School of Law – 糖心少女News /news Wed, 29 Apr 2026 20:27:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Q&A: 糖心少女professor lends human rights expertise to FIFA, 2026 World Cup /news/2026/04/29/qa-uw-professor-lends-human-rights-expertise-to-fifa-2026-world-cup/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 20:27:24 +0000 /news/?p=91556 A soccer field with the lights and a soccer goal in the distance
Anita Ramasastry, a professor of law at the 糖心少女, is working with FIFA and host cities on human rights preparations ahead of the 2026 World Cup. Photo: Pixabay

As the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup inches closer, 鈥檚 schedule keeps getting busier.

鈥淚f I鈥檓 not teaching, I鈥檓 on a call dealing with the World Cup,鈥 Ramasastry said.

Ramasastry, a professor of law at the 糖心少女, is an expert in the convergence of business and human rights 鈥 a field she helped create. She was also an advisor to the United Nations Human Rights Council, the group that established standards to help governments regulate companies while also providing guidelines for听 those companies to navigate global human rights issues.

A woman wearing a pink suit and smiling at the camera
Anita Ramasastry Photo: 糖心少女

Her expertise led to work with , which launched a stronger commitment to human rights after the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. included its reliance on migrant workers to build stadiums, women鈥檚 rights and LGBTQ+ rights. As a large global sporting body bigger than most multinational corporations, FIFA accepted that, like those companies, it has corresponding human rights commitments.

In the wake of that tournament, Ramasastry was asked to join FIFA鈥檚 human rights subcommittee as its independent human rights advisor. The committee commissioned on Qatar, which found that many migrants were uncompensated for their work, and others died or suffered injuries.听

As a result, the 2026 World Cup marks the first time each host bid had to include a human rights component, including the United Bid submitted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.听

Once that bid was accepted, cities also had to vie to host matches. Ramasastry drafted the human rights action plan for Seattle. Because of her global and local expertise, she鈥檚 also chairing the human rights expert advisory group for FIFA 2026, headquartered in Miami. She worked on the 2026 World Cup鈥檚 human rights framework, which served as a baseline for cities to create their plans.

糖心少女News caught up with Ramasastry to talk about the World Cup and human rights, Seattle鈥檚 action plan and more.

The point of having a human rights action plan is that you anticipate the harms that arise from the tournament and you try to mitigate them.

Anita Ramasastry糖心少女professor of law
What is a human rights action plan and what potential issues do they address?

Anita Ramasastry: For every city that鈥檚 going to host the tournament, in every country, there are going to be human rights impacts. How do you identify harms and risks to unhoused people that are connected to the tournament? How do you ensure that people have the right to assemble and protest? Are workers being fairly paid?听

There are all kinds of issues that arise that are connected to these sporting events. In different countries, there are different issues. Qatar had issues with migrant labor. In Russia, it was LGBTQ+ rights and discrimination. The controversy around Qatar happened after the bid was already awarded. The world tuned into what was happening there and started thinking about human rights.听

The point of having a human rights action plan is that you anticipate the harms that arise from the tournament and you try to mitigate them. It鈥檚 been a bumpy ride because the issues we’re now dealing with are not the issues we originally thought we were going to be dealing with. Immigration issues are very different now. The issue of protests and counterprotests weren鈥檛 necessarily top of the list before, but they are now very much an issue for cities.听

FIFA and the host cities also have a commitment to what we call 鈥渁ccess to remedy.鈥 If someone is harmed, there should be a way for them to be provided with relief and remediation. FIFA is going to have a grievance portal where people will be able to raise an issue and then FIFA is going to screen it.听

This is the largest and most decentralized World Cup ever. FIFA says its role is to protect human rights in the stadium and to protect the human rights of athletes and workers in the stadium. It鈥檚 the cities鈥 job to deal with fan festivals or other events happening outside the FIFA zone. This has been a challenge because the cities don’t get extra money to deal with this. My job is to say we want to protect people 鈥 the fans, the workers, the communities 鈥 that may get impacted.

What issues are most pressing for Seattle and how did you identify them?

AR: For the Seattle bid, I consulted local stakeholders and they identified what they saw as the top salient risks. The main topics were human trafficking, issues related to unhoused populations, the right to protest, workers鈥 rights and discrimination against certain communities.听

Now one of the biggest issues 鈥 and it鈥檚 challenging to address 鈥 is the rights of immigrant communities. We at the 糖心少女hosted a roundtable on safeguarding immigrant communities. We鈥檙e also working on a peaceful assembly toolkit about the rights of protestors 鈥 how they can ensure they鈥檙e doing things peacefully and lawfully.

Part of the idea is that the practices and protocols that are created for Seattle now can be used in the future. I’d love for Seattle to have good ways of dealing with things. When the MLB All-Star Game came to Seattle in 2023, there were . Those are exactly the issues we don’t want to have happen. If there’s a protest, we don’t want people to be harmed. We want to allow dissent in a proper way. It鈥檚 really about the legacy of: Are there mechanisms in place to address issues or, if there is harm, to resolve complaints in a way that helps people?

It鈥檚 really about the legacy of: Are there mechanisms in place to address issues or, if there is harm, to resolve complaints in a way that helps people?

Anita Ramasastry糖心少女professor of law

Can you elaborate on past issues that led to this being the first World Cup to require human rights to be part of the bidding process?

AR: I think it’s a combination of several things. One is that there were the human rights standards that arose out of the United Nations. , a former Harvard professor, helped draft those. And he had such authority that he was then able to go to FIFA and advise on embedding human rights into its operations. FIFA was amenable to changing its governance standards, not only because it was called out because of questions about Qatar, but because it had been implicated. There were and a whole investigation by the Department of Justice. And so with FIFA being ensnared in the bribery and corruption charges, it was open to these other reforms. It was kind of a confluence of events.

At the same time, there was similar pressure on the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to do the same thing, so now the IOC also has its own commitment to human rights. It does work with host governments and they have ways in which human rights plans are mobilized. With the expertise we鈥檝e developed at the UW, I鈥檓 going to keep moving forward with our students. The Women鈥檚 World Cup may be coming to the U.S. in 2031 and the Olympics are in Los Angeles in 2028. Those are other opportunities to ensure safe events.

Speaking of your students, how do they engage with this work?

AR: I just taught a seminar this winter on human rights and the World Cup, so they were able to trace the journey from Qatar all the way to Seattle and beyond. We had people speaking about the World Cup, the LA Olympics and what it means to think about the World Cup going to Saudi Arabia in 2034, which is its own kind of interesting issue. Every week, students were able to meet with insiders 鈥 either in-person or virtually. The human rights officer from FIFA Zurich talked to them, as did the leader of the Dignity 2026 Coalition, which is a network of labor and human rights organizations uniting to protect groups who are at risk of adverse effects from the World Cup. Other speakers included former Olympic soccer gold medalist , who is the CEO of the Centre for Sport and Human Rights who worked on the United Bid, and , who graduated from the 糖心少女School of Law. She is the COO of the Seattle Reign and chaired the bid committee for Seattle. She now serves on the board of the Seattle 2026 Local Organizing Committee.

