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Archive for 'FIU College of Law'

Home » Gabilondo Named One of 50 Most Influential Minority Law Professors » FIU College of Law

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Recent News

  • Professor H.T. Smith Receives Equal Justice Leadership Award
  • Sanjeev Shah ’12 Reflects on His Transition from Engineer to Lawyer
  • Gabilondo Named One of 50 Most Influential Minority Law Professors
  • Stephen Harper Receives ACLU’s C. Clyde Atkins Civil Liberties Award
  • David W. Barman ’05, Patent Attorney & CBA Faculty Member
  • Professor Gómez Addresses Implications of Chevron-Ecuador Saga
  • Fritznie Jarbath ’11, President-Elect of the HLA

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Gabilondo Named One of 50 Most Influential Minority Law Professors

Posted in: Faculty News, In the News
Tags: CNN, FIU College of Law, José Gabilondo, Lawyers of Color
Gabilondo Named One of 50 Most Influential Minority Law Professors

Lawyers of Color (LOC) recently selected the 50 most influential minority law professors, who are 50 years old or younger. The Florida International University College of Law is very pleased to announce that José Gabilondo has been named to this exceptional group.

LOC published the 1st annual edition of “The 50 Under 50 List” on May 15, 2013. The publication is available online and features profiles of these brilliant law professors. The publication also includes the names and racial and ethnic heritage of all minority law professors at 200 law schools and a comprehensive list of scholarships, fellowships and interns available to minority prospective and current law students.

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17MAY

David W. Barman ’05, Patent Attorney & CBA Faculty Member

Posted in: Alumni News, Spotlight
Tags: Alumni Q&A, David W. Barman, FIU College of Law
David W. Barman ’05, Patent Attorney & CBA Faculty Member

David W. Barman is a 2005 alumnus of the College of Law and one of the first registered patent attorneys from the college. He recently accepted a full-time faculty appointment with the university’s College of Business. Barman, who has taught courses at the bachelor’s and master’s levels at FIU, recently discussed his career path with FIU Law.

What have you been doing since your graduation from law school?

After law school, I took a position with a patent firm in Hollywood. While I was working there, I had occasion to meet an assistant chair in the Department of Criminal Justice at FIU. Although I did not practice criminal law, they offered me a position teaching a class as an adjunct. I have a teaching background having previously taught high school science/advanced math and SAT and MCAT test preparation for Kaplan.

The position eventually led to teaching assignments in Public Administration, where I taught administrative law, and the College of Business teaching business law. I have been teaching as an adjunct at FIU for six years.

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14MAY

Professor Gómez Addresses Implications of Chevron-Ecuador Saga

Posted in: Faculty News
Tags: Chevron, Ecuador, FIU College of Law, Manuel A. Gomez, Stanford Law School
Professor Gómez Addresses Implications of Chevron-Ecuador Saga

Professor Manuel A. Gómez recently served as a panel expert at the Constitutional Innovation, Human Rights, and Public Interest Litigation in the Global South Symposium, held at Stanford Law School on May 7, 2013.

Professor Gomez’s presentation, A Sour Battle in Lago Agrio: The Judicial Protection of the Environment and Indigenous Rights in Ecuador, addressed the implications of the Chevron-Ecuador saga in the debate on the protection of diffuse rights in Latin America and the development of structural litigation in the region.

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10MAY

Christine Rickard Selected as Professor of the Year for 2012-13

Posted in: Faculty News, School News
Tags: Barristers Ball, Christine Rickard, FIU College of Law, Marci A. Rosenthal, Professor of the Year, R. Alexander Acosta, Samah Abukhodeir
Christine Rickard Selected as Professor of the Year for 2012-13
SBA Secretary Samah Abukhodeir and Professor Christine Rickard

In a night where the FIU Law community dressed in their finest attire, and enjoyed a masquerade ball, Professor Christine Rickard was selected as “Professor of the Year” for 2012-13.

She was selected in recognition of her “excellence in teaching” and her “devoted commitment to the students of the Florida International University College of Law.”

“I am very honored and humbled to be the Professor of the Year,” said Rickard. “I love being a professor and this job means so much to me because I get to teach students how to make a difference every day through the law.”

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22APR

Professor Choudhury Discusses the Role of Culture in Legal Reform

Posted in: Faculty News
Tags: Albany Law School, Culture in Legal Reform, Cyra Akila Choudhury, FIU College of Law, symposium
Professor Choudhury Discusses the Role of Culture in Legal Reform

FIU Law Professor Cyra Akila Choudhury, recently served as a panelists at the Stoneman Conference on Gender and Human Rights at the invitation of the Albany Law School’s Dean, Penelope Andrews.

The conference, part of Albany Law’s Spring 2013 Kate Stoneman Series of Events, brought together national and international legal scholars of gender rights and international law to discuss the current state of women’s rights.

Professor Choudhury, part of the panel that discussed the issue of culture, spoke on the role of culture in legal reform.

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19APR

Nina Lewis ’06, Volunteer and U.S. Diplomat

Posted in: Alumni News
Tags: Alumni Q&A, FIU College of Law, Nina Lewis
Nina Lewis ’06, Volunteer and U.S. Diplomat
Nina Lewis works with an elementary school student at Lesotho State Library

After graduating from the Florida International University College of Law in 2006, Nina Lewis began a journey which would lead her to join the U.S. Diplomatic Corps.

