Search for: "Clara Altman" Results 1 - 20 of 35
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24 Jun 2013, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Congratulations to Clara Altman, Legal History Blogger and Facebook Coordinator, for landing a position as Visiting Assistant Professor of Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought, which she will shortly take up at Amherst College. [read post]
15 May 2012, 7:00 am by Dan Ernst
Congratulations to Legal History Blog’s own Clara Altman, Brandeis University, for being one of nine Miller Center National Fellows for the 2012-13 academic year. [read post]
18 Nov 2010, 7:42 am by Karen Tani
Over on the blog's facebook page, Clara Altman has started a discussion thread for graduate students attending the ASLH. [read post]
25 Nov 2010, 1:35 am by Mary L. Dudziak
At the Legal History Blog, we're thankful for: our tireless Facebook coordinator, Clara Altman our guest bloggers over the past year:  William E. [read post]
15 Jan 2011, 2:00 am by Karen Tani
History News Network's coverage is always helpful, but there is much, much more, including a link to Clara Altman's great post. [read post]
21 Jan 2011, 11:00 am by Karen Tani
Guest blogger Clara Altman commented on the Bald Knobbers and new work by Michael J. [read post]
9 Oct 2018, 3:24 pm by ernst
Congratulations to Clara Altman on her appointment as Deputy Director of the Federal Judicial Center (“the research and education agency of the federal courts”). [read post]
22 May 2018, 8:00 am by Dan Ernst
Clara Altman, Gautham Rao & Winston Bowman (Federal Judicial Center):Mass incarceration has long constituted not only a sociological fact and a moral disaster in the United States, but also a major sector of the public and private economy; a significant component of ideologies of race, gender, and sexuality; and a distorting influence upon electoral processes and deliberative democracy. [read post]
24 Jan 2020, 10:00 am by ernst
The Federal Judicial Center has just published Approaches to Federal Judicial History, edited by Gautham Rao, Winston Bowman and Clara Altman and downloadable here. [read post]
9 Apr 2016, 11:37 am by Dan Ernst
  I’m thinking especially of a few of the comments delivered on Thursday and Friday at a small, state-of-the-field conference on the history of the federal judiciary at the Federal Judicial Center, where Clara Altman (formerly an LHB blogger!) [read post]
13 Nov 2014, 8:00 am by Dan Ernst
  Professors Sarah Barringer Gordon and Hendrik Hartog provided valuable insight to both sides of the job-hunt, while Assistant Professor Tom McSweeney, and Visiting Assistant Professor Clara Altman brought their recent job-hunting experiences to the table. [read post]
13 Mar 2013, 6:39 pm by Clara Altman
Clara Altman (Brandeis), “Damages and Colonial Difference: U.S. [read post]
30 Apr 2016, 11:31 am by Dan Ernst
  (Clara Altman, now Director of the Federal Judicial History Office of the Federal Judicial Center, originated the role.) [read post]
9 Apr 2017, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
  Clara Altman, the Director of the Federal Judicial History Office at the Federal Judicial Center, has written to highlight a few features.]The Biographical Directory of Article III Federal Judges, 1789-Present. [read post]
8 Mar 2016, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
  That said, we were pleased to see papers by Anne Fleming, Georgetown University Law Center (“Expertise without Activism: The Russell Sage Foundation and Consumer Lending”) and Smita Ghosh, University of Pennsylvania (“Managing Borders in the Post-Civil Rights Era”) as well as the following panels:Policymaking in the Human Rights Context, with Clara Altman, Federal History Office, chairing and commenting on papers from Tim Lovelace, Indiana University… [read post]
28 Feb 2013, 5:59 am by Christopher Schmidt
 (Among the contributors are the Legal History Blog’s own Karen Tani, who co-authored, with Felicia Kornbluh, an essay on “Siting the Legal History of Poverty: Below, Above, and Amidst,” and Clara Altman, who wrote an essay on "The International Context: An Imperial Perspective on American Legal History.")This is such an impressively ambitious project and is sure to provide an indispensible resource for legal historians. [read post]