Students who want to do applied work helped write the Seattle bid. They were in the room for the roundtables we convened on immigration and peaceful protest, taking notes and writing summaries. My students have met with people who have dedicated their careers to human rights. For many of us, it鈥檚 about the people, right? No matter how much money is made, at the end of the day it should be made in a harm-free manner.

For more information, contact Lauren Kirschman at lkirsc@uw.edu.

soccer field

Hear more from Anita Ramasastry

Anita Ramasastry will moderate 鈥淲orkers鈥 Rights in Seattle during the World Cup,鈥 a discussion with King County councilmember Teresa Mosqueda, on May 4 from 5-6:00 p.m.

The discussion is part of an ongoing speaker series from the 糖心少女Global Sport Lab where experts discuss the geopolitical, local and sporting implications of the 2026 FIFA Men鈥檚 World Cup in Seattle. These sessions are free and open to all via livestream. Registration is required. Please follow to RSVP.

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糖心少女School of Law to convene 鈥楴either Sword Nor Purse,鈥 a national rule of law symposium on defending America鈥檚 independent judiciary /news/2026/04/13/uw-school-of-law-to-convene-neither-swords-nor-purse-a-national-rule-of-law-symposium-on-defending-americas-independent-judiciary/ Mon, 13 Apr 2026 16:03:18 +0000 /news/?p=91170 two images with a man with glasses on the left and a woman wearing a purple dress on the right
The 糖心少女School of Law is hosting “Neither Sword Nor Purse: Defending America鈥檚 Independent Judiciary and the Rule of Law,” a symposium featuring leading jurists, academics and journalists. Judge Robert Harlan Henry, left, scholar-in-residence, and Dean Tamara J. Lawson, right, are leading the symposium. Photo: 糖心少女

As judges across the United States face growing political pressure, public attacks and threats to their personal safety, the 糖心少女 School of Law will host on April 17 and 18 to examine how to protect America鈥檚 independent federal judiciary and the rule of law.

The two-day symposium, 鈥淣either Sword Nor Purse,鈥 at the School of Law, is sponsored by the American College of Trial Lawyers and planned in partnership with Keep Our Republic/Article 3 Coalition, the Society for the Rule of Law, and the Task Force for American Democracy. It convenes a slate of prominent judges, scholars and journalists who will examine the rule of law and the constitutional foundations of judicial independence.

鈥淭his symposium is designed to address a core constitutional concern,鈥 said Toni Rembe Dean . 鈥淎ttacks on an impartial and independent judiciary undermine public confidence in the courts, which weakens the foundation of the American legal system and its protections.鈥澨

The U.S. judiciary system was designed to be independent precisely so it could uphold the rule of law, said , the 糖心少女School of Law jurist-in-residence and a retired member of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.

鈥淎t this moment, independence is under sustained challenges,鈥 Henry said. 鈥淭his symposium will confront those challenges directly.鈥

April 17 & April 18

W.H. Gates Hall

糖心少女School of Law

, School of Law associate dean emeritus, said the participation in the symposium of respected judges, scholars and journalists reflect a rising concern that the U.S. system is in peril.

鈥淭he extraordinary group of judges and scholars share a commitment not just to diagnosing the problem, but to identifying meaningful ways to address it,鈥 Spitzer said.

The symposium begins on Friday, April 17 and continues through Saturday, April 18.

Accessible Accordion

Jess Bravin, Wall Street Journal Supreme Court correspondent
Jeremy Fogel, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California (ret.), Berkeley Judicial Institute
Thomas B. Griffith, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (ret.)
Paul W. Grimm, U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland (ret.), Duke Law School
J. Michael Luttig, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (ret.)
Kimberly J. Mueller, Judge, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California (ret.), Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law
Shira Scheindlin, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (ret.)
Debra L. Stephens, Chief Justice, Washington State Supreme Court
Seth P. Waxman, U.S. Solicitor General, 1997鈥2001
Mark L. Wolf, U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (ret.)
Diane P. Wood, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (ret.)

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Q&A: Ryan Calo, law professor and interdisciplinary researcher, talks about his new book, 鈥淟aw and Technology鈥 /news/2026/03/31/qa-ryan-calo-law-professor-and-interdisciplinary-researcher-talks-about-his-new-book-law-and-technology/ Tue, 31 Mar 2026 22:34:24 +0000 /news/?p=91165 A book cover
Ryan Calo, a 糖心少女professor of law, has written a new book, “Law & Technology.” Calo is also a professor in the Information School and an adjunct in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering. Photo: University of Oxford Press

Since Ryan Calo joined 糖心少女 School of Law in 2012, he has become a leading expert on the law and emerging technology.听听

Calo believes that few interesting questions 鈥 especially around technology 鈥 can be resolved by reference to a single discipline.听

Calo is a co-founder of the , and the . He is also a professor in the and an adjunct in the .听

Calo鈥檚 newest book, 鈥,鈥 published late last year, is a guide to a legal analysis of regulation and technology. Nearly a decade ago, Calo realized that the most recent book on the topic was published in the 1970s. He decided it was time for an updated resource reflecting current, rapidly evolving technology and the present regulatory environment.听

糖心少女News spoke with Calo about the book and the current legal and policy climate in the United States.

man wearing a plaid shirt standing outside
Ryan Calo is a professor in the 糖心少女School of Law and the Information School. He is an adjunct in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering. Photo: Doug Parry/糖心少女

Who is the intended audience for 鈥淟aw and Technology鈥?

Ryan Calo: I wrote it primarily for new entrants to the field, be they junior scholars or students. I also hoped that the themes would resonate with more senior scholars and that it would be useful outside of academia for either analysis or instruction. Because ultimately, what the book does is proposes a methodology for analyzing technology from a legal perspective.听

I spent a lot of time interacting with policymakers, staffers on Capitol Hill, people who work for senators and members of Congress. A legislator might come to a staffer and say,听 鈥淗ey, my constituents are really worried about augmented reality or AI. They’re really worried about deep fakes.鈥 That staff member doesn’t really have a place to start, and they end up just calling up experts, reading New York Times articles, talking to industry, but not in any kind of methodical way. This book is designed to help them figure out what’s going on.听

I also hope that this book would be of use to people who are in practice and want to be more methodical about analyzing a given technology.听

Technology evolves fast. How should the legal system and policymakers prepare to navigate the relationship between law and emerging technologies?

