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New York State Bar Association (NYSBA) Law Student Membership

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New York State Bar Association – Free Membership for Law Students

 

Through a partnership with the New York State Bar Association (NYSBA), we are pleased to announce that you are entitled to join the New York State Bar Association for FREE! Your complimentary membership in the NYSBA will be activated within 72 hours, and will be effective as long as you are a student. This FREE membership is open to all 1L, 2L, and 3L students. Once activated, you will receive an email providing you with instructions on how you can join a substantive section — you can also pick one for free. In the coming weeks you will receive a welcome packet and your official NYSBA membership ID card.

 

In addition, you will receive a complimentary membership in the Young Lawyers Section and one complimentary Substantive Section membership. Sections are specialty groups that focus on various areas of practice and offer exclusive, additional benefits, like programs, publications, and special events.

 

Again, if you are interested in taking advantage of your FREE NYSBA MEMBERSHIP, follow the link provided or copy and paste this URL:  http://www.nysba.org/pathway/.

 

If you would like more information on the benefits of NYSBA law student membership, or how to get involved, contact the Member Service Center: 800.582.2452/518.463.3724, or email Alex Englander at aenglander@nysba.org.

 


American Bar Association (ABA) Section of Litigation Law Students and Member Benefits

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With the ABA Section of Litigation’s FREE Law Student Membership, we can provide law students the tools they need to succeed in business development as a lawyer.
With membership, law students will receive:

  • Access to our Business Development webpage featuring videos and articles to help law students network, build a resume, and get a job;
  • Subscriptions to our award-winning Litigation Journal and Monthly Litigation News electronically;
  • Opportunities to network and learn more about practice areas you are interested in through our over 35 committees;

Discounts on our 1-day Regional Meeting Workshops where law students can learn and network locally.

 

Learn more here.

New York School of Finance Investment Banking Interview Preparation

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The New York School of Finance will be hosting an investment banking interview preparation session via webcast for anyone interested in working in the field.

 

All those who successfully attend that session will be invited into our multi-day crash course covering financial modeling, valuation, mergers and acquisitions and leveraged buyouts.  All free of charge for students who enroll with a university email address.

 

Fall 2015 courses: September 24 – December 18

Register for the Fall 2015 Webcast here

 

New York School of Finance

Licensed by the State of New York, New York State Education Department

www.nyschooloffinance.com

Tel: (888) 775-3072 ext: 1

Oct. 16: RSVP Deadline: Johnson & Johnson Law Department’s Seminar and Networking Reception on “Becoming In-House Counsel”

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Friday, October 30, 2015

10:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

Registration begins at 9:30 am

Johnson & Johnson World Headquarters

One Johnson & Johnson Plaza

New Brunswick, New Jersey 08933

 

Join us for an engaging one-day seminar discussing the role of in-house counsel, why it can be a rewarding career choice, and how best to pursue it.

The seminar will include:

  • An interactive showcase of areas of expertise practiced by in-house counsel (Mergers and acquisitions, litigation, intellectual property, health care regulation, tax, international practice, and others)
  • A career planning discussion about becoming in-house counsel
  • Networking and mentoring opportunities with current in-house attorneys
  • Registration is limited. Please RSVP by October 16th via e-mail to LDIHC@ITS.JNJ.COM

Johnson & Johnson World Headquarters is easily accessible by train or car.

 

Lunch and a welcome gift bag will be provided.

 

Sponsored by the Johnson & Johnson Law Department Diversity & Inclusion Committee.

Oct. 8: New York City Bar (NYCB): Careers in Compliance

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Thursday, October 8

6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Program Fee: $5 Student Members | $10 Members| $25 Non-Member

Where:

42 West 44th Street
New York, NY 10036

 

Sponsoring Committee(s): Minorities in the Profession, Rakhi Bahadkar-Rajpaul, Chair

 

Are you thinking about a career in compliance? Over the past several years, the area of compliance has evolved into an integral part of a business. This panel of minority and women compliance professionals will provide you with information on how to leverage your law degree and experience into a successful career in compliance in the financial services, life science, and insurance industries. The panelists will share tips on entering the compliance field, a glimpse into their day-to-day activities, and more.

