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Foohey presents at NACTT Annual Seminar
Professor Pamela Foohey presented as part of the How hard to squeeze debtors? Getting the best results for creditors while balancing benefits to debtors panel at the National Association of Chapter 13 Trustee\u27s Annual Seminar during July
Labor Strife and Peace
This Article examines a significant yet underexplored feature in the decline of worker power: The gradual erosion of protections under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) for workplace protest by rank-and-file, nonunion workers. Rather than protect their protest as necessary to galvanize workplace solidarity and organizing, current labor doctrine offers employers various opportunities to fire them. Focusing on nonunion workers standing up to management, this Article offers three key insights into U.S. labor law. First, it draws on social movements to confirm strife’s vital but uneasy role in workplace solidarity. Second, it unearths the NLRA’s original intention to protect the co-constitutive roles of strife and industrial peace. The New Dealers viewed conflict as a short-term step toward achieving collective bargaining’s peaceful dispute resolution. Third, it shows how the Supreme Court and National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) misconstrue the NLRA’s industrial peace objective as both the means and the ends of labor relations, to the detriment of strife and the solidarity it generates. This Article calls for greater doctrinal and statutory protections for nonunion workers engaged in workplace protest while clarifying when protests cross the line
Orford featured in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Assistant Professor Adam D. Orford was featured in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution regarding the operations of the Greenfuels Energy company. The article titled String of environmental violations raises concerns about firm linked to Okefenokee mine project was written by Dylan Jackson and Drew Khan and was published 7/15/24
Redmon featured in The Current
Clinical Assistant Professor & Prosecutorial Justice Program Director Melissa D. Redmon was featured in The Current regarding the Jackie Johnson case. The article titled ‘Judge’s hands are tied’: Jackie Johnson case turns 3 years old with no trial date set was written by Jake Shore and published 8/28/24
Phillips-Sawyer featured on BBC News
Wilson Associate Professor in Business Law Laura Phillips-Sawyer was featured on BBC News regarding Google\u27s online advertisement litigation. The article titled Google\u27s lucrative ad tech business goes on trial was written by Lily Jamali and published 9/8/24. The article has been republished by other media outlets
Ringhand\u27s book reviewed in Political Science Quarterly
Hosch Professor & Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor Lori A. Ringhand\u27s book Supreme Bias: Gender and Race in U.S. Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings (Stanford University Press, 2023) (with C.L. Boyd and P.M. Collins) was reviewed by Kirsten Widner in Political Science Quarterly. The review was published 9/4/24
Rodrigues featured on Bloomberg
Associate Dean, University Professor & Kilpatrick Chair of Corporate Finance and Securities Law Usha Rodrigues was featured on Bloomberg regarding the buying and selling of stock shares. The article titled Trump can cash in his slumping stock now. But he promised not to was written by Bailey Lipschultz and published 9/19/24. The article was republished by other media outlets
Ringhand featured in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Hosch Professor & Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor Lori A. Ringhand was featured in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution regarding the need for public trust in election outcomes. The article titled Challenging Georgia elections is harder than in 2020 – but some may try was written by Mark Niesse and David Wickert and was published 10/18/24
Hellerstein featured in the Savannah Morning New
Distinguished Research Professor & Shackelford Distinguished Professor in Taxation Law Emeritus Walter Hellerstein was featured in the Savannah Morning News regarding state ballot measures on taxation. The article titled “What to know about this year’s ballot measures on tax courts, property exemptions” was written by Maya Homan and published 10/18/24. The article was republished by other media outlets
Amann publishes article in American Society of International Law publication
Regents\u27 Professor of International Law & Woodruff Chair in International Law Diane Marie Amann published “Children and the ICC Arrest Warrant Against the President and Children’s Rights Commissioner of Russia” as part of “Late-Breaking Panel: ICC Arrest Warrants: Impunity in Check?” in 117 American Society of International Law Proceedings 328 (2024)