UCLA Law - 2015, Vol 38

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MOMENTUM

the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. His article, “Blade Runner’s Humanism: Cinema and Representation,” Contemporary Political Theory (14:2) (2015), won the 2014 Wilson Carey McWilliams Award for Best Paper in the Politics, Literature and Film Section (American Political Science Association [APSA] 2013). Publications s

“Evils of Representation: Werewolves, Pessimism, and Realism in ‘Europa’ and ‘Melancholia,’” in a special issue of Theory & Event (Bonnie Honig and Lori Marso, eds.) (18:2) (2015).

Sharon Dolovich

Professor of Law; Faculty Director, UCLA Prison Law & Policy Program Professor Dolovich spoke on “Do Natural Life Sentences Violate the Eighth Amendment?” at the Southern California Criminal Justice Roundtable at UC Irvine in June. In May, she presented “Canons of Evasion in Constitutional Criminal Law” at the UCLA Law Summer Faculty Workshop and commented on “The Point of Mens Rea: The Case of Willful Ignorance” at a Yale Law School Criminal Justice Roundtable. In April, she spoke on “Are Natural Life Sentences ‘Cruel and Unusual Punishment’?” at the Roundtable on Life Imprisonment and Human Rights, sponsored by the International Institute of Sociology of Law in Oñati, Spain. In the fall, she convened the Prison Law and Policy Roundtable as part of UCLA Law’s Prison Law and Policy Program. Leading scholars in the field participated in the two-day workshop.

Ingrid Eagly

Professor of Law; Faculty Director, David J. Epstein Program in Public Interest Law and Policy Professor Eagly was a discussant on “Punitive Experiences of Civil Exclusion” and a panelist on “A National Study of Access to Counsel in Immigration Court” at the Law & Society Annual Meeting in Seattle in May, as well as a panel chair on “Clinical Education at the Intersection of Immigration Law and Criminal Law” at the 2015 Conference on Clinical Legal Education, held in Rancho Mirage, California. She was a panelist on “A National Study of Access to Counsel in Immigration Court” at the Michigan Journal of Law Reform Symposium on the 50th Anniversary of the Immigration & Nationality Act of 1965 in February and a speaker on “Im-

migration and Nationality Law Review” at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. Professor Eagly spoke on “Remote Adjudication in Immigration” at the RAND Institute for Civil Justice conference on courts in January. In October 2014, she was a panelist at “The Future of Immigration Enforcement: A Symposium in Honor of Professor David Martin,” sponsored by the University of Virginia’s Immigration Law Program and the Journal of Law and Politics, and she spoke on “Teaching Crimmigration Law” at the Society of American Law Teachers (SALT) Teaching Conference on “Legal Education in a Time of Change: Challenges and Opportunities.” In September, she moderated “Increasing Representation through Pro Bono, Non-profit and Other Models” at “Crisis of Counsel: Redoubling Efforts to Address Representation Gaps Facing Immigrants,” held at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. She also spoke on “Remote Adjudication in Immigration” at a University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law Faculty Workshop. Publications s

“A National Study of Access to Counsel in Immigration Court,” (with Steven Shafer), 165 University of Pennsylvania Law Review (forthcoming, 2015).

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“Remote Adjudication in Immigration,” 109 Northwestern University Law Review (forthcoming, 2015).

Kristen Eichensehr

Visiting Assistant Professor of Law Professor Eichensehr spoke on “The Current and Future Landscape of Cybersecurity Law” at the UCLA Anderson School of Management Cybersecurity Speaker Series in May. In February, she presented “Foreign Sovereigns as Friends of the Court” at the Southern California International Law Scholars Workshop, and she was a panelist on “Unresolved Issues in Cyberwarfare” at “Cyberwarfare and Killer Robots: How the Law of War Regulates New Technology,” sponsored by the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. In January, Professor Eichensehr was the moderator of “Managing Threats to Corporate Cybersecurity” as part of UCLA Law’s Program on In-House Counsel. She was the moderator for UCLA Law’s Lowell Milken Institute for Business Law and Policy panel on “Corporate Cybersecurity Challenges” in October 2014 . Publications s

“Foreign Sovereigns as Friends of the Court,” 102 Virginia Law Review (forthcoming, 2016).

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“The Cyber-Law of Nations,” 103 Georgetown Law Journal 317 (2015).

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“Cyberwar & International Law Step Zero,” 50 Texas International Law Journal 355 (2015) (Invited symposium contribution). FALL 2015 | UCLA LAW MAGAZINE 31


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