Search for: "Karen Tani"
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18 Dec 2014, 8:01 am
Karen Tani has published “States’ Rights, Welfare Rights, and the ‘Indian Problem': Negotiating Citizenship and Sovereignty, 1935–1954” in the Law & History Review. [read post]
1 Oct 2010, 7:47 pm
Karen Tani Karen is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Pennsylvania, where she also earned her J.D. [read post]
15 Jun 2010, 6:46 am
Thank you to Karen Tani, who has been an extraordinary guest blogger for the past month and a half. [read post]
21 Nov 2012, 9:11 am
With at least one person arguing that any recent surfeit in law graduates is due to law schools' "exploitation of the career aspirations of women in particular," Professor Karen Tani's article, Portia's Deal, published in Chicago-Kent Law Review and available... [read post]
30 Mar 2011, 6:07 am
I'm very happy to report that Karen Tani, our Legal History Blog colleague, has accepted an entry-level offer at U.C. [read post]
30 Apr 2010, 4:23 am
The Legal History Blog welcomes Karen Tani as a guest blogger for the month of May. [read post]
18 Nov 2008, 7:30 am
This is a guest post from Karen Tani, Sharswood Fellow in Law and History at the University of Pennsylvania. [read post]
20 Mar 2016, 9:30 pm
“The publication of Karen Tani’s States of Dependency marks a new beginning in the history of the American welfare state. [read post]
6 Nov 2013, 6:30 am
Fellow Legal History Blogger Karen Tani has posted on Jotwell her appreciation of Margaret D. [read post]
16 Nov 2009, 10:07 pm
This post on the 2009 American Society for Legal History conference comes from Karen Tani, the Sharswood Fellow in Law and History, University of Pennsylvania: Among the many offerings at this year’s meeting of the American Society for Legal History was a Friday morning panel on “Gender, Soldiering, and Citizenship in the Twentieth Century United States,†chaired by Jill Hasday (University of [read post]
19 Nov 2008, 8:00 am
Guest Post by Karen Tani A highlight of the recent conference of the American Society for Legal History was the panel on "Pauli Murray's Human Rights Revolution," which paired papers on the underappreciated activist and scholar, Pauli Murray. [read post]
19 Nov 2009, 2:13 am
This post on last week's American Society for Legal History meeting comes from Josh Stein, Bernard and Irene Schwartz Postdoctoral Fellow at the New School for Social Research and the New York Historical Society and Karen Tani, Sharswood Fellow in Law and History, University of Pennsylvania.Another highlight of the 2010 ASLH annual meeting was a panel titled “Civilizing and Un-Civilizing War in [read post]
21 Apr 2016, 9:30 pm
Congratulations to my co-blogger Karen Tani and to Sam Lebovic for their being named Nancy Weiss Malkiel Junior Faculty Fellows by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. [read post]
2 Nov 2017, 8:00 am
Here is the citation:Historians and social scientists, Karen M. [read post]
19 Nov 2024, 8:55 am
Karen Tani (University of Pennsylvania) has posted The Supreme Court 2023 Term - Foreword: Curation, Narration, Erasure: Power and Possibility at the U.S. [read post]
22 Oct 2013, 8:44 am
My LHB coblogger Karen Tani has posted on Jotwell a review of Michele Landis Dauber's The Sympathetic State: Disaster Relief and the Origins of the American Welfare State (University of Chicago Press, 2012). [read post]
9 Aug 2023, 4:30 am
Jasmine Harris (University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School), Karen Tani (University of Pennsylvania), & Shira Wakschlag (The Arc) have posted The Disability Docket (American University Law Review, Vol. 72, 2023) on SSRN. [read post]
22 Mar 2024, 4:30 am
Eyer (Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Rutgers Law School) & Karen Tani (University of Pennsylvania) have posted Disability and the Ongoing Federalism Revolution (Yale Law Journal, Vol. 133, 2024) on SSRN. [read post]
3 Sep 2021, 10:07 am
Felicia Kornbluh, University of Vermont, and Karen Tani, University of Pennsylvania, have posted The Poverty Law Education of Charles Reich, which appeared in the Touro Law Review 36 (2020): 807-821:This essay, written for a symposium on the life and legacy of Charles Reich, explores how Reich came to be interested in the field of poverty law and, specifically, the constitutional rights of welfare recipients. [read post]
25 Nov 2010, 1:35 am
Forbath, Thomas Gallanis, Ariela Gross, Stephen Vladeck, Mark Tushnet, and Karen Tani, and current guests Allison Brownell Tirres and Chris Tomlins the newest on-going member of our team, Karen Tani our 77 blog followers the 263 people who like us on [read post]