The University of Tennessee College of Law community will commemorate student Joseph Aaron Moore at the college on Jan. 31. Moore, 38, died unexpectedly on Jan. 1 at his home.
University of Tennessee College of Law Dean Melanie Wilson and four additional law professors have been selected to help lead one of the nation’s most prestigious academic organizations serving legal educators.
Maria Saez Tatman has joined the University of Tennessee College of Law as the assistant dean for student affairs. Saez Tatman will also serve as the director of diversity and inclusion for the College of Law. “We are so pleased to have someone of Maria’s caliber joining our team,” Dean Melanie Wilson said.
Nashville attorney Isaac Conner will speak at the University of Tennessee College of Law as part of the 20th annual Julian Blackshear, Jr. Scholarship Gala.
The Tennessee Supreme Court has recognized 47 recent University of Tennessee College of Law graduates for their commitment to pro bono service throughout their law school careers.
Faculty Forum is a monthly feature written by Michael Higdon highlighting the achievements of faculty at UT Law including publications in academia and the media, speaking engagements, interviews, awards, and other accomplishments. Professor Ben Barton’s fourth book, Fixing Law Schools, was released by NYU Press.
For a group of University of Tennessee College of Law students, spending a Saturday in a rural county of East Tennessee showed them just how much the law degrees they’re earning can help them change lives.
The Tennessee Supreme Court has appointed University of Tennessee College of Law Professor Joy Radice to serve on the Access to Justice Commission. Radice is one of three new members who will join the commission beginning April 1.
Publishers Weekly has named Professor Maurice Stucke’s forthcoming book “Competition Overdose” as one of its top ten business and economics reads for Spring 2020. The book, the second to be co-written by Stucke and Ariel Ezrachi, takes a different direction from their previous book “Virtual Competition.
Three University of Tennessee College of Law students have advanced to the finals of the National Moot Court Competition. Third-year law student Andrew Cox, and second-year students Kayla Rask and Regan Sherrell, competed on behalf of UT Law in the Region 7 competition earlier this month in Memphis.