RC: Many of us have an expectation that technology is just going to change. It’s just going to evolve, and our job as lawyers or judges or policymakers, is to kind of scramble and accommodate the resulting disruption, and perhaps try to restore the status quo. Part of what I hope to see is legal scholars and policymakers acknowledging that the disruption isn鈥檛 inevitable.

We need to empower independent researchers to figure out what’s going on with new technology. Right now researchers are disempowered because they don’t have access to the relevant data and platforms. And many times when they try to get that data, they get served with a cease and desist letter.听

We need to protect whistleblowers and make sure there’s adequate, truly top-notch expertise within government. If you have those things, then you’re much more likely to be able to figure out what could go wrong with these technologies without having to observe the harm unfold over a long period of time, as we have with the internet and now with AI.

You mentioned the School of Law鈥檚 leadership in tech policy. How is the 糖心少女positioned nationally in this space?

RC: We are really among the leaders in this area.听

The School of Law has a lot of tech policy offerings, including a . Many faculty have contributed to scholarship over the years. We have lots of faculty writing about law and technology.听

We also have been really a model for impactful interdisciplinary collaboration. Law students can work in the clinic or the Tech Policy Lab. I’m one of the founders of the Center for an Informed Public, which bridges human centered and design engineering as well as the Information School and dozens of other departments including psychology, education and even geography.听

A third important example is the . We did a whole year of work mapping out who was doing work in the space 鈥 all the centers, all the labs, all the initiatives 鈥 all the people on the three campuses identified as working at this intersection.听

We’re leaders across the country at the law school in terms of our student offerings in our research, but we are also part of that interstitial glue. People think of the iSchool, which they should. They think of computer science, which they should. But they also should think about who else is in the center of this, who else is at the heart of it, and the School of Law is a big part of that.

There鈥檚 been a lot of news lately about states trying to regulate AI and the federal government pushing back. What鈥檚 your perspective?

RC: If I were trying to sabotage the innovation edge of the United States, I would do at least two things, maybe three.听

First, I would divest in basic research. The United States has had an innovation edge over the rest of the world in large part because of decisions made in the 1950s and beyond to invest in basic research. I would dismantle that, and I would try to make it really hard for universities to do research, either by spending less, disrupting the relationships, or messing with overhead in ways that makes research impossible.听

The second thing I would do is make it really hostile for outside innovators to come in and participate in knowledge production here. I would, whether xenophobically or not, try to make it really hard for people with ideas and talent and knowledge to come here to the United States to work on teams with other Americans, to stay here and teach in our schools, to found companies. The second enormous advantage the United States has had is that the country has become attractive because of its commitment to the rule of law and its robust higher ed system, and that鈥檚 built on its innovation and investment in research. People from all over the world come here to try and make the next Google and Amazon, or are teaching in our schools and contributing to our ecosystem.听

The third thing I would do in this hypothetical situation is remove non-existent hurdles to transformative technologies like AI. What do I mean? Federal leaders are currently talking about getting out of the way of AI, but there aren’t any regulations about AI, really. There are some state laws that have a kind of European flavor of risk management, like and . There are specific things that states are worried about, including deep fakes and labeling online social media accounts that are automated. There’s almost nothing standing in the way of AI innovation in terms of regulation.听

The way that our system is structured is that the individual states, under our concept of federalism, are supposed to be laboratories of ideas, experimenting with legislation, and showing that it works or it doesn’t. Pretending that you’re pro-innovation because you’re trying to stamp out the very few regulatory hurdles that companies have to have to abide by all in the name of competing with China, which has AI laws, is just senseless. We’re much better off following the wisdom of the founders, who said, 鈥淗ey, if you have something new in society, let the states serve as laboratories for different laws, and we can all learn from each other about how that’s going.鈥 That’s classic federalism and it used to be a pillar of conservative thinking.听

The President doesn’t have the power to boss the states around in terms of their legislative capacities. And Congress has taken up the question of whether to try to preempt AI laws, and they resignedly declined. I just want to comment that the overall strategy of the administration has been deeply anti-innovation in its impact, even though it is vociferously proinnovation in its rhetoric.

Any final thoughts?

RC: We have an environment in the U.S. that promotes innovation, sometimes through laws, such as laws that protect intellectual property, and laws that make people feel safe enough to use products and services that companies can sell them to us. There鈥檚 not, and never has been, a one-to-one correlation between regulation and promoting innovation. It’s really important that we acknowledge, as a society and community, that sometimes laws are written in the service of innovation. What you want is a favorable regulatory environment, not a complete absence of the rule of law.

For more information, contact Calo at rcalo@uw.edu.听

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$7.1M commitment from Hawaii businessman and philanthropist expands Tech and IP programs in the 糖心少女School of Law /news/2025/10/30/7-1-million-commitment-from-hawaii-businessman-and-philanthropist-expands-tech-and-ip-programs-in-the-uw-school-of-law/ Thu, 30 Oct 2025 19:03:30 +0000 /news/?p=89750 The 糖心少女 School of Law has received a $7.1 million commitment from Honolulu-based real estate investor Jay H. Shidler to augment the technology and intellectual property programs at the 糖心少女School of Law.

The gift, which will be realized over the next 10 years, cements the School of Law鈥檚 global reputation in the fields of technology and intellectual property (IP) law.

鈥淥ur听students and faculty are enriched by the generosity of Jay Shidler and his commitment to听supporting innovations in the area of听technology听and听intellectual property听law,鈥澨齭aid Tamara听F.听Lawson,听the Toni听Rembe听Dean听of the听School of Law.听鈥溙切纳倥甃aw is uniquely situated听in a region known throughout the world for听technology and innovation.听These resources will support our community听and keep us听competitive听in this听environment.鈥澨

With this gift,听Shidler听鈥 a philanthropist and听investor in educational infrastructure听who has听owned听interests in听more than 2,000 properties worldwide听鈥斕齝ontinues a tradition听he鈥檚 established听of听honoring听his uncle,听Roger Shidler, a 1924 graduate of the 糖心少女School of Law听who听was听an early听trailblazer听in technology law听alongside听William Gates, Sr.

The gift will allow the School of Law to:

  • Establish a Shidler Endowed Chair who will lead the听Technology and Intellectual听Property听Law programs, while also covering adjacent needs including torts and contracts.听
  • Recruit a full-time scholar-in-residence to manage and听grow听the existing Shidler Lecture Series.
  • Support scholarships and fellowships awarded to students focused on Technology and Intellectual Property Law. The first year will support three students in the J.D. program with a $50,000 award for each.

鈥淲e are honored to steward Jay Shidler鈥檚 transformative investment in the critical intersection of technology and law,鈥 said 糖心少女President Robert J. Jones. 鈥淗is generous gift will help the 糖心少女School of Law attract the most talented faculty and students at a moment when expertise in IP and Technology law is urgently needed. We are thrilled to be able to expand our global reach in this important field.鈥

鈥淚 am very fortunate to be able to financially support universities and colleges on the West Coast and in Hawaii. 糖心少女Law has had a special place in my family鈥檚 lore for almost 100 years,鈥 Shidler said.

