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University of Pittsburgh Law School Assistant Professor of Law Greer Donley discusses the future of civil liberties and other consequences if Roe is repealed. Georgia State University College of Law Assistant Professor of Law Anthony Michael Kreis joins Legal Face-Off to discuss the future of LGBTQ rights if Roe v. Wade is overturned. Chicago 42nd Ward […]
LILY TANG WILLIAMS, Chinese Dissident, Lawyer and Law Assistant Professor, former Candidate, Colorado State House and Senate, @Lily4Liberty Lily Tang Williams, born two years before the Chinese Cultural Revolution, grew up believing that Chairman Mao Zedong was God. What happened to make her flee China in search of a better life? Williams delves into the Great Proletariat Cultural Revolution, the Black blocks, the Red Guards, and the “Reactionary” classes Did Mao succeed in destroying Chinese traditions? Williams: If you don't institute identity politics, you can't have a cultural revolution - 1/3 of traditional Chinese relics were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution in China Following the uptick in violence caused by the Red Guards, Chairman Mao decreed that all “Urban Youths”, except for the youngest in every family be sent to the countryside to undergo rustification Threats of mass suicides were used by the sent-down youths to allow them to return to the cities in China Censorship and mass surveillance in China today - When your rights are no longer derived from God but instead from Bureaucrats, you are no longer free Williams: Xi Jinping's aspirations are not a “China Dream,” it's a Chinese Communist Party dream
Denise Howell is joined by Kate Klonick, St. John's University School of Law Assistant Professor and author of "The New Governors: The People, Rules, and Processes Governing Online Speech," to discuss how private online platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are failing and succeeding in their attempt to moderate content posted by their users and whether regulators are equipped to make laws on how these companies should moderate online speech. Host: Denise Howell Guest: Kate Klonick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/triangulation.
Denise Howell is joined by Kate Klonick, St. John's University School of Law Assistant Professor and author of "The New Governors: The People, Rules, and Processes Governing Online Speech," to discuss how private online platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are failing and succeeding in their attempt to moderate content posted by their users and whether regulators are equipped to make laws on how these companies should moderate online speech. Host: Denise Howell Guest: Kate Klonick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/triangulation.
Denise Howell is joined by Kate Klonick, St. John's University School of Law Assistant Professor and author of "The New Governors: The People, Rules, and Processes Governing Online Speech," to discuss how private online platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are failing and succeeding in their attempt to moderate content posted by their users and whether regulators are equipped to make laws on how these companies should moderate online speech. Host: Denise Howell Guest: Kate Klonick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/triangulation.
Denise Howell is joined by Kate Klonick, St. John's University School of Law Assistant Professor and author of "The New Governors: The People, Rules, and Processes Governing Online Speech," to discuss how private online platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube are failing and succeeding in their attempt to moderate content posted by their users and whether regulators are equipped to make laws on how these companies should moderate online speech. Host: Denise Howell Guest: Kate Klonick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/triangulation.
The increased media coverage of police shootings has coincided with the growing prominence of conversations about race and law enforcement. In this episode of Planet Lex, host Daniel Rodriguez speaks with Northwestern Pritzker School of Law Assistant Professor of Law Destiny Peery about implicit bias, tensions between the police and the communities they serve, and how perceptions of race impact the legal system. Destiny Peery is an Assistant Professor of Law at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law. Her teaching and research interests focus on law and psychology perspectives on criminal law, discrimination law, the use of social science as evidence, and race and law.