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James A. Sonne

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  • James A. Sonne
Jun 18 2019
Tuesday 12:30 p.m. EDT    

A Discussion of Prof. Sonne’s Experience Running the Nation’s First Religious Liberty Clinic

Charleston, SC
Speakers:
James A. Sonne
Topics:
Religious Liberty
Sponsors:
Charleston Lawyer Chapter
  • In-Person Event
Jun 17 2019
Monday 12:00 p.m. EDT    

The Law and Culture of Religious Liberty

Columbia, SC
Speakers:
James A. Sonne
Topics:
Religious Liberty
Sponsors:
Columbia Lawyer Chapter
  • In-Person Event
Jan 5 2017
Thursday 10:30 a.m. PDT    

7 Minute Presentations of Works in Progress Panel 1-C

19th Annual Faculty Conference

San Francisco, CA
Speakers:
Paul Richard Baier • Andrea Boyack • Tara Leigh Grove • Michael E. Lewyn • Kathrine Macfarlane • Earl M. Maltz • James A. Sonne • Stephen J. Ware
  • In-Person Event
Nov 13 2015
Friday 12:00 p.m. EDT    

Roundtable on Adjunct & Clinical Teaching

2015 National Lawyers Convention

Washington, DC
Speakers:
Salen Churi • Joanmarie Davoli • Jeanne M. Hauch • Craig S. Lerner • James A. Sonne
  • In-Person Event
James Madison Portrait
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Speaker Information
James A. Sonne

James A. Sonne

Associate Professor of Law and Director, Religious Liberty Clini, Stanford Law School

Biography

Jim Sonne is a professor at law at Stanford Law School, and is the founding director of the law school’s Religious Liberty Clinic, the only full-time program in the country where students learn the practice of law through supervised litigation in that field. He is an experienced and award-winning teacher, practitioner, and scholar, with expertise in law and religion issues.

Professor Sonne received his BA with honors from Duke University and his JD with honors from Harvard Law School. He is a former law clerk to Judge Edith Brown Clement of ­­the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Before joining the law school in 2012, Sonne was an appellate lawyer at Horvitz & Levy in Los Angeles.



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Speaker Information
James A. Sonne

James A. Sonne

Associate Professor of Law and Director, Religious Liberty Clini, Stanford Law School

Biography

Jim Sonne is a professor at law at Stanford Law School, and is the founding director of the law school’s Religious Liberty Clinic, the only full-time program in the country where students learn the practice of law through supervised litigation in that field. He is an experienced and award-winning teacher, practitioner, and scholar, with expertise in law and religion issues.

Professor Sonne received his BA with honors from Duke University and his JD with honors from Harvard Law School. He is a former law clerk to Judge Edith Brown Clement of ­­the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Before joining the law school in 2012, Sonne was an appellate lawyer at Horvitz & Levy in Los Angeles.



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Speaker Information
Paul Richard Baier

Paul Richard Baier

George M. Armstrong, Jr. Professor of Law, Judge Henry A. Politz Professor of Law, and Hermann Moyse, Sr. Professorship Professor of Law, Louisiana State University Law Center

Biography

Professor Baier, an editor of Harvard Legal Commentary while at Harvard Law School, joined the LSU Law faculty in 1972 after teaching at the University of Michigan Law School and the University of Tennessee College of Law.

The Judicial Fellows Commission selected Professor Baier from ten finalists to serve as the U.S. Supreme Court Fellow for 1975-76, during which time he scripted and narrated “Supreme Court," the first film ever made inside the Supreme Court. This award-winning A.B.A. production was exhibited at the court for over a decade. Professor Baier’s expertise lies in Constitutional Law, Civil Rights Litigation, and Appellate Advocacy. He was a Special Assistant State Attorney General in several U.S. Supreme Court and 5th Circuit cases, including the Louisiana Higher Education Desegregation Case. He served as Executive Director, Louisiana Bicentennial Commission, U.S. Constitution, 1987-91, and was selected as the first Scholar in Residence of the Louisiana Bar Foundation, 1990-92.