The听gift builds听upon听previous听gifts from Jay Shidler听to the UW, including听an听ownership interest in听a 2.6-acre property in Seattle鈥檚 South Lake Union neighborhood,听which was celebrated听in 2018.听Half听of the ownership of the land and buildings will be transferred to the UW听in 2115听to be divided equally between 糖心少女Medicine and the 糖心少女School of Law. The other half goes to Shidler鈥檚 alma mater, now called the Shidler College of Business at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.听

Shidler also contributed听$600,000听to the School of Law in听2016听for the creation of the听lecture series honoring Roger Shidler.听

The 糖心少女recognized Jay Shidler and his wife, Wallette, as Presidential Laureates upon having generously contributed more than $10 million to the 糖心少女in 2017.

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Annual symposium pushes the UW, and Seattle, to forefront of space diplomacy /news/2025/10/29/annual-symposium-pushes-the-uw-and-seattle-to-forefront-of-space-diplomacy/ Wed, 29 Oct 2025 18:08:56 +0000 /news/?p=89696 The Space Needle lit up in front of a cloudy night sky
Panelists at the 2025 Space Diplomacy Symposium will include representatives from the Cabinet Office of Japan, the U.S. Space Force, the Space Law Council of Australia and New Zealand, and Harvard Medical School. Photo: Pixabay

Seattle is well-known as a space industrial hub. In 2024, launched into space were designed or built in the Greater Seattle area. Washington state manufactured more than half of the satellites currently orbiting earth, and more than 75% of the world鈥檚 satellites.

, a 糖心少女 professor of international studies, believes the city can expand its reach even further by also becoming a hub for space diplomacy. This mission led her to start the annual at the 糖心少女in 2023.

The 2025 Space Diplomacy Symposium will be held on Nov. 7 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Walker-Ames Room of Kane Hall. to view a detailed schedule and register for the event.

The SDS 鈥 co-sponsored by the Space Law, Data and Policy Program (SPACE LDP) in the 糖心少女School of Law and the Program on Strategy, Policy, and Diplomacy Research in the 糖心少女Jackson School of International Studies (SPDR) 鈥 aims to center diplomacy in civilian, commercial and military space activities.

鈥淚 want the world, not just our nation, to pay attention to what鈥檚 going on in Seattle鈥檚 industry,鈥 said Pekkanen, who is the founding director of SPACE LDP and SPDR. 鈥淪eattle is becoming the leading hub for satellites and , but we鈥檙e also trying to become the place for regulatory policy and building diplomatic collaborations. All of this serves the interests not just of educators, but also our community. Seattle can lead the way for what space diplomacy might look like.鈥

There is no shortage of space technology in the world, Pekkanen said, but it鈥檚 dialogue and diplomacy that makes it grow.听

鈥淚t’s important to have capabilities, but it’s also important to position those capabilities in a very fiercely competitive international system,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow can we advance those capabilities in a way that’s good for our community and that’s good for whoever may be interested in buying them?鈥

This year鈥檚 SDS keynote speaker is the James H. Binger senior fellow in global governance at the Council on Foreign Relations. Brimmer will reflect on the role of diplomacy in international space relations while also raising awareness of essential space-related topics. Brimmer directed the Council of Foreign Relation鈥檚 report, 鈥,鈥 on which Pekkanen served as a task force member.听

Symposium panelists will include representatives from the Cabinet Office of Japan, the U.S. Space Force, the Space Law Council of Australia and New Zealand, and Harvard Medical School.

Pekkanen had three major motivations for establishing the SDS.

鈥淭he first one was, nobody else was doing it,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o now we are the only ones in the world. The 糖心少女has a standing platform.鈥

Secondly, she said, the symposium gives 糖心少女and the Seattle area an opportunity to draw attention to the next generation of regulatory, policy and diplomatic challenges.听

Finally, Pekkanen said, universities have a remarkable, but siloed, ecosystem. The SDS helps bridge the gap by gathering thought leaders from across academic departments.

鈥淲e have so many people at the 糖心少女with different competencies that are at the cutting edge of where space is going,鈥 Pekkanen said. 鈥淲e need to come together to begin building the sort of policy and diplomatic foundation for what matters.鈥

The SDS started as a way to bring together experts and build community. But as the event grows, Pekkanen also views it as a way to bring special topics to the table.

鈥淚t鈥檚 fiction that space has nothing to do with war, or that it only has to do with prosperity,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a dual-use technology that cuts across both. This year, for the first time, we have more specific themes.鈥

, a 糖心少女assistant teaching professor of international studies and lead of the Jackson School鈥檚 Cybersecurity Initiative, will preside over a military space diplomacy panel that will focus on cybersecurity.听

A key topic on the civil space diplomacy side will be megaconstellations 鈥斕 large groups of satellites that work together to provide a service. , a 糖心少女research assistant professor of astronomy and associate director of the 糖心少女Institute for Data-intensive Research in Astrophysics and Cosmology (DiRAC) will host the panel.

The commercial diplomacy panel will be moderated by , an associate professor of bioethics and humanities in the 糖心少女School of Medicine. One key topic for these experts will be the medical and biological challenges of sustaining humanity in space.

鈥淚t鈥檚 space!鈥 Pekkanen said. 鈥淲ho is not interested? It鈥檚 a hopeful vision. It gives people hope that we can build something and sustain something good not just for our community, but also nationally and internationally.鈥

For more information, contact Pekkanen at smp1@uw.edu.

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Estate of Stan and Alta Barer makes transformational gift to 糖心少女School of Law to support global sustainable development program /news/2024/10/29/barergift/ Tue, 29 Oct 2024 16:00:22 +0000 /news/?p=86677 Couple posing for photo
The 糖心少女School of Law has received a transformational gift from the estate of Stan and Alta Barer, pictured here, to expand what will now be called The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development. Photo: 糖心少女

The 糖心少女 on Tuesday announced a transformational gift from the estate of Stan and Alta Barer to the School of Law, expanding the couple鈥檚 namesake institute: The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development. The gift will support the recruitment of additional international fellows, increase scholarships, endow faculty positions and create more global impact.

The $45 million gift, one of the largest bequests in 糖心少女history, will cement the 糖心少女School of Law鈥檚 reputation and impact as an internationally known center for excellence in global sustainable development. The gift will allow the Barer Institute to expand its work with mid-career attorneys from developing countries, enabling them to come to Washington state and then return to their homes to improve health outcomes, advocate for law and justice, boost education and spur economic development. Building on previous gifts the Barers made to the School of Law, the total endowment for the Institute is more than $50 million. The gift also renames the Institute, formerly known as the Barer Institute for Law & Global Human Services.

