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2020 Annual Meeting
Date(s):
January 2 5, 2020
Venue:Washington Marriott Wardman Park Hotel
2660 Woodley Rd. NW Washington, DC 20008
Website:https://am.aals.org
Fee(s):This event has a fee
Description:Pillars of Democracy: Law, Representation, and Knowledge
Legal education plays essential roles in sustaining the pillars of constitutional democracy. These include law, its values, and institutions; elections and representation; and the knowledge institutions of which law schools are an integral part.
The ideas of government under law, and equality under law, central to our constitutional traditions, require independent courts. Yet personal attacks on judges, along with increased violence against certain minorities, threaten the ideal of equal justice under law. Legal training speaks to issues of fair process, equal treatment, and judicial independence. These ideas do not sustain themselves; they need to be taught, critically analyzed, and practiced. Indeed, respect for fair process is important throughout government, including adherence to “regular order” in the Congress (in which lawyers disproportionately serve). Law school curricula should reflect the needs for fair process in all parts of our system of governance.
A second pillar of constitutional democracy is fair voting and representation—with law laying down rules in advance—about who can vote, for what candidates, for which offices. But law can be used to obstruct as well as to support democracy by, for example, illegitimately suppressing the vote. Law schools should consider how to explore the significance of voting and representation, as well as the norms of political reciprocity on which a decent democracy rests. Just as we introduce our students to thick ideas of what it means to be a good judge, we should consider providing more analytical and normative attention to elections and elected representatives, asking, for example, whether principle and compromise might play different roles for a judge and for a legislator.
Knowledge institutions—universities (including law schools), a free press, and public and private offices devoted to gathering and disseminating data