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Note
on Accommodations:
Each
registratant should make their own hotel reservations.
A block
of rooms has been set aside at the DoubleTree Hotel in Westwood.
Please reserve your room by mentioning the Equal Justice Society
Conference to obtain a group rate of $149 per night.
Contact
Information
DoubleTree Hotel Reservations
(310) 475 8711 or (800) 472 8556
www.doubletreelawestwood.com
The
special group rate is available only by calling the reservation
numbers above. Booking your room online will not provide you with
the special rate.
For
other accommodations near the campus, please visit
this page.
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National
Conference First of Its Kind to Examine
Corporate Law and Progressive Social Movements
Conference
Sponsored by the Equal Justice Society and
the Center on Corporations, Law & Society at Seattle University
School of Law
SAN
FRANCISCO (February 25, 2005; Updated March 2, 2005) - The Equal
Justice Society and the Center on Corporations, Law & Society
at Seattle University School of Law today announced that their
2005 national conference, "New Strategies for Justice: Linking
Corporate Law with Progressive Social Movements," will take
place April 7-9 at the UCLA School of Law.
This
conference will explore the evolution of corporate influence in
the United States, as well as new intellectual, political, private
sector and grassroots trends that are emerging to address how
corporations can support public interest values of justice and
equality. Through understanding the mechanisms driving corporate
interests today, progressives can supplement issue-specific remedies
with new strategies that can address root causes of injustice.
The
following speakers, representing a wide cross-section of professional
sectors and issues, are confirmed for the conference:
- Debi
Barker, Executive Director, International Forum on Globalization
- Itzel
D. Berrío, Deputy General Counsel, Greenlining Institute
- John
Bonifaz, General Counsel, National Voting Rights Institute
- Richard
Brooks, Professor of Law, Yale Law School
- James
Brosnahan, Senior Counsel, Morrison & Foerster
- Devon
Carbado, Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law
- Lee
Cokorinos, Executive Director, Capacity Development Group
- Jamie
Court, President, Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights
- Charles
Cray, Director, Center for Corporate Policy
- Scott
Cummings, Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law
- Dana
Gold, Director, Center on Corporations Law and Society, Seattle
University School of Law
- Kent
Greenfield, Professor of Law, Boston College School of Law
- Cheryl
Harris, Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law
- Thomas
Joo, Professor of Law, UC Davis School of Law
- Jeff
Milchen, Executive Director, ReclaimDemocracy.org
- Shaffy
Moeel, Student, UCLA School of Law
- Eva
Paterson, President, Equal Justice Society
- Katherine
Stone, Professor of Law, UCLA, School of Law
- Julie
Su, Attorney, Asian Pacific American Legal Center
- Kellye
Testy, Dean, Seattle University School of Law; Faculty Director,
Center for Corporations, Law and Society
- Eric
Yamamoto, Professor of Law, University of Hawai'i Law School
- Kimberly
West-Faulcon, Western Regional Director and Counsel, NAACP Legal
Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.
- Adam
Winkler, Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law
"The
corporation has become the dominant institution of our time and
the evolution of corporate law principles has played a significant
role in the expansion of corporate power," said Eva Paterson,
president of the Equal Justice Society. "In many cases that
expansion endangers the environment, threatens human health and
safety, increases wealth disparities both nationally and globally,
and diminishes political and workplace democracy."
"In
response to these social and economic justice concerns, progressives
have focused their efforts on addressing specific problems, such
as racial equality, environmental protection, human rights, living
wages, health care, safe workplaces, and peace and security,"
said Dana Gold director of the Center on Corporations Law and
Society at Seattle University School of Law. "These concerns
have often splintered progressives as they attempt to stem erosion
of fundamental principles of justice without fully appreciating
a common factor-the corporation and its legal framework-that runs
through all of these issues."
Registration
for the conference is now open online: http://conf2005.equaljusticesociety.net.
The website also provides information on how to register by phone
or by fax. Registration fees are $75 for public interest and nonprofit
sector and $175 for private sector. A limited number of slots
are available to students for free, with an option to purchase
meals for the entire conference at $25. The tentative conference
program is available on the website.
The
Equal Justice Society certifies that this activity has been approved
for 11.75 MCLE credits by the State Bar of California. This program
has also been approved by the Washington State Bar Association
for 11.5 general CLE credits.
For
more information on the conference, contact Equal Justice Society
project associate Rico Oyola at (415) 288-8700 or at royola@equaljusticesociety.org.
About
the Equal Justice Society
The Equal Justice Society is a national organization of scholars,
advocates and concerned individuals advancing innovative legal
strategies and public policy for enduring social change. We generate
critical analysis on issues of race and social justice through
research, public education and bringing together individuals from
diverse backgrounds and disciplines. Our goal is to reshape jurisprudence
to ensure that the rights of all are expanded, rather than diminished,
by our courts and policy makers.
About
the Center on Corporations, Law & Society at Seattle University
School of Law
The Center on Corporations, Law & Society at Seattle University
School of Law conducts and promotes interdisciplinary scholarship
and dialogue on issues related to the roles and obligations of
corporations in an increasingly privatized and interdependent
global society. In addition to serving as a platform for enhanced
scholarly inquiry, the Center provides a forum for sustained discussion
among academics, legal practitioners, business leaders, activists,
policy makers and community members on the complex and important
relationships between business enterprises and their many stakeholders.
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