He is the editor of the memoirs of Justice Hugo Black, "Mr. Justice and Mrs. Black" (Random House 1986), and of "Lions Under the Throne: The Edward Douglass White Lectures of Chief Justices Warren E. Burger and William H. Rehnquist" (Louisiana Bar Foundation, 1995). He has taught summer programs with Justice Harry A. Blackmun (Aix-en-Provence, France, Berlin, Germany) and with Justice Antonin Scalia (Siena, Italy). For a sample of his writing see: "The Court and Its Critics," Feb. '92, A.B.A.J. Professor

Baier is also a nationally published playwright, producer, and director of “Father Chief Justice: Edward Douglass White and the Constitution," which premiered in Thibodaux, March 8, 1997, and has since played at Louisiana’s Old State Capitol, Loyola University, the Louisiana Supreme Court, and the Fifth Circuit Judicial Conference, May 2009. Aspen Publishers printed a limited centenary edition of the play and sponsored a performance in the Louisiana Supreme Court on Twelfth Night, Jan. 6, 2010.  Most recently, on March 8, 2011, the Law Library of Congress sponsored a production of the play in the Coolidge Auditorium, Jefferson Building, in Washington, D.C.

Baier has several media credits, including “Court Reports,” a film historiography of the U.S Supreme Court in National Archives newsreels, and a television production featuring Erwin N. Griswold, former Solicitor General and Dean of the Harvard Law School. He is nationally known for his use of media in law school teaching, "What Is the Use of a Law Book Without Pictures or Conversations," 34 J. Legal Ed. 619 (1984). The Diamond Anniversary Sixth Edition of Baier’s "The Pocket Constitutionalist," with a foreword by his former student and Louisiana Supreme Court Justice John L. Weimer, was published by Claitor's in 2010.

Professor Baier is Secretary of the Supreme Court of Louisiana Historical Society. The Louisiana Bar Foundation named Baier its Distinguished Professor 2004. The Tiger Athletic Foundation honored Professor Baier with its prestigious TAF Undergraduate Teaching Award for his teaching in the LSU Honors College ("Honors Colleges and Law Schools: A Decennial Digest," 32 Legal Stud. F. 915, 2008). He was voted Law Professor of the Year by the Law Center senior class of 2010.

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Speaker Information
Andrea Boyack

Andrea Boyack

Professor of Law, Washburn University School of Law

Biography

 Professor Boyack has an extensive background practicing, teaching and writing about legal topics at the nexus of contract and property law. She has written and presented on issues relating to the housing crisis, the secondary mortgage market, common interest community governance, and bankruptcy, and is currently working on projects exploring transactional freedom and individual liberties in the context of real property development and control. Professor Boyack is an innovative teacher and is involved in the Institute for Law Teaching and Learning as well as other joint pedagogical projects focused on improving teaching in law schools. Professor Boyack has participated in Washburn Law's commercial law project in the Republic of Georgia, and was a featured presenter at Free University's 2013 Commercial Law Symposium in Tbilisi. She was voted Professor of the Year at Washburn Law in 2015.

Prior to joining the faculty at Washburn University School of Law, Professor Boyack taught Contracts, Property, Real Estate Transactions, Professional Responsibility and Public International Law as a visiting professor at Fordham University School of Law, George Washington University School of Law, and Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law. She also taught Real Estate Finance as an adjunct professor at George Mason University School of Law.

After graduating from University of Virginia School of Law in 1995, Professor Boyack practiced corporate finance and real estate law for 13 years in New York City and the Washington, D.C. area with Reed Smith; Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson; Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe; Goodwin Proctor; and O'Melveny & Myers and as in-house regional counsel to Toll Brothers, Inc., the largest publicly held national development company. While in law school, she was notes editor for the Virginia Journal of International Law and directed the Philip C. Jessup International Moot Court Competition. Professor Boyack also clerked for Judge John Gleeson of the U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York.

Professor Boyack is admitted to practice in New York, the District of Columbia, and Virginia. She is proficient in Russian.

