Law in Contemporary Society

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AdamCarlisIntro 10 - 21 Jan 2009 - Main.IanSullivan
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 I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. This summer I will be working at Bronx Defenders where I hope to both keep people out of jail and determine if this is the right path for me. (edited 18 Feb 2008)

-- AdamCarlis - 17 Jan 2008


AdamCarlisIntro 9 - 18 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
>
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I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. This summer I will be working at Bronx Defenders where I hope to both keep people out of jail and determine if this is the right path for me. (edited 18 Feb 2008)
 -- AdamCarlis - 17 Jan 2008
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Please note that I am fiddling with my first paper here:

http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/twiki/bin/view/LawContempSoc/AdamCarlis-FirstPaper

and would appreciate any and all comments.

-- AdamCarlis - 07 Feb 2008

Adam, I think it's worth thinking about whether it's plausible that Hillary Clinton, running against a JFK-type (i.e., a white male with JFK-like credentials) would have been able to tout her experience as a positive. You hint at this in your "Hole in argument #1," but I'm not sure that the fact that youth hasn't been a detriment to presidential candidacies necessarily means that people actually believe it is not a detriment, at lease at the beginning and middle stages of a candidacy. Perhaps Hillary wants to prevent the electorate from making the leap that it was able to make for Kennedy and Bill? Do you think Hillary is creating an issue, or emphasizing (and perhaps distorting) an issue that's already there?

-- MichaelBerkovits - 08 Feb 2008

Hey Adam - How do you create a "new topic" underneath your user bin, as you did?

-- JesseCreed - 08 Feb 2008

Use the "edit" function on the user bin page (top right). Then scroll down to where Eben has left you some bullets (they look like three spaces followed by a "*") and add a WikiWord? of your choosing as the title for the page. Click save and then you can go back to the user bin page and click on the ? next to the WikiWord? that you created in order to access the new page. Hopefully this was helpful.

-- AdamCarlis - 08 Feb 2008

 
 
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AdamCarlisIntro 8 - 09 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
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 Please note that I am fiddling with my first paper here:
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http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/twiki/bin/view/LawContempSoc/AdamCarlis-FirstPaper
 and would appreciate any and all comments.

AdamCarlisIntro 7 - 08 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
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 -- JesseCreed - 08 Feb 2008
Changed:
<
<
Use the "edit" function on the user bin page (top right). Then scroll down to where Eben has left you some bullets (they look like three spaces followed by a *) and add a WikiWord? of your choosing as the title for the page. Click save and then you can go back to the user bin page and click on the ? next to the WikiWord? that you created in order to access the new page. Hopefully this was helpful.
>
>
Use the "edit" function on the user bin page (top right). Then scroll down to where Eben has left you some bullets (they look like three spaces followed by a "*") and add a WikiWord? of your choosing as the title for the page. Click save and then you can go back to the user bin page and click on the ? next to the WikiWord? that you created in order to access the new page. Hopefully this was helpful.
 -- AdamCarlis - 08 Feb 2008
 
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AdamCarlisIntro 6 - 08 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
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 Hey Adam - How do you create a "new topic" underneath your user bin, as you did?

-- JesseCreed - 08 Feb 2008

Added:
>
>

Use the "edit" function on the user bin page (top right). Then scroll down to where Eben has left you some bullets (they look like three spaces followed by a *) and add a WikiWord? of your choosing as the title for the page. Click save and then you can go back to the user bin page and click on the ? next to the WikiWord? that you created in order to access the new page. Hopefully this was helpful.

-- AdamCarlis - 08 Feb 2008

 
 
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AdamCarlisIntro 5 - 08 Feb 2008 - Main.JesseCreed
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
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 Adam, I think it's worth thinking about whether it's plausible that Hillary Clinton, running against a JFK-type (i.e., a white male with JFK-like credentials) would have been able to tout her experience as a positive. You hint at this in your "Hole in argument #1," but I'm not sure that the fact that youth hasn't been a detriment to presidential candidacies necessarily means that people actually believe it is not a detriment, at lease at the beginning and middle stages of a candidacy. Perhaps Hillary wants to prevent the electorate from making the leap that it was able to make for Kennedy and Bill? Do you think Hillary is creating an issue, or emphasizing (and perhaps distorting) an issue that's already there?