鈥淲e are honored to extend Stan and Alta鈥檚 inspiring legacy of global leadership development with the help of this transformative investment,鈥 said 糖心少女President Ana Mari Cauce. 鈥淭he work of the Barer Institute to cultivate talented mid-career attorneys for the benefit of their home countries and the world is one of our law school鈥檚 most innovative and effective programs, and we are delighted to be able to expand its reach.鈥

Since its founding in 2010, the Barer Institute has contributed to the UW鈥檚 commitment to global engagement and impact, and upheld the University鈥檚 core value of educating a diverse student body to become responsible global citizens and future leaders.

In 2008, the Barers gave $4 million to establish an institute that would improve outcomes in governance and multi-dimensional development in low and lower-middle income countries and countries in political transition. Each year, the Institute brings three to four fellows to the 糖心少女鈥 there have been nearly 50 fellows since inception 鈥 where they earn a Master of Laws degree in Sustainable International Development.

Group photo of law school fellows
This year鈥檚 cohort of Barer Institute fellows, from left to right, Cyrus M. Maweu, Kassama Dibba, Kalenike Uridia and Justice Victoria Katamba. Photo: 糖心少女

鈥淩eceiving this gift during the School of Law鈥檚 125th anniversary is special as we celebrate the transformative power of our graduates,鈥 said Tamara Lawson, the Toni Rembe Dean of the School of Law. 鈥淭hanks to Stan and Alta鈥檚 generosity, the Institute will continue robust engagement and meaningful collaboration. 糖心少女Law is furthering the life鈥檚 work of Stan Barer and his aim to impact law around the world.鈥

The new gift will build upon the Barer Institute鈥檚 original mission in several ways, including:

  • Increasing support for fellowships and scholarships to recruit more students to the Institute and hire post-doctoral research fellows focused on human rights, global business and climate issues.听The gift also will help pay for international travel to support the fellows and other Institute participants.
  • Funding to recruit Juris Doctor students to the Barer Fellows Program.
  • Reinforcing 糖心少女School of Law鈥檚 impact on sustainable development while expanding its work on the rule of law, the global climate challenge and sustainable business in a changing world.
  • Endowing a faculty appointment for a Barer Chair to lead the Institute and participate in cross-disciplinary and global conferences, symposia and networking events. Anita Ramasastry will be the inaugural chair.
  • Providing critical program and operating support to develop the Institute into a robust and renowned hub known internationally for promoting global leadership and the rule of law. This will include hiring an executive director to develop and implement programming, as well as an assistant director to help manage programming, and recruit and provide support to the students interested in careers focused on global issues in government, public service and sustainable business.听Jennifer Lenga-Long was tapped to serve in the inaugural executive director role.

鈥淪tan鈥檚 impact on our state, region and the world cannot be overstated. One of his significant contributions as a leader was his work re-opening trade between the U.S. and China, and his dedication to finding shared values and connection in our global world. Stan鈥檚 lifelong work will continue to be felt around the world as this generous gift will empower global leaders and citizens to find innovative solutions to the world鈥檚 most pressing problems,鈥 said former U.S. Ambassador to China and former Washington Gov. Gary Locke, a friend and colleague of Barer鈥檚.

Stanley H. Barer, who went by Stan, was a world-renowned Seattle attorney, 糖心少女Regent and 糖心少女alumnus (Class of 1963), who died in 2021. He received the 2021 Gates Volunteer Service Award, the University鈥檚 highest honor for volunteer service, prior to his passing. His wife, Alta, preceded him in death in 2019.

The son of immigrants, Stan Barer grew up in Walla Walla before attending the UW, where he earned his undergraduate degree and then his Juris Doctor. Barer experienced bigotry, antisemitism and discrimination growing up and in the workplace when law firms wouldn鈥檛 hire Jews. He went to Washington, D.C., to work for Washington Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, eventually becoming his chief of staff. Barer learned that he could combat prejudice using the power of the law and he served as the U.S. Senate lawyer for the enactment the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act, helping to write the legislation. He also discovered that he needn鈥檛 be constrained by national borders, and that he could craft policy that supported global development. Barer was instrumental in re-establishing trade with China in 1979 and securing Seattle as a significant port-of-call.

Barer brought his years of experience to the UW鈥檚 highest levels of volunteer leadership, serving as a Regent from 2004 to 2012 and as a member of the 糖心少女Foundation Board. He also held volunteer roles with 糖心少女Law, 糖心少女Medicine and the Burke Museum. Alta Barer also advocated for the transformative power of education and research. At the UW, she served on the Law Committee during a 糖心少女fundraising campaign and, together with her husband, hosted numerous events at their home.

鈥淭his bequest exemplifies Stan and Alta鈥檚 belief in the power of education, the rule of law, and in the critical importance of focusing on what we have in common across cultures instead of what separates us,鈥 said their daughter Leigh K. Barer. 鈥淲e look forward to seeing the Institute expand and flourish because of their visionary gift.鈥

Together, Stan and Alta Barer left a decades-long legacy of philanthropy at the UW. They played central roles in the construction of William H. Gates Hall, the School of Law鈥檚 home. Across campus, the couple also endowed faculty positions in the College of the Environment, sponsored cancer research at 糖心少女Medicine and supported graduate education in the sciences.

鈥淭he expanded Barer Institute will serve as a hub for graduate students interested in international careers in service of the global common good, including the advancement of human rights, global justice and the rule of law, and indigenous people鈥檚 rights. True to Stan鈥檚 vision, it will recognize and build upon multidisciplinary approaches to tackling the world鈥檚 greatest challenges by engaging with scholars and practitioners within and beyond the UW,鈥 said Anita Ramasastry, director of the Barer Institute and the Henry M. Jackson Endowed Professor of Law.

For more information about The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development, click .

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ArtSci Roundup: Journeys of Black Mathematicians, Circa Performance, Building Scyborgs Lecture, and more /news/2024/02/08/artsci-roundup-journeys-of-black-mathematicians-circa-performance-building-scyborgs-lecture-and-more/ Fri, 09 Feb 2024 00:04:20 +0000 /news/?p=84365 This week, head to Kane Hall for the film screening of Journeys of Black Mathematicians: Forging Resilience, attend K. Wayne Yang’s discussion on scyborgs and decolonization, enjoy next level circus by the Australian contemporary circus group Circa, and more.


February 12, 3:30 – 5:00 pm | Smith Hall

As part of the History Colloquium, Professor La Tasha Levy will discuss 鈥淏lack Soldiers and the Racial Debilitation of Slavery and the Civil War.” Levy is a Black Studies scholar who currently serves as an Assistant Professor in the Department of American Ethnic Studies

The History Colloquium aims to encourage greater intellectual exchange within the 糖心少女community by discussing works in progress from faculty members and graduate students.

