Tagged: CLE credit

REMINDER: PCJI Presents Making A Murderer Discussion

making a murdererPlease join the Pace Criminal Justice Institute (PCJI) on Wednesday, March 2, 2016 at 6:00-9:00 PM in the Pace Law School Moot Court Room for an eventLegal, Ethical and Practical Issues: A Panel Discussion on the Netflix Documentary Series ‘Making A Murderer’. Join us as panelists including Professors Carol BarryDavid DorfmanLissa GriffinJill Gross, and alumnus Chris McNerney (’06), Chief of Greenburgh Police, discuss the legal and ethical issues raised by this documentary. Attendees can earn up to 3.5 CLE credits (1.5 ethics and 2.0 professional practice).

Related Readings:

REMINDER: PCJI Presents Making A Murderer Discussion

making a murdererPlease join the Pace Criminal Justice Institute (PCJI) on Wednesday, March 2, 2016 at 6:00-9:00 PM in the Pace Law School Moot Court Room for an eventLegal, Ethical and Practical Issues: A Panel Discussion on the Netflix Documentary Series ‘Making A Murderer’. Join us as panelists including Professors Carol BarryDavid Dorfman, Lissa Griffin, Jill Gross, and alumnus Chris McNerney (’06), Chief of Greenburgh Police, discuss the legal and ethical issues raised by this documentary. Attendees can earn up to 3.5 CLE credits (1.5 ethics and 2.0 professional practice).

Related Readings:

PCJI Presents Making A Murderer Discussion

MaMPlease join the Pace Criminal Justice Institute on Wednesday, March 2, 2016 at 6:00-9:00 PM in the Pace Law School Moot Court Room for an event: Legal, Ethical and Practical Issues: A Panel Discussion on the Netflix Documentary Series ‘Making A Murderer’. Join us as panelists including Professors Carol Barry, David Dorfman, and Lissa Griffin, and alumnus Chris McNerney (’06), Chief of Greenburgh Police, discuss the legal and ethical issues raised by this documentary. Attendees can earn up to 3.5 CLE credits (1.5 ethics and 2.0 professional practice).

Related Readings:

Event: Criminal Behavior and the Brain Symposium at Fordham Law

event neuroscienceThe Fordham Law Review in co-sponsorship with the Fordham Neuroscience and Law Center present an all day Symposium entitled Criminal Behavior and the Brain: When Law and Neuroscience Collide on Friday, February 26, 2016. The line-up of speakers is impressive; see the brochure

This symposium examines a variety of cutting-edge, at times controversial, linkages between law and neuroscience, ranging from social and environmental influences on the brain and behavior to the interpretations of neuroimaging to the prediction of criminality and predispositions towards mental illnesses and addictions.

The registration is open and those interested can earn up to 4 professional practice and 2 ethics CLE credits.  Students should consider attending and learning more about this fascinating subject.