Professor Boyack is Co-Director of the Business and Transactional Law Center.

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Speaker Information
Tara Leigh Grove

Tara Leigh Grove

Vinson & Elkins Chair in Law, University of Texas at Austin School of Law

Biography

Tara Leigh Grove is the Vinson & Elkins Chair in Law at the University of Texas School of Law. Grove graduated summa cum laude from Duke University and magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she served as the Supreme Court Chair of the Harvard Law Review. Grove clerked for Judge Emilio Garza on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and then spent four years as an attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division, Appellate Staff, where she argued fifteen cases in the courts of appeals.

Grove’s research focuses on the federal judiciary, interpretive theory, and the constitutional separation of powers. She has published with such prestigious law journals as the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Columbia Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the New York University Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, the Virginia Law Review, the Texas Law Review, the Cornell Law Review, the Northwestern University Law Review, and the Vanderbilt Law Review. Grove has received awards for both her research and her teaching.

In 2021, Grove served on the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States, a bipartisan commission created by President Biden and charged with examining proposals for Supreme Court reform. Since 2022, Grove has worked on the Princeton Initiative on Reclaiming the Constitutional Powers of Congress, which brings together former members of Congress, political scientists, and law professors. Grove serves as the Co-Chair of the section on the Appointments Process for the Princeton Initiative. Grove is a co-author of Low & Jeffries' Federal Courts and the Law of Federal-State Relations, a leading federal courts casebook, and she has served as the Chair of the Federal Courts Section of the Association of American Law Schools. Grove has been a visiting professor at both Harvard Law School and Northwestern Pritzker School of Law.

 
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Michael E. Lewyn

Michael E. Lewyn

Director of the Institute on Land Use and Sustainable Development and Associate Professor of Law, Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center

Biography

Michael Lewyn teaches property, land use and environmental law. Originally from Atlanta, he graduated from Wesleyan University and received his J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. After clerking for two federal judges and practicing law for several years, he began his teaching career. Most of Professor Lewyn's scholarship focuses on urban and suburban development, and in particular the question of "sprawl": why some cities are walkable and full of vitality, while others have been overshadowed by suburbs where car ownership is a necessity.

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Kathrine Macfarlane

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Earl M. Maltz

Earl M. Maltz

Distinguished Professor of Law, Rutgers Law School

Biography

Earl  Maltz is a Distinguished Professor and the author of two books and more than 50 articles on constitutional law, statutory interpretation, the role of the courts and legal history. He teaches constitutional law, employment discrimination, conflicts of law and a seminar on the Supreme Court.

Professor Maltz is the author of Rethinking Constitutional Law: Originalism, Interventionism, and the Politics of Judicial Review (1994), Civil Rights, The Constitution and Congress, 1863-1865 (1990), and over 50 articles on constitutional law, statutory interpretation, the role of the courts and legal history. He received his B.A. from Northwestern University, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and his J.D. cum laude from Harvard. Professor Maltz teaches Constitutional Law, Employment Discrimination, Conflicts of Law, and a seminar on the Supreme Court.

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James A. Sonne

James A. Sonne

Associate Professor of Law and Director, Religious Liberty Clini, Stanford Law School

Biography

Jim Sonne is a professor at law at Stanford Law School, and is the founding director of the law school’s Religious Liberty Clinic, the only full-time program in the country where students learn the practice of law through supervised litigation in that field. He is an experienced and award-winning teacher, practitioner, and scholar, with expertise in law and religion issues.

Professor Sonne received his BA with honors from Duke University and his JD with honors from Harvard Law School. He is a former law clerk to Judge Edith Brown Clement of ­­the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Before joining the law school in 2012, Sonne was an appellate lawyer at Horvitz & Levy in Los Angeles.



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Stephen J. Ware

Stephen J. Ware

Frank Edwards Tyler Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Kansas School of Law

Biography

Stephen Ware is the author of four books, over 50 law review articles, and many other publications. His writings have been cited by the Supreme Court of the United States and in at least 36 other cases. Ware teaches and writes on: Arbitration, Mediation, and Alternative Dispute Resolution, Bankruptcy, Insolvency, and Debt Collection, Contracts and Commercial Law, and Judicial Selection, each with an international or comparative dimension.

