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TaxProf Blog: The 50 Most Downloaded U.S. Tax Law Professors Of 2023
Prof. Omri Marian is listed No. 28, Prof. Joshua Blank is listed No. 40, and Prof. Victor Fleischer is listed No. 47.
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Hidden Brain: Are Your Memories Real?
Prof. Elizabeth Loftus joins the podcast to discuss the malleability of memory – what we remember, and what we think we remember.
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Financial Times: ICJ’s Israel judgment seeks to restore rule of law to a brutal conflict
Prof. David Kaye says: “For Israel the court’s order presents it with a dilemma — and the dilemma is how does it convey to the world that it is acting consistently with international law?”
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Foreign Affairs: The ICJ Ruling’s Hidden Diplomacy
Prof. David Kaye pens an op-ed in Foreign Affairs.
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New Yorker: Can an American Hold the United Arab Emirates Responsible for a Smear Campaign?
Prof. David Kaye says: ” Sovereign immunity can be a serious bar to going after bad state behavior.”
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WIRED: Notorious Spyware Maker NSO Group Is Quietly Plotting a Comeback
Prof. David Kaye, former United Nations special rapporteur says: “It’s not a transparency report in any meaningful way.”
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TaxProf Blog: Amorality In The Lawyering Skills Classroom
Prof. Ezra Ross’ paper explores one facet of the “hidden curriculum” in 1L Lawyering Skills courses.
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Law.com: How Schools Fared on California’s July 2023 Bar Exam
UCI Law was highlighted on Law.com, showcasing an 87% bar pass rate among first-time takers in the July 2023 test.
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The Christian Science Monitor: Growing like a weed: Taking stock 10 years after legalization began
Prof. Bob Solomon contends that the legalization of marijuana does not signify the eradication of illicit cannabis activities, drawing a parallel to the enduring legacy of alcohol prohibition.
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National Taxpayer Advocate: Annual Report to Congress 2023
Prof. Joshua Blank’s article, The Inequity of Informal Guidance, 75 Vand. L. Rev. 1093 (2022) (co-authored with Leigh Osofsky) was cited on page 42 in the annual report to Congress.
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The Atlantic: Why Israel Is Taking the Genocide Case Seriously
Prof. David Kaye comments, “No matter how the case turns out, some will argue that what the court says or does simply doesn’t matter. That would be a misreading of the moment.”
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The Sociological Review: Uncommon Sense
LISTEN: Prof. Swethaa Ballakrishnen joins the podcast to discuss rules and whether or not “neutrality” embedded in ideas of law can be dangerous.
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Voice of OC: A Hollywood Actor’s Fatal Police Call, then UC Irvine Law Students Stepped in
UCI Law students in the Civil Rights Litigation Clinic are highlighted in their role requesting that the South Pasadena police release evidence.
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Daily Journal: The incarcerated deserve a second look*
Prof. Katie Tinto writes a column in the Daily Journal with Criminal Justice Clinic client, arguing prisoners deserve a second chance.
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preLaw Magazine: Winter 2024 Issue
UCI Law was ranked No. 1 for Asian students, No. 9 for Hispanic students, and No. 25 for Black students in preLaw magazine’s Winter 2024 issue. The issue also highlighted the UCI Law and UCI School of Humanities 3+3 Program.
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CoinTelegraph: A taxing obligation: Is crypto reporting ‘impossible’ under US law?
Prof. Omri Marian comments on crypto taxation: “If people do not more widely adopt crypto in the U.S., it has nothing to do with tax [treatment].”
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Law.com: Women in Academic Leadership Still Face Systemic Barriers
Prof. Swethaa Ballakrishnen’s 2023 paper presenting intersectional data on race and gender, “Law School as Straight Space,” was highlighted in Law.com.
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Los Angeles Press: Lawsuit reveals details of LASD deputy shooting off colleague’s tattoo
Prof. Susan E. Seager commented in Los Angeles Press on a lawsuit filed by Press Freedom Project client Knock LA to obtain internal investigatory files from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
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Marketplace: Labor Department wants to get more gig workers on company payrolls
Prof. Veena Dubal says ride-hailing and delivery apps have changed the conversation around who counts as an independent contractor and whether companies are exploiting that distinction.
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The Economist: How art is used against artists, like Young Thug, in court
Prof. Jack Lerner says that before rappers picked up their microphones, lyrics were rarely used as evidence in court, so why is rap music treated differently?