Free |听


February 12, 5:30 – 7:30 pm | Thomson Hall

Join the Department of Asian Languages & Literature for a series of films exploring diversity and inclusion in Japanese society. “Whole” is a short drama created by Writer Usman Kawazoe and Director Bilal Kawazoe depicting Haruki, a biracial student who decides to quit college and travel to Japan, and Makoto, a construction worker raised in the projects of Kansai who is also biracial. Haruki and Makoto grow closer and begin their journey from “Half” to “Whole.”

The film is in Japanese with English subtitles and will be followed by a brief discussion.

Free |


February 12, 7:30 pm | Meany Hall

Dynamic duo Cuong Vu and Cristina Vald茅s straddle the worlds of contemporary classical music and free improvisation, premiering works for trumpet and piano by Oliver Schneller, Wang Lu, and Sk煤li Sverrisson, and performing music by Huck Hodge and Eva-Maria Houben.

Tickets |


February 13, 5:00 – 6:20 pm | Architecture Hall

Join the Jackson School of International Studies for a Middle East Lecture Series with Marc Lynch, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the George Washington University, on Regional Repercussions of the War.听

This event is part of听War in the Middle East, a series of talks and discussions on the aftermath of October 7, the war in Gaza, and responses worldwide.

Recordings of past lectures are available on the .

Free |


February 13, 6:30 pm | Building Scyborgs. An evening on decolonization, Town Hall Seattle & Livestream

Join scholar, organizer, and co-conspirator K. Wayne Yang as he shares stories about decolonizing endeavors from past, present, future, and speculative somewheres. Yang will discuss monsters, machines, mortals, and how people are the objects of colonization and agents of decolonization.

The livestream of this lecture will be accompanied by an ASL interpreter and include CART captioning.

Free | More info & Registration


February 14 & 15, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm | Husky Union Building Street/Lyceum

The Makers Fair showcases the creative talents and uniquely made crafts and creations of 糖心少女students, faculty, and staff. The quarterly fair is sponsored by the Husky Union Building and Housing & Food Services.

Free |


February 15, 6:00 – 8:30 pm | Kane Hall

The Simons Laufer Mathematical Sciences Institute is joined by the Departments of Applied Mathematics, Mathematics, and Statistics for the film screening of Journeys of Black Mathematicians: Forging Resilience.

The film, by George Csicsery, traces the cultural evolution of Black scholars, scientists, and educators. Follow the stories of prominent pioneers, and the challenges and accomplishments reflected in today’s working Black mathematicians. Their mathematical descendants are now present day college and K-12 students across the US, learning they belong in mathematics and STEM.

The screening will follow with a Q&A with Director George Csicsery.

Free |


February 15 – 17, 8:00 pm | Meany Hall

A symphony of acrobatics, sound, and light, Humans 2.0 is next level circus by the Australian contemporary circus group Circa. Ten bodies appear in a flash of light. They move in harmony for a fleeting moment and then descend into a sinuous trance. Created by circus visionary Yaron Lifschitz, with pulsing music by composer Ori Lichtik and dramatic lighting by Paul Jackson, Humans 2.0 is intimate, primal, and deeply engaged with the challenge of being human.

Tickets |


February 15, 4:00 – 5:30 pm | Thomson Hall

The 糖心少女South Asia Center invites Elora Shehabuddin, professor of Gender & Women’s Studies and Global Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, to present a unique and engaging history of feminism as a story of colonial and postcolonial interactions between Western and Muslim societies.

Stretching from the eighteenth-century Enlightenment era to the War on Terror present, Sisters in the Mirror shows how changes in women鈥檚 lives and feminist strategies have consistently reflected wider changes in national and global politics and economics.

Free |


February 15, 7:30 pm | Brechemin Auditorium

Craig Sheppard, Robin McCabe, and Cristina Vald茅s lead students from the 糖心少女piano studios to perform works from the piano repertoire.

Craig Sheppard is Professor of Piano and Head of Keyboard at the 糖心少女School of Music. He is also Professor of the Advanced Innovation Center at the China Conservatory in Beijing.

Celebrated pianist Robin McCabe has established herself as one of America鈥檚 most communicative and persuasive artists. McCabe鈥檚 involvement and musical sensibilities have delighted audiences across the globe.

Pianist Cristina Vald茅s presents innovative concerts of standard and experimental repertoire, and is known to 鈥減lay a mean piano.鈥 A fierce advocate for new music, she has premiered countless works, including many written for her.

Free |


February 16, 3:00 pm | Brechemin Auditorium

糖心少女Strings students perform concerto movements for outside judges, competing听for a chance to perform with the 糖心少女 Symphony.

Free |


February 20, 1:00 pm | Husky Union Building South Ballroom

The College of Arts & Sciences welcomes the 糖心少女community of faculty, staff, and students to participate in the second annual 鈥淏ig Read.鈥

Tune into the conversation with Dr. Joy Buolamwini, founder of the Algorithmic Justice League and author of Unmasking AI: My Mission to Protect What is Human in a World of Machines and听Dr. Emily M. Bender, 糖心少女Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Master鈥檚 Program in Computational Linguistics.

Free |


February 22, 4:00 pm | Climate Crisis: Our Response as Artivists, Walker Ames Room, Kane Hall

Appearing onstage at the UW鈥檚 Meany Center in February, 鈥Small Island Big Song鈥 is an immersive concert experience that celebrates the seafaring cultures of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and features Indigenous musicians from the frontline of the climate crisis.

The UWAA and Meany Center are excited to gather a 糖心少女College of the Environment alumna, a current student (Majoring in geography) and creators of 鈥淪mall Island Big Song鈥 to talk about issues of climate change, advocacy, art and culture. Our panelists each come to these topics from different vantage points and will share their reflections on how these topics all impact one another.

As the climate crisis quickly rises to the top of world concerns, different sectors 鈥 including artists 鈥 scramble to figure out ways to respond to its impending pressures. We all have a vital role to play. Join the conversation as we explore ways we can use our voices to push the needle on political, economic, social and cultural questions at the root of this global concern.

UWAA hosted reception to follow.

Free | More info & Registration


 

Have an event that you would like to see featured in the ArtSci Roundup? Connect with Kathrine Braseth (kbraseth@uw.edu).

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Faculty/staff honors: Legal education innovation award, stellar astronomical writing and more /news/2023/03/22/faculty-staff-honors-legal-education-innovation-award-stellar-astronomical-writing-and-more/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 18:00:25 +0000 /news/?p=80959 Recent recognition of the 糖心少女 includes the Bloomberg Law 2022 Law School Innovation Program 鈥淭op Legal Education Program鈥 for the 糖心少女Tech Policy Lab, 2023 Seattle Aquarium Conservation Research Award for Vera Trainer and 2023 Chambliss Astronomical Writing Award for Emily Levesque.