 

Moderator:

Rakhi Bahadkar-Rajpaul: Director, Legal and Compliance, Morgan Stanley

 

Panelists:

Ingrid A. Pelzer, Esq.: Senior Manager of Regulatory and Compliance Services, Porzio Life Sciences, LLC

Emily Jordan: Chief Privacy Officer and Associate Counsel, Legal and Compliance, Affinity Health Plan

Michael McMaster: Managing Director, BNY Mellon Capital Markets

Rose-Anne Richter: Managing Director, Morgan Stanley

 

See more here.

Professor Thompson seeks RAs for Fall 2015 (Topics: prosecutorial misconduct, leadership, reentry)

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Professor Anthony Thompson is looking for research assistants for the Fall 2015 semester to work on issues related to Prosecutorial Misconduct, leadership for lawyers and reentry issues (CSM ID 440236).

Professor Taylor-Thompson seeks RA for Fall 2015 (Topics: race, policing, mass incarceration)

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Professor Taylor-Thompson needs an RA to focus on race and policing and mass incarceration (CSM ID 440324).

Professor Hulsebosch seeks research assistance (Topic: history of international creditors rights)

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Professor Hulsebosch seeks a research assistant to help with a project on this history of international creditors rights. The position would last for the semester or the academic year (CSM ID 440255).


Professor Barry Friedman seeks research assistant (Topics: policing, criminal procedure, fourth amendment)

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Professor Friedman is looking for an RA to work with him on the American Law Institute’s new “Principles of Law, Police Investigations” project, for which he is the lead reporter. Topics include police accountability, and general principles of search and seizure. He also requires some assistance on a book and articles about the Fourth Amendment and policing. Position would last for the academic year.  Please submit a vita and transcript to his assistant Alex Lu, lua@mercury.law.nyu.edu

Professor Choi seeks research assistant (Pollack Center Graduate Fellow)

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The Pollack Center for Law and Business is hiring a Graduate Fellow for the Fall 2015 semester with the option to extend. The Graduate Fellow will work with Professor Stephen Choi on an empirical database on SEC enforcement actions against public companies.  Students are encouraged to do their own research on this new dataset.

 

Tasks include research on SEC filings, document review, and data entry. The successful candidate is a detail-oriented, highly organized individual who can execute directed projects.  The candidate should be comfortable working with Microsoft Office programs, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook (CSM ID 440491).

 

You’re Invited! Panel on Promoting Public Interest Law in Europe: Past, Present and Future

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Hosted by the Office of Global Programs in conjunction with NYU Law in Paris’ EU Public Interest Law Clinic

Thursday, October 15, 4:00-6:00 PM

Vanderbilt Hall, Room 216
NYU School of Law
40 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012

This event will explore the past, present and future of public interest law in Europe. Looking particularly at clinical legal education and its promise in the context of EU law, the speakers will reflect on how public interest law has taken shape in Europe and how it might develop in the coming years. The speakers will also reflect on the need for entrepreneurialism in the context of emergent public interest law fields. Coffee and snacks will be served.

 

Panelists

Louise TrubekEmerita Clinical Professor, University of Wisconsin Law School

Ed RekoshFounder and former Director of PILnet, the Global Network for Public Interest Law and Adjunct Professor, Columbia Law School

Gráinne de BúrcaFlorence Ellinwood Allen Professor of Law, NYU Law School

Alberto AlemannoGlobal Clinic Professor, NYU Law in Paris; Professor of Law, HEC Paris; Founder, eLabEurope

 

For more information about the event. please visit: http://www.law.nyu.edu/global/globalopportunities/nyulawabroad/paris/promoting-public-interest-law-in-europe

 

If you plan to attend, please RSVP to the Office of Global Programs HERE.

 

Oct. 5 – Oct. 29: Walk for Work with Associate Dean Dorzback (2Ls, 3Ls)

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Associate Dean Dorzback will be available to students on an individual basis by advance sign-up to discuss job search related issues during a walk around Washington Square Park. Sign up through the events tab on CSM https://law-nyu-csm.symplicity.com/students/.

Oct. 15: New York City Bar (NYCB): Program and Reception For International LL.M. Candidates

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Thursday, October 15, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m., 42 West 44th Street New York, NY 10036
6:30 – 7:30 p.m. – Panel Discussion with Q&A
7:30 – 8:30 p.m. – Reception
There is no charge for this program; please sign in to register.

