Search for: "Taja-Nia Henderson" Results 1 - 20 of 23
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14 Oct 2021, 5:25 pm by Bridget Crawford
If you have a project that you believes fits this panel please submit it to Jamila Jefferson-Jones (jeffersonjones@wayne.edu) and Taja-Nia Henderson (tajhenderson@gmail.com) by the above deadline. [read post]
8 May 2020, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
  We aren't scanning all 556 episodes but can report they include Christopher Tomlins, Nicholas Bagley and Julian Davis Mortenson  Alejandro de la Fuente and Ariela Gross, Thomas McSweeney, Elizabeth Katz, Taja-Nia Henderson and Lutie A. [read post]
24 Aug 2019, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
[We're moving this up, because we've received an updated version of the program. [read post]
21 Aug 2019, 1:09 pm by Dan Ernst
O'Connor's Pub)FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 20198:30 AM – 10:00 AMPetitioning the President: James Madison, The Haitian Revolution, and a Resurgence of the International Slave Trade (Arlington Room)Chairs: Malick Ghachem, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (mghachem@mit.edu), Rebecca J Scott, University of Michigan (rjscott@umich.edu) and Darrell Meadows, Nation Historical Publications & Records… [read post]
19 Sep 2013, 1:05 am by Harold O'Grady
Other members of the panel are retired Brooklyn Law Professor William Hellerstein, Ian Ayres of Yale Law School, Alafair Burke of the School of Law at Hofstra University, Miriam Gohara, visiting assistant professor at Columbia Law School, Taja-Nia Henderson of Rutgers School of Law-Newark, Tanya Hernandez of Fordham University School of Law, Conrad Johnson of Columbia Law School, K. [read post]
16 May 2013, 9:00 am by Karen Tani
 Taja-Nia Henderson, J.D., Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor at Rutgers-Newark School of Law. [read post]
13 Feb 2013, 11:35 am by GiovannaShay
  Taja-Nia Henderson of Rutgers-Newark has developed a TWEN page (on Westlaw) entitled "Teaching the Carceral State," that grew out of a panel at the SALT teaching conference last October. [read post]
30 Dec 2012, 8:54 am by Alfred Brophy
As I am thinking about Taja-Nia Henderson's really exciting work on incarcertaion and slavery in pre-Civil War Virginia, the Hanover County jail comes to mind. [read post]