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6 Nov 2015, 4:08 am by sally gordon
  Sophia Lee noted that one might speak as much of “termination” of fatherhood in the clinic (the fatherhood of the donor) as of the “creation” of fathers. [read post]
4 Nov 2015, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
  The new members of the Board of Directors are Gautham Rao, American University; Sophia Lee, University of Pennsylvania Law School; Sara McDougall, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY; Philip Girard, Osgoode Hall Law School; and Malick Ghachem, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. [read post]
16 Oct 2015, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
  While we're mentioning LAPA events, the program hosts a book talk by Sophia Lee, Penn Law, on The Workplace Constitution from the New Deal to the New Right (Cambridge University Press, 2014) on Monday, October 26, at 12:15, and a workshop presentation by my fellow LAPA Fellow Sherally Munshi on Immigration, Imperialism, and the Legacies of Indian Exclusion. [read post]
2 Oct 2015, 9:09 am by Ed. Microjuris.com Puerto Rico
In 2015, she also obtained an ex-parte TRO and seizure order in the Nicole Lee copyright infringement case against Novus. [read post]
1 Oct 2015, 5:00 am by Karen Tani
., John Ferejohn, and Sophia Lee to demonstrate "American bureaucracy's long and useful history. [read post]
22 Sep 2015, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Eskridge Jr. and John Ferejohn’s Republic of Statutes, Sophia Lee's The Workplace Constitution from the New Deal to the New Right, and articles by Anuj Desai and Jeremy Kessler. [read post]
16 Sep 2015, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
”Commentator and Chair: Gary Gerstle, University of CambridgeIndividual Rights and Administrative Power in New Deal History Sophia Lee, University of Pennsylvania Law School, “Against Rights Essentialism:Labor, Civil Rights, and the New Deal State”Karen Tani, University of California Hasting School of Law, “The UnanticipatedConsequences of New Deal Poor Relief: Welfare Rights, Empowered States, and the Revival of Localism”Joanna Grisinger, Northwestern… [read post]
30 Aug 2015, 9:30 pm by Seth Kreimer
My friend and colleague Sophia Lee’s book exhibits a full array of the virtues of the historian, the legal scholar, and the writer. [read post]
4 Aug 2015, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Lee | University of Pennsylvania Law School & University of Pennsylvania (History)For more information, please contact noah.rosenblum@yale.edu or brent.salter@yale.edu. [read post]
20 Jul 2015, 9:29 pm by RegBlog
The essays, written by student authors from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, were chosen as the best essays by students in Professor Sophia Lee’s administrative law class this past spring. [read post]
5 Jun 2015, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Over at New Books in History, Peter Christian Aigner talks to former LHB Guest Blogger Sophia Z. [read post]
24 Apr 2015, 3:00 pm by Karen Tani
  Honorable mentions went to another recent guest blogger, Sophia Z. [read post]
17 Apr 2015, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
“[T]he concept of a legal ‘right to work,' harkens back to the early Twentieth Century when this and other substantive due process doctrines were used to strike down Progressive labor laws,” writes former LHB Guest Blogger Sophia Lee in a post on ACSblog that draws upon her book Workplace Constitution. [read post]
9 Apr 2015, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
Metzger, Columbia Law Administering the Workplace Constitution, by Sophia Lee, Penn Law    [read post]
2 Apr 2015, 9:30 pm by Deborah C. Malamud
” As someone who teaches, writes (often from an historical perspective), and once practiced in the fields of labor law, employment discrimination, constitutional law, and administrative law, I am as core a member of the audience for Sophia Z. [read post]
1 Apr 2015, 9:30 pm by Mark Tushnet
For me, the most impressive aspect of The Workplace Constitution is Sophia Lee’s insight that the African-American effort to secure constitutional rights in the workplace – primarily, in the part of her story that I found most thought-provoking, against racially exclusionary unions – should be juxtaposed to the development of conservative right-to-work efforts to do “the same,” that is, to establish that individual workers had a constitutional right,… [read post]
31 Mar 2015, 9:30 pm by Nicholas R. Parrillo
In a narrative of great depth and nuance, Sophia Lee’s The Workplace Constitution tells how the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) took upon themselves a duty, under the Fifth Amendment’s principle of equal protection, to prevent the companies (and, in the NLRB’s case, the unions) under their jurisdiction from discriminating among employees on the basis of race and, in some contexts, sex. [read post]
30 Mar 2015, 9:30 pm by Gillian E. Metzger
Sophia Lee’s The Workplace Constitution: From the New Deal to the New Right offers a remarkable window on the federal administrative state. [read post]