We recently caught up with Lewis to discuss her career path and what led her on this journey.

Can you trace your career path after law school? What led you to join the U.S. Diplomatic Corps?

I graduated from FIU Law in May 2006. I spent the summer studying for the bar, took the July exam and sent out applications to masters degree programs. During law school, I was in the part-time program and was teaching full-time at a local high school.  After four years of sheer exhaustion, I wanted to enjoy some time off while waiting to see if I passed the bar, so I left the U.S. to backpack for a few months.  During my time as a teacher, I had summers off and did study abroad programs in The Netherlands and Australia.  FIU Law’s focus on international law and the study abroad experiences sparked my interest in foreign affairs.  I decided that after law school I would do a one-year Master of Arts in International Relations overseas, and learn a foreign language.  I was interested in working for the United Nations.  While backpacking in New Zealand, after a hike on a glacier, I bought a calling card, found a pay phone and called to find out my bar score: I passed!  The same week, I was accepted into a masters program in Brussels and one in Geneva, both starting in September.  I ended up in Thailand and found out that the program in Geneva, was also offered in Bangkok and was able to enroll in the course starting in February. I loved it, so I ended up learning Thai instead of French! My faculty advisor was a retired U.S. Ambassador. She was the U.S. Ambassador to Rwanda at the beginning of the genocide.  She encouraged me to join the State Department as a Foreign Service Officer.

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17APR

Carlos Lago ’09, Focuses on Land use and Governmental Affairs

Posted in: Alumni News
Tags: Alumni Q&A, Carlos R. Lago, FIU College of Law, Greenberg Traurig P.A.
Carlos Lago ’09, Focuses on Land use and Governmental Affairs

Carlos R. Lago, who received his Juris Doctor from the Florida International University College of Law in 2009, focuses his practice on land use, zoning and governmental affairs.

Lago recently discussed his career path and what led him to his current position at Greenberg Traurig.

What was your career path? What led you to your current position?

After law school, I worked in local government. I began at the city of Miami as a legislative aide for Commissioner Francis Suarez, advising him and working with staff members on land use and zoning matters, including the enactment and implementation of the city’s new zoning code, Miami 21.

That led me to Jackson Health System, where I was asked to serve as Chief of Staff to Jackson’s newly appointed President and CEO, Carlos Migoya. I was attracted to the opportunity to be a part of the financial turnaround of such an important public institution in South Florida. Prior to the new management’s arrival, Jackson had reported losses of more than $80 million in 2011, and by the following fiscal year, the health system had accumulated a surplus of more than $8 million.

After almost four years in the public sector, I felt a strong desire to apply what I learned to the practice of law. My experience had been in local government, so joining the Land Development Practice Group at the powerhouse law firm Greenberg Traurig was a natural match.

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17APR

Manuel Gómez Discusses Law Abiding Behavior at Burning Man Festival

Posted in: Faculty News
Tags: FIU College of Law, Manuel A. Gomez, Stanford Law School
Manuel Gómez Discusses Law Abiding Behavior at Burning Man Festival

Manuel Gómez, Associate Professor at the Florida International University College of Law, recently discussed his research on the Burning Man festival for the Stanford Program in Law and Society called Order in the Desert: Law abiding Behavior at Burning Man. The presentation was held April 10 at Stanford Law School.

The Burning Man is a massive weeklong event that takes place in the Nevada Desert, which, when compared to similar events, shows one of the lowest crime rates, and high-level law abiding behavior.

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16APR

Professor Choudhury Presents at Symposium on Presumed Incompetent

Posted in: Faculty News
Tags: Cyra Akila Choudhury, FIU College of Law, symposium, UC Berkeley School of Law
Professor Choudhury Presents at Symposium on Presumed Incompetent

Cyra Akila Choudhury, associate professor at the Florida International University College of Law, recently presented at a symposium about a book called Presumed Incompetent: The Intersections of Race and Class for Women in Academia. The symposium, sponsored by the the Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law and Justice, was held at the University of California Berkeley School of Law on March 8.

The symposium brought together nationally recognized scholars from the legal academy to discuss the experiences of discrimination faced by women and particularly women of color in the academy.

Professor Choudhury gave a talk entitled “Diversity and Its Discontents” which explored the issue of discrimination and the use of differing standards of evaluation in a diverse context.

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10APR

FIU Law Students Participate in the Caribbean Law Clinic

Posted in: Student News
Tags: American Caribbean Law Initiative, Caribbean Law Clinic, FIU College of Law, Julie Lockhead, Michele Anglade, Patricia Ramsey Chronicle, Terry Ann Howell
FIU Law Students Participate in the Caribbean Law Clinic
Pictured above (front row, L-R): Patricia Ramsey Chronicle, Terry Ann Howell and Julie Lockhead. (back row) Assistant Dean Michele Anglade

Three students from the Florida International University College of Law participated in the Caribbean Law Clinic held in Nassau, Bahamas, earlier this month. The participating students included Patricia Ramsey Chronicle (3L), Terry Ann Howell (2L), and Julie Lockhead (4L).

The CLC is organized by the American Caribbean Law Initiative, a collective of American and Caribbean law schools with an interest in supporting the growth and development of the Caribbean Basin by facilitating collaborative relationships and strengthening its legal development and institutions.

As part of the clinic, participating students presented arguments on challenging legal issues to members of the Bahamian bench and bar.

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9APR
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