Ware has testified before both houses of the U.S. Congress, several state legislatures and, as an expert witness, in court. He is a frequent guest lecturer and speaker at academic and professional conferences—having given such presentations throughout the U.S. and in several other countries. He has appeared on numerous television and radio stations and been quoted in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Financial Times, National Law Journal and many other news outlets. He is an elected member of the American Law Institute (ALI) and has served, at various times in his career, on the editorial board of the Journal of Legal Education and as an arbitrator for the American Arbitration Association.

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Salen Churi

Salen Churi

General Partner, Trust Ventures

Biography

Salen is a leading expert on navigating the collision points of innovation and regulation. A former law professor at the University of Chicago and founder of its Innovation Clinic, he has advised startups on regulatory strategy across industries. Previously, Salen practiced law at the international law firms of Kirkland & Ellis and Sidley Austin, and advised low-income entrepreneurs in overcoming barriers at the Institute for Justice.

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Joanmarie Davoli

Joanmarie Davoli

Florida Coastal School of Law

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Speaker Information

Jeanne M. Hauch

Professorial Lecturer in Law, The George Washington University School of Law

Biography

Jeanne Hauch is a senior international legal consultant at the Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative at the World Bank. StAR is a joint initiative of the World Bank and the United Nations to support international efforts to end safe havens for the proceeds of corruption. Previously, she served as a senior staff member at the Integrity Vice Presidency of the World Bank, where she concentrated on combating fraud and corruption in the international development projects of the World Bank. Before joining the World Bank in June 2009, she served as an Assistant United States Attorney in Washington, DC for many years, specializing in the prosecution of transnational crimes and national security. She conducted jury trials in many areas of white-collar as well as violent crime.


She is the coauthor of “Identification and Quantification of the Proceeds of Bribery: A Joint OECD-StAR Analysis” (OECD 2012) and has been published in the Tulane Law Review, the University of San Francisco Law Review and the Criminal Law and Policy Review of Paris. She has delivered speeches and seminars to the Working Group on Bribery of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). She has taught for the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies (DIILS) in Africa and the American Bar Association’s Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative (CEELI) in the former Yugoslavia. 


Professor Hauch attended the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton, followed by the Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the Yale Law Journal and the Yale Journal of International Law. She then clerked on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court for Justice Anthony Kennedy. Under the auspices of a Fulbright grant, she conducted research and lectured at the University of Paris and the Institute of Political Studies of Paris. She practiced law with leading firms in Washington, DC, and Brussels for several years before joining government service.



  • B.A., Princeton University
  • J.D., Yale Law School


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Craig S. Lerner

Craig S. Lerner

Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law

Biography

Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law Craig S. Lerner served as an associate independent counsel in the Office of Independent Counsel (Whitewater Investigation). He also has clerked for the Honorable James L. Buckley of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and worked as an associate at Cooper, Carvin, & Rosenthal and Wiley, Rein, & Fielding in Washington, D.C. He received his A.B. and J.D. from Harvard and his M.A. from the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. He teaches Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Business Associations, and Conflicts of Laws.



  • A.B., Harvard University
  • M.A., University of Chicago
  • J.D., Harvard University
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Speaker Information
James A. Sonne

James A. Sonne

Associate Professor of Law and Director, Religious Liberty Clini, Stanford Law School

Biography

Jim Sonne is a professor at law at Stanford Law School, and is the founding director of the law school’s Religious Liberty Clinic, the only full-time program in the country where students learn the practice of law through supervised litigation in that field. He is an experienced and award-winning teacher, practitioner, and scholar, with expertise in law and religion issues.

Professor Sonne received his BA with honors from Duke University and his JD with honors from Harvard Law School. He is a former law clerk to Judge Edith Brown Clement of ­­the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Before joining the law school in 2012, Sonne was an appellate lawyer at Horvitz & Levy in Los Angeles.



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