3 Books You Should Read Before Starting Law School
The BARBRI Law Preview touts Professor Jeremy Paul’s best-selling book, Getting to Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams, as a “must read” for all incoming 1L students.
The BARBRI Law Preview touts Professor Jeremy Paul’s best-selling book, Getting to Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams, as a “must read” for all incoming 1L students.
“What I would like to see come out of this… is a deeper and broader conversation about how to fundamentally change the incentives that are driving all sorts of harmful behavior related to the collection and use of private information,” Professor Woodrow Hartzog tells news@Northeastern.
Professors Woodrow Hartzog and Ari Waldman renew their calls for government oversight of facial recognition and other advanced technologies.
Sarah Peck ’96, director of #UnitedOnGuns, a nonpartisan initiative of Northeastern Law’s Public Health Advocacy Institute, joined NPR’s All Things Considered to talk about the Mass Shooting Protocol and Playbook, a checklist and handbook produced in collaboration with a group of US mayors who have presided over large-scale shooting incidents. These resources provide a guide for mayors to prepare for, respond to, the needs of survivors and their communities when recovering from a mass shooting.
Commenting for News@Northeastern, Professors Alexandra Meise and Ari Waldman explain why concerns about data being used in abortion cases are warranted.
In an op-ed co-authored for the LA Times, Professor Woodrow Hartzog addresses the need to hold social media companies accountable for their role in fostering political violence.
Professors Claudia Haupt and Woodrow Hartzog comment on social platforms and free speech for Northeastern News....
“Obscurity is really important and really powerful in the modern-day privacy debates because it’s intuitive to all of us in the way that we live our lives, but we don’t often think about it in terms of privacy,” Professor Woodrow Hartzog tells USA Today