 

Welcome: Debra L. Raskin, President, New York City Bar Association

 

Moderator: Mark Shulman, Chair, New York City Bar Association Asian Affairs Committee

 

Speakers: Adriana Ospina, Director of Pro Bono Partnerships, Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice; Nicola Christine Port, Senior Vice President and Associate General Counsel, ACE Group; Hon. Delissa A. Ridgway, Judge, U.S. Court of International Trade & Member, City Bar Council on International Affairs

 

The panelists will speak about how they came to be involved in international practice. They will offer advice on effective contact-making and networking, including how joining the New York City Bar and participating in its activities can be an effective route to do so. Meet, mingle and network with panelists and other City Bar leaders.

 

For more information about this program, please contact Margot Isaacs at (212) 382-6624 or misaacs@nycbar.org. For registration issues, please contact our Customer Service Department at customerservice@nycbar.org or 212-382-6600.

 

See more here.

Networking American Style 101: Events & Conversations

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Monday, October 12
12:45-1:55p.m.
Furman Hall, Room 210
Feel free to bring your own lunch

 

Networking is a powerful tool for attorneys no matter where they practice. Networking can help you find a job, extend your business relationships, and generate new clients. However, networking strategies in the United States may differ from those employed in other countries. In this installment, students will learn how to network, American style. The focus will be on networking at events and the art of conversation.

JDs are welcome to attend.

Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) Guided Visit

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Friday, October 9
2:15-3:30 p.m.
Tickets at OGA: $5

 

Have you had a chance to visit the MET yet? The MET is the largest art museum in the United States, and one of the ten largest in the world – visiting this museum without a guide can be daunting. Therefore, we hope you will join OGA on a guided tour of the museum’s highlights.

 

We hope you’ll join us.


Oct. 13: Global Post-Graduate Opportunities for LLMs Information Session

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►International Law and Human Rights Fellowship
►International Finance and Development Fellowship
►World Bank Legal Analyst Program
►International Court of Justice Clerkship

►Arthur Helton Global Human Rights Fellowship

 

Tuesday, October 13, 12:00-1:30 p.m.
Furman Hall, Room 216

 

There will be an information session for LLMs on Tuesday, October 13, from 12:00 to 1:30, in Furman Hall, Room 216, regarding global LLM post-graduate opportunities through the International Law and Human Rights Fellowship, the International Finance and Development Fellowship, World Bank Legal Analyst Program, International Court of Justice Clerkship, and Arthur Helton Global Human Rights Fellowship.

 

The International Law and Human Rights Fellowship Program is coordinated by the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) in cooperation with the Institute for International Law and Justice (IILJ) with the support of the Public Interest Law Center (PILC). Individuals who are current full-time 1L, 2L, LLM and JSD students are eligible to apply. For more information, see http://chrgj.org/opportunities/students/chrgj-international-human-rights-fellowship/.  The Fellowship has two major components: a 10-12 week internship in 2016, generally in the summer but in some cases in the fall, at one of many international organizations and a post-internship academic research paper. The list of ILHR program internship organizations is expected to include international tribunals (e.g. ICTY, ECCC, STL); UN organizations (e.g., ILC, UNHCR); international and national NGOs (e.g., groups in locations as diverse as Beijing, Bangkok, Bogotá, Buenos Aires, Dhaka, Jerusalem, Johannesburg, Kampala, London, New Delhi, Ramallah and Windhoek). The ILHR Fellowship application will be available on October 13 on the CHRGJ website (www.chrgj.org) and applications will be due by noon on Wednesday, November 11.

 

The International Finance and Development Fellowship Program for LLM students is coordinated by the Public Interest Law Center. The IFD Fellowship Program is designed to provide students with the opportunity to gain experience working with international organizations engaged in the areas of finance, development and international law. Each Fellowship has two major components: a 10-12 week internship at a prominent international organization and an academic research paper. Participating organizations for 2015-2016 are: EBRD, IDLO, IFC, IISD, IMF, OECD, UN, and the World Bank. Students who are current full-time LLM students are eligible to apply. For more information, see http://www.law.nyu.edu/publicinterestlawcenter/llmstudents/postgradfellowships/ifdfellowships. The IFD Fellowship application will be available on October 13 on the PILC website and applications will be due by 5:00pm on Monday, November 2.

 

Applicants to the IFD Fellowships can also elect on the application form to be considered for nominations for the World Bank Legal Analyst Program (LAP). NYU School of Law puts forward up to two nominations per Term of Reference for LAP each year, but does not guarantee the success of the nominations, nor award any financial support to successful applicants. The LAP nomination process is open to students with a minimum of one year and no more than two years of work experience post legal education. LAP positions are paid three-year term appointments with the Legal Vice Presidency.