Bloomberg recognizes 糖心少女Tech Policy Lab as 鈥楾op Legal Innovation Program鈥

The 糖心少女Tech Policy Lab was recently recognized by Bloomberg as a in 2022 due to its unique cross-discipline approach. The award is given to pioneering schools making an impact in the legal field.

Ryan Calo

Founded in 2013 by faculty from the 糖心少女School of Law, the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering and the Information School, the lab bridges the gap between technologists and policymakers to help generate wiser, more inclusive tech policy.

鈥淭he students and community members who interact with the lab come away with the understanding that collaborating and bringing a variety of perspectives together is the key to working through contemporary challenges,鈥 said , professor of law at the 糖心少女and co-director of the Tech Policy Lab. Bloomberg鈥檚 Law School Innovation Program seeks to recognize and connect law school faculty, staff and administrators who are education innovators. Submissions to the program were scored based on impact on students, ability to advance the legal industry and replicability. In its submission, the 糖心少女Tech Lab demonstrated the model鈥檚 unique blend of immersive experiences, opportunities for relationship-building and interdisciplinary approaches.

鈥淩ather than try to work with every student, we offer programming open to all and work closely with a small handful of law students whom we place on interdisciplinary teams to work on consequential issues of tech policy,鈥 Calo said. 鈥淭hey often go on to work in the field and get a unique perspective and experience working across disciplines.鈥

This was the inaugural year of the awards.

糖心少女professor wins 2023 Seattle Aquarium Conservation Research Award

Vera Trainer, affiliate professor of aquatic and fishery sciences at the UW, was selected as the winner for her work on harmful algal blooms, or HABs, which are proliferations of algae that cause environmental and economic damage.

Vera Trainer

The Conversation Research Award has honored leaders and innovators in marine conservation research since 2004, focusing on climate change, plastic pollution, sustainable fisheries and tourism, marine protected areas and socioeconomics.

鈥淭his award is not only for what has been accomplished, but what will be accomplished in the future,鈥 said Trainer, a former NOAA oceanographer and current research lead for the .

Trainer鈥檚 HABs research has provided a foundation for understanding the effects climate change has had on coastal ecosystems and highlights the need for inclusion of impacted communities in decision-making.

Trainer is also co-founder of the program and founder of , a partnership that monitors HABs in the Puget Sound. These unique community collaborations provide advance warning of HABs that threaten seafood safety as well as ecosystem and human health, ultimately ensuring safe, sustainable shellfish harvests.

Astronomy professor awarded for stellar physics textbook

The American Astronomy Society awarded , associate professor of astronomy at the UW, and her co-author Henny J.G.L.M.听Lamers the for their graduate textbook 鈥淯nderstanding Stellar Evolution.鈥

The Chambliss Award recognizes astronomy writing geared towards the upper-division undergraduate or graduate level, a rarely recognized category.

Emily Levesque

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see the importance of stellar physics recognized,鈥 said Levesque. 鈥淗enny Lamers spent more than a decade developing amazing lecture notes for our course on stellar structure and evolution, and it was great to work with him on turning these into a textbook.鈥

Split into three parts, the book first delves into the physics of how stars work. It then describes the evolution of stars from formation to death and explores some complicating factors of stellar evolution. The book was produced using years of lecture notes for an astronomy class at the UW.

鈥淲e spent a lot of time expanding and fleshing out roughly outlined ideas from lecture notes so that they could stand alone as complete explanations in the textbook,鈥 said Levesque. 鈥淚t was interesting to be teaching the course and writing the book at the same time in the spring of 2016. It helped alert us to a topic or detail that would spark discussion or follow-up questions in class and encouraged us to expand on the topic in the text.鈥

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Q&A: Navajo Nation water rights case an opportunity to reaffirm treaty obligations, 糖心少女law professor says /news/2023/03/16/qa-navajo-nation-water-rights-case-an-opportunity-to-reaffirm-treaty-obligations-uw-law-professor-says/ Thu, 16 Mar 2023 18:47:14 +0000 /news/?p=80917

 

Against the backdrop of a longtime conflict among Western states over water in the Colorado River Basin, the U.S. Supreme Court on March 20 will take up the case of another significant 鈥 but often overlooked 鈥 claimant: the Navajo Nation.

The case, , pits the treaty rights of the largest Native American reservation in the United States against water-rights claims by the state in which much of the reservation is located.

, professor of law at the 糖心少女 and director of the UW鈥檚 Native American Law Center, co-authored an on behalf of 37 tribal nations, the Affiliated Tribes of the Northwest, the San Luis Rey Indian Water Authority and the National Congress of American Indians.

The brief, which Mills co-wrote with attorneys for the Native American Rights Fund and faculty from the University of Arizona and the University of Idaho, hinges on the Winters Doctrine, a 1908 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that recognized that the establishment of a tribal reservation also reserved water necessary to fulfill the purposes of that reservation 鈥 even if water rights were not explicitly mentioned in the treaty.

Monte Mills

鈥淏ased on Winters, tribal nations have legal rights to water for their homelands, with a priority date of the creation of the reservation, which often means that tribal rights are quite senior compared to those of other water users,鈥 Mills said. 鈥淎lthough the development of water resources and infrastructure across the West throughout the 1900s often overlooked or ignored tribal rights,听the assertion of Winters rights by tribes (and the U.S. on tribes’ behalf) over the听last half-century has helped resolve uncertainties based on the existence of those rights while ensuring many tribes could secure water for actual use, so-called 鈥榳et鈥 water rights, in addition the 鈥榩aper鈥 rights guaranteed by the Winters 顿辞肠迟谤颈苍别.鈥

Mills discussed the current case with 糖心少女News.

Q: States in the Colorado River Basin have been grappling with water supply and their own competing demands. How does this case fit into that context?

Monte Mills: The current conflict over water in the Colorado River Basin is the result of dwindling supply and the historical establishment of rights to water that overestimated the amount of water that might be available. Like the many other tribal nations in the Basin, the water rights of the Navajo Nation were largely overlooked in those negotiations and, therefore, rights were allocated among the Basin states with little thought given to the rights that the tribes would need. While other tribal rights in the Basin have been identified and resolved, the Navajo Nation continues to seek protection for its legal rights to water, particularly in the current era of scarcity. This case is part of those efforts.

 

Q: While this case specifically involves the Navajo Nation, there are implications for other tribes, as well. Please explain.

