Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
Haub Law News
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StudentsOctober 11, 2024
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In the Media
Latest News
Alumnus Eric Paulk is making strides in the fight for equality in his own home state of Georgia and making headlines, too, as one of the state’s Top 40 Leaders Under 40.
On Tuesday, February 8, 2022, with over 300 people registered, Roger Martella virtually delivered the 22nd annual Gilbert and Sarah Kerlin Lecture on Environmental Law. Mr. Martella is the Chief Sustainability Officer for GE, an American multinational conglomerate among the largest industrial companies in the U.S. The topic of his lecture was “This Decade of Action: How Corporate Social Responsibility Will Define the 2020s as the Most Historic Period of Environmental Progress.”
“Inconceivable!” Should Justice Kavanaugh recuse in West Virginia v. EPA II?
Professor Kuh Of Pace Environmental Law breaks down the “messy complications”
Jill Gross, a professor at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University who has studied arbitration, said that Finra has generally bent ...
Certified paralegal. Vice President of the Black Law Students Association. Third year law student. Learn more about Epiphanie Reddick '22 in this Q+A.
Randolph M. McLaughlin, a professor at Pace University's Haub School of Law, took a rosier view of the complaint's prospects.
Emilia Rodriguez, a volunteer attorney for Pace Women’s Justice Center (PWJC), was awarded the Jonathan Lippman Pro Bono Award by the New York State Bar Association (NYSBA). The award recognizes the dedication of senior attorneys who generously use their legal knowledge and experience to provide pro bono assistance in New York to underserved members of the community.
Haub Law was recognized by the White House in a virtual event commending 99 law schools from across the country for their efforts to address the housing and eviction crisis.
Haub Law was recognized by the White House in a virtual event that took place on Friday commending 99 law schools from across the country for their efforts to address the housing and eviction crisis.
Katrina Fischer Kuh, a professor at Pace Law School, said Justice Breyer's dissent, which was joined by the other three members of the court's liberal wing, was notable for showcasing his well-known habit for using hypotheticals to probe issues and make points. "Justice Breyer invites readers to apply the majority's reasoning to a 'hypothetical statute' and later posits myriad hypothetical situations, including that of a landowner downstream from a dam, to suggest flaws in the majority's reasoning," Kuh said.
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