel of distinguished UNC Law alumni who served as federal and state ...

Faculty Speaker Series: Monica C. Bell

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

Monica C. Bell, Yale Law School Criminal justice; welfare law; housing, race and the law; qualitative research methods; and law and sociology.

Defending Farmworker Rights in North Carolina

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

Classroom 5046 This will be a panel discussion with 3 speakers focusing on farmworker issues in North Carolina. It will be open to the public. Food will be served to ...

Faculty Speaker Series: Marie-Amélie George

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

Marie-Amélie George, Wake Forest University School of Law LGBTQ rights; civil procedure and family law; sexuality and gender law; how and why laws have changed, as well as the ways ...

Consumer Law and Consumer Credit Symposium

The Consumer Law and Consumer Credit Symposium is held at the Festival of Legal Learning and offers courses on a variety of issues related to the representation of consumers, with ...

Faculty Speaker Series: Kerrel Murray

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

Kerrel Murray, UNC School of Law Property law; race and the law; law and democracy; administrative law; constitutional law.

Witt Professionalism Roundtable

Carolina Club

Hosted by the Office of Advancement, the invitation-only Witt Professionalism Roundtable offers Carolina Law guests the unique opportunity to discuss ethical issues with seasoned attorneys, judges, and faculty members. Each ...

Faculty Speaker Series: Nirej Sekhon

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall 160 Ridge Road, CB #3380, Chapel Hill

Nirej Sekhon, Georgia State University College of Law Relationships between criminal procedure, criminalization, and political culture. Evaluating criminal justice norms and institutions through the lenses of democracy and equality theory.