Tulane Home Tulane Home
Tulane Law School News
Law alumni create new professorship, scholarship honoring Hall of Fame inductees
Richardson, Hancock listen to Thomas Lane (L'91)announce the new scholarship. Tulane Law School will have an endowed professorship in corporate law and a new scholarship in honor of one of its longest-serving and most beloved professors, Interim Law Dean Sally Richardson announced during...
Tulane Law Professor Kristin Johnson explored the implications of artificial intelligence for American law and public policy at a special program this weekend that kicked off the annual meeting of the prestigious American Law Institute (ALI). Johnson, the McGlinchey Stafford Professor of Law and... Read more
Three Tulane Law students were among the recipients of one of the univeristy’s highest student honors, the Tulane 34 Award. Anais Moore-Jaccard, Erin Marie Morrissey and Radha Venkata Padma Yerramilli, were recognized Thursday, May 17 for their exemplary leadership, service and academic excellence... Read more
The inaugural Tulane Center for Environmental Law $1000 prize for an outstanding comment submitted by a student to the Tulane Environmental Law Journal is going to Daniel Stein, a rising 3L student.  Stein's comment “Protecting the Artic Environment from Northwest Passage Shipping in an Era of... Read more
Note to the New Orleans community: If there is a need locally that’s not being met, please call Tulane student Lydia Winkler. In four years as a Tulane Law and A.B. Freeman School of Business MBA student, she has: Taken to court a landlord who refused to return her deposit and won; Turned that... Read more
There is nothing easy about law school. It is three years of relentless, complex and demanding work. Now imagine attending one of the nation’s most rigorous law schools following a diagnosis – and subsequent treatment – for stomach cancer. “I thought I would have to take time off,” said Gerald... Read more
A Tulane Law alum who migrated to the U.S. as a child and rose to become a distinguished federal judge is this year’s Law School graduation speaker. Judge L. Felipe Restrepo (L’86) will deliver the address to law graduates at the May 18 ceremonies at 4 p.m. at Devlin Fieldhouse.  Restrepo sits on... Read more
Khrista McCarden, Tulane’s Hoffman Fuller Associate Professor of Tax Law, has been awarded tenure, Law Dean David Meyer announced. “Since joining the Tulane Law School faculty last year from Pepperdine School of Law, Khrista McCarden has continued to build a national reputation as a thoughtful and... Read more
National Maritime Services has made a generous gift to Tulane Law School’s William Tetley Lecture in Maritime Law in memory of Patrick Novak (L’89).  Novak, a founding partner of the prominent Miami-based admiralty firm Horr, Novak & Skipp, passed away in November. The gift was made last week... Read more
A Tulane Law alumnus who faced harassment and death threats in his fight to save Liberian tropical forests and preserve the rights of indigenous people, was the recipient of the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize, one of the top international environmental awards. Liberian lawyer Alfred... Read more
Louisiana is one of more than two dozen states with a law that criminalizes exposure to HIV, charging, prosecuting, jailing and labeling anyone who potentially exposes another to the virus as a sex offender. An exposition of the broadly-written and punative state law and its impact on women is the... Read more
She’s a respected scholar of property rights, a dedicated educator who engages students and expertly brings to life often arcane laws. She’s also known for having an impressive throwing arm that can send a box of Girl Scout cookies flying to the very back of a classroom and into the hands of... Read more
The founders of Tulane Law School’s Women’s Prison Project join former colleague, law professor and newly-minted Loyola University President Tania Tetlow on an April 30 panel addressing domestic violence at the federal level. Profs. Becki Kondkar and Katherine Mattes join Tetlow to discuss... Read more
Tulane was the first law school to require pro bono hours, a program that has now recorded more than 255,000 hours of free legal assistance in our community since 1988. Over three years of law school, the Class of 2019 gave 17,027 hours of service to the community, representing indigent clients... Read more
He once taught English in Asia, worked as an investment consultant and volunteered for a Kenya-based NGO. At Tulane Law, he rose to become editor of Tulane’s Environmental Law Journal and published an article in a major environmental journal as a second-year law student. In between, Andrew Taylor... Read more
Those serving time in prison have no right to free legal representation after the conviction becomes final.   If they want to challenge the constitutionality of their conviction – such as arguing that their attorney was ineffective or that the prosecutor withheld exculpatory evidence – then they... Read more

Pages