 

International Court of Justice Clerkship

NYU School of Law was the first American law school to initiate a clerkship program with the International Court of Justice in 2000. Graduating students and recent graduates are eligible to apply. The Public Interest Law Center selects a shortlist of students or alumni with strong international law knowledge and proficiency in both English and French to work for nine or ten months in The Hague. The clerk selected by the ICJ will work with international judges, conduct legal research, draft memoranda and listen to oral arguments on issues in public international law. The deadline for applications has not been determined, but is expected to be in January 2016.

 

Arthur Helton Global Human Rights Fellowship

This annual fellowship supports one or more graduating students (JD or LLM) who have demonstrated a commitment to pursuing a career in international human rights law, and who have designed sound proposals for work at a host organization of their choice. Applicants are invited to design projects to put their legal education to work on timely issues in countries where their efforts are most needed and where there are insufficient resources for human rights protection. The fellowship provides a modest salary for one year and covers health insurance and travel costs for graduates to work closely with their chosen host organization. The deadline for applications is February 17, 2016.

 

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The October 13 meeting will be videotaped and available later on the PILC website.

 

For students interested in the ILHR Fellowship Program, there will be an informal meeting on Wednesday, October 28, from 5:30 – 7:00 PM at Golding Lounge West in Vanderbilt Hall to meet with former ILHR Fellows and learn about the Fellowship and program internships.

 

Contacts:

  • ILHR Fellowship Program: Tish Armstrong, CHRGJ Fellowship Coordinator, armstrong@nyu.edu
  • IFD Fellowship Program, World Bank Legal Analyst Program, ICJ Clerkship, and Arthur Helton Fellowship: David Glasgow, Associate Director and Research Fellow at PILC, at glasgow@nyu.edu

Calling all 1Ls and 2Ls: Learn About NYU Law’s Opportunities Overseas at the Global Positioning Panel

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Wednesday, November 11, 2015 

 12:45 PM – 2:00 PM

Greenberg Lounge, Vanderbilt Hall

 

This panel will provide students with information on NYU Law’s academic and professional opportunities overseas. 1Ls and 2Ls interested in learning more about the Law School’s international programming are strongly encouraged to attend. Speakers include Vice Dean for Global Affairs Kevin Davis, NYU Law Abroad Faculty Directors Frank Upham and Franco Ferrari, student participants from NYU Law Abroad, Career Services Director Clara Solomon and PILC Counselor Miriam Eckenfels-Garcia.

 

NYU Law Abroad student participants Katie Smith ‘16, Carter Nelson’ 16 and Darien Smith ‘16 will also speak to offer the student perspective on how the Law School’s different global opportunities have bolstered their academic experience and advanced their professional career plans.

 

Lunch food and beverages will be served. If you plan to attend, please RSVP to the Office of Global Programs HERE.

Deadline to Drop a Seven-week Course Ending in October

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As a reminder, please carefully note that if you are taking a seven-week course which ends in October, the deadline to drop that course is the last day the class meets. Once the class has ended, you will not be permitted to drop it.

To drop the class, please complete an add/drop form in your program office (Academic Services for JDs and the Office of Graduate Affairs for LLMs).

Reminder: A History of Roman Law Part II – Lunch Talk with Professor Epstein on 10/6/15

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Reminder: On Tuesday, October 6, 2015, Professor Richard Epstein will give the second in a series of lunch talks on the history of Roman Law.

The lunch will be held from 12:15pm – 1:30pm in Furman Hall 310.

In Part II of this lunch lecture series, Professor Epstein will focus on two central questions of property in Roman law.  The first of these deals with the classification of common and private property.  The second deals with the rules of acquisition for private property, dealing with land, chattels, animals, riparian lands, and accession.

Free lunch will be served. 

This event is open to NYU students and fellows.

To sign up for Part II of the series, please click here or visit:

http://goo.gl/forms/3I0uqg7XVz

Registration is required as space is limited.  

For questions, please contact Jen Canose at Jennifer.canose@nyu.edu.

Residence Life Family Fun Day

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Saturday, October 10
1:00-3:00 p.m.
RSVP at law.reslife@nyu.edu
Please include name of child/children and age(s)

 

The Office of Residence Life invites you and your family to join them for arts and crafts and light refreshments.

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