MM: The core of the Nation’s claim is that the United States has a duty to identify and protect the Nation’s as-yet unquantified and unadjudicated rights to water in the Colorado River Basin. That claim is rooted in the centuries-old recognition that 鈥 based on treaties, rulings of the U.S. Supreme Court, and acts of Congress 鈥 the United States has a trust relationship with tribal nations. Over the course of the evolution of federal Indian law, that trust relationship has come to define the federal-tribal relationship and is a critical component of the modern era of tribal self-determination. Here, the Navajo Nation is seeking to enforce those trust duties by asking a court to order the United States to take certain steps to protect the Nation’s rights to water.

Listen to with Monte Mills

While the facts and context of this case are unique to the Navajo Nation, a decision by the Supreme Court in this case could help inform the scope and enforceability of the Indian trust doctrine.听

 

Q: A series of court rulings, as well as statements and policies by presidential administrations of both parties, have referenced the importance of treaty obligations. Is there reason to believe this time is different?

MM: It is hard to overstate the importance of treaties and the promises made therein, both to tribal nations and the United States. Those time-honored agreements are the backbone of federal Indian law and have been the basis on which the federal government has identified and fulfilled its duties to tribes. In addition, treaties provide a critical, quasi-constitutional connection between tribal sovereigns and their federal and state counterparts by providing a consensual basis on which tribal governments can base their intergovernmental relationships. It is no wonder, therefore, that the U.S. Constitution confirms that treaties are the “supreme law of the land,” and that the U.S. Supreme Court has established specific rules guiding the interpretation and enforcement of treaty promises.

Like many other tribal claimants before them, the Navajo Nation is asking the federal judiciary to interpret and enforce the terms of its historical agreements with the United States in accordance with those rules and standards. But,听notwithstanding their importance, treaty obligations have often been set aside, ignored, overlooked, or outright abrogated by the United States, often in deference to other, non-tribal interests.

This case presents yet another opportunity for the United States Supreme Court to weigh the word and bond of the United States, pledged in treaties with the Navajo Nation, along with the rights and duties that flow from those guarantees, in light of their place in the Constitution, the Court’s precedent, and the competing claims and interpretations offered by those countering the Navajo Nation’s position.

For more information, contact Mills at mtmills@uw.edu.

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糖心少女law professor goes to music school, launches interdisciplinary Music Law & Policy class /news/2023/03/07/uw-law-professor-goes-to-music-school-launches-interdisciplinary-music-law-policy-class/ Tue, 07 Mar 2023 17:37:05 +0000 /news/?p=80826  

was in a parent-child music class with his daughter when he decided to pursue a long-dormant passion.

Nicolas joined the 糖心少女 School of Law in 2000, and he鈥檚 nationally known as an expert in constitutional law, evidence, sexual orientation law and intellectual property. Now Nicolas has combined his legal training with his growing academic interest in the study of music. His new class, , is open to students in the law school and in the School of Music, where Nicolas is currently a post-baccalaureate student as well as an adjunct professor.

Student plays a flute at the front of a class
Music Law & Policy is open to students in the 糖心少女School of Law and in the School of Music. Photo: 糖心少女

Nicolas鈥 formal music training began just six years ago, not long after he enrolled his daughter in a class designed to awaken a love of music in children. The course did more than just that. It also inspired Nicolas, who has always loved music, to pursue a new path.

During one of the classes, Nicolas noticed a flyer for a free 30-minute music lesson and decided to take a chance. That lesson turned into continued private instruction in voice and piano and then a spot in a church choir.

Soon, Nicolas started taking classes at Shoreline Community College, where in 2021 he earned a degree in music performance. Still eager to learn more, he applied to the 糖心少女School of Music and auditioned as a vocalist. Now a music history major with a focus on vocal performance, Nicolas expects to earn his second bachelor鈥檚 degree this year.

With his music education underway, Nicolas decided to combine his interests. Music Law & Policy launched this quarter as an interdisciplinary course, at the same time Nicolas was named the director of the law school鈥檚 graduate program in intellectual property.

鈥淚 think going back to school made me a better teacher,鈥 Nicolas said. 鈥淏y the time all is said and done, I probably will have experienced the equivalent of four full years of taking classes with very different types of professors. There are a lot of things I’ve learned about how they do things that I’ve incorporated into my teaching.鈥

Music Law & Policy covers legal issues in the music industry, including intellectual property law as it relates to music and musicians. After building a fundamental understanding of music theory and copyright law, Nicolas asks students to examine court decisions that purport to rely upon principles of music theory. The class also covers subjects like trademark law and the right of personality and publicity.

A male professor stands behind a computer screen.
Peter Nicolas is a professor of law and an adjunct professor of music at the UW. Photo: 糖心少女

鈥淥ne of the things this experience taught me is that what music students go through in their field has more in common than people realize with what law students have to do to be successful,鈥 Nicolas said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot in this course 鈥 technical reading and analysis 鈥 that music students must do when dealing with theory. Music history has a lot in common with the historical documents law students study. The ability to get up and perform in front of people is something that lawyers and musicians both must do.鈥

While other universities offer courses that teach music and law, Nicolas said his class is unique because he incorporates music principles into the learning process. Nearly all the music and law students are expected to perform an excerpt from one of the cases being studied. Law students with musical backgrounds can do solo performances, and those without musical backgrounds can engage in group-based musical performances. Students also complete a paper in groups consisting of both law and music students.

鈥淧eople were very skeptical when I said I was going to teach a class to law students where they have to do music 鈥 not just at the superficial level, but to really know and understand it,鈥 Nicolas said. 鈥淭here is a reason for it. To some extent, the law sometimes comes to incorrect decisions because the people making the decisions don鈥檛 understand how music works.

鈥淚f we can bring these two disciplines together through teaching and scholarship, we can likely get better outcomes. When these disputes are decided, we can know what is unique about this particular song, that somebody shouldn鈥檛 be able to use without permission, and what about it is a basic building block of music, that anyone is free to use.鈥

A student plays the harp in front of a class.
Music Law & Policy covers legal issues in the music industry, including intellectual property law as it relates to music and musicians. Photo: 糖心少女

Nicolas prides himself on teaching students with varying educational backgrounds. In the past, he taught an interdisciplinary course in forensic nursing to those in the 糖心少女School of Law and the School of Nursing. He鈥檚 also currently teaching a course on sexual orientation law that is cross-listed in the Department of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies, where Nicolas also is an adjunct professor.

For music students, the Music Law & Policy course introduces potential copyright issues and the legalities of performing or filming a certain composer鈥檚 music. The law students enrolled in the course tend to be a combination of those generally interested in intellectual property law and others with a musical background.

鈥淚鈥檓 viewing this in the long term as a good possible partnership,鈥 Nicolas said. 鈥淢aybe some of the students who are undergraduates in music can go into the field of law and find a way to blend those two interests in the way I鈥檝e tried to do myself.鈥

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For more information, contact Nicolas at pnicolas@uw.edu.

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