-- MichaelBerkovits - 08 Feb 2008

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>
>

Hey Adam - How do you create a "new topic" underneath your user bin, as you did?

-- JesseCreed - 08 Feb 2008

 
 
<--/commentPlugin-->

AdamCarlisIntro 4 - 08 Feb 2008 - Main.MichaelBerkovits
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
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 and would appreciate any and all comments.

-- AdamCarlis - 07 Feb 2008

Added:
>
>

Adam, I think it's worth thinking about whether it's plausible that Hillary Clinton, running against a JFK-type (i.e., a white male with JFK-like credentials) would have been able to tout her experience as a positive. You hint at this in your "Hole in argument #1," but I'm not sure that the fact that youth hasn't been a detriment to presidential candidacies necessarily means that people actually believe it is not a detriment, at lease at the beginning and middle stages of a candidacy. Perhaps Hillary wants to prevent the electorate from making the leap that it was able to make for Kennedy and Bill? Do you think Hillary is creating an issue, or emphasizing (and perhaps distorting) an issue that's already there?

-- MichaelBerkovits - 08 Feb 2008

 
 
<--/commentPlugin-->
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AdamCarlisIntro 3 - 07 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)

-- AdamCarlis - 17 Jan 2008

Added:
>
>

Please note that I am fiddling with my first paper here:

http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/twiki/bin/view/Main/FirstPaper

and would appreciate any and all comments.

-- AdamCarlis - 07 Feb 2008

 
 
<--/commentPlugin-->
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AdamCarlisIntro 2 - 07 Feb 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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I am interested in the law because I see it as an opportunity for folks who usually lose to win. I am most drawn to the areas of law where groups of people who have been wronged can band together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) and where individuals who are generally the most trodded upon can stick it to those who try and tread upon them (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.). Where that leaves me this summer and next and the many summers afterwards, I am unsure.
>
>
I see the courtroom as a place where folks who usually lose can win. Whether it means banding together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) or standing up to an oppressive regime (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.), legal victories can be human victories. I am interested in facilitating those victories. (edited 7 Feb 2008)
 -- AdamCarlis - 17 Jan 2008

AdamCarlisIntro 1 - 17 Jan 2008 - Main.AdamCarlis
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>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="WebPreferences"
I am interested in the law because I see it as an opportunity for folks who usually lose to win. I am most drawn to the areas of law where groups of people who have been wronged can band together to create justice (class actions, mass torts, etc.) and where individuals who are generally the most trodded upon can stick it to those who try and tread upon them (civil rights, criminal defense, etc.). Where that leaves me this summer and next and the many summers afterwards, I am unsure.

-- AdamCarlis - 17 Jan 2008

 
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Revision 10r10 - 21 Jan 2009 - 22:53:19 - IanSullivan
Revision 9r9 - 18 Feb 2008 - 13:14:39 - AdamCarlis
Revision 8r8 - 09 Feb 2008 - 15:08:30 - AdamCarlis
Revision 7r7 - 08 Feb 2008 - 21:07:25 - AdamCarlis
Revision 6r6 - 08 Feb 2008 - 11:33:08 - AdamCarlis
Revision 5r5 - 08 Feb 2008 - 03:23:32 - JesseCreed
Revision 4r4 - 08 Feb 2008 - 01:30:52 - MichaelBerkovits
Revision 3r3 - 07 Feb 2008 - 22:21:12 - AdamCarlis
Revision 2r2 - 07 Feb 2008 - 15:20:32 - AdamCarlis
Revision 1r1 - 17 Jan 2008 - 14:35:19 - AdamCarlis
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