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‘It’s all about the brief’

April 27, 2020

Keep it concise and know your audience: N.C. Court of Appeals Judge Richard Dietz鈥檚 writing advice in a virtual presentation to first-year Elon Law students was drawn from his experience as an appellate attorney and six years on the bench.

Elon Law clinic gives close-up view of appellate process

April 9, 2020

The Constitutional Law Appellate Advocacy Clinic tasked students this winter with researching and writing amicus curiae briefs in the Supreme Court of the United States and a U.S. Court of Appeals dealing with questions of judicial process and freedom of speech.

Appeals court at Elon Law: Cocaine convictions & a wrongful death

March 9, 2020

Judges from the North Carolina Court of Appeals heard oral arguments on March 4 in the case of a man convicted of drug possession who alleges an illegal search by police, and a civil lawsuit brought by the estate of a man killed when his riding mower overturned at a construction site.

Elon Law program extended with $1.2 million from N.C.

February 4, 2020

The Emergency Legal Services Program, which assists victims of domestic violence, sexual violence and elder abuse at the Family Justice Centers in Guilford and Alamance counties, was renewed for another two years through a grant from the North Carolina Governor鈥檚 Crime Commission.

Empowering young people through ‘Street Law’

January 15, 2020

A fall trimester course provided Elon Law students with an opportunity to visit local high schools and a juvenile detention center to teach teenagers about the constitutional rights afforded them in the justice system.

Study: Lower debt, stronger diversity & improved outcomes at Elon Law

December 3, 2019

A new report by RTI International measured access, affordability, and value in Elon Law鈥檚 2.5-year Juris Doctor program, which prioritizes learning by doing through sequencing doctrinal courses with a first-of-its-kind legal residency-in-practice for academic credit.

Symposium serves up suggestions for protecting court legitimacy

October 4, 2019

The Elon Law Review鈥檚 2019 Symposium on Judicial Independence brought to Greensboro some of the nation鈥檚 leading experts on the American court system, with keynote remarks by a Yale Law scholar who favors keeping the U.S. Supreme Court at nine justices while reconfiguring the way they are appointed and help decide cases.

Visiting scholar delivers legal writing lessons at Elon Law

October 1, 2019

A grant from the Association of Legal Writing Directors supported the two-day visit by Ruth Anne Robbins, a distinguished clinical professor from Rutgers Law who taught Elon Law students, faculty, and staff about the power of narrative storytelling and the importance of document design in the legal profession.