Fireside Chat – Framing Failure with Jules Lobel and Bruce Miller
Event Details
Join Us for a Special Fireside Chat – Framing Failure with Jules Lobel and Bruce Miller
Speakers/Facilitator:
- Jules Lobel, Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law
- Bruce Miller, Director of UCSF Memory and Aging Center; Founding Director, GBHI at UCSF
- Kate Rankin, (facilitator) GBHI Faculty member and professor and neuropsychologist at UCSF
This special event will feature Jules Lobel in conversation with Bruce Miller. Together, they will explore the concept of framing failure, offering unique insights and an engaging dialogue.
Atlantic Fellows, GBHI staff, MAC post-docs, and research coordinators are encouraged to join.
Coffee and light refreshments provided.
About Jules Lobel:
Jules Lobel is the Bessie Mckee Walthour Chaired Professor at the University of Pittsburgh Law School. He is the author of Success Without Victory, Lost Legal Battles and the Long Road to Justice in America (NYU 2003), and the co-author with Professor David Cole of the award-winning book Less Safe, Less Free, Why America is Losing the War on Terror (new Press 2007). He has authored or co-authored numerous articles in academic journals, including co-authoring with Professor Huda Akil, “Law and Neuroscience: The Case of Solitary Confinement” in the fall 2018 issue of Daedalus He was formerly the President of the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR). On behalf of CCR, he argued the case of Wilkinson v. Austin in the United States Supreme Court and was lead counsel in the Ashker v. Brown case, challenging the prolonged solitary confinement of hundreds of prisoners in California as cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the United States Constitution and International Law. Both cases resulted in hundreds of prisoners being released from prolonged solitary confinement and placed in the general population. Most recently, he has published Participatory Litigation: A New Framework for Impact Lawyering, published in Stanford Law Review.
Read this publication to learn more: https://www.stanfordlawreview.org/print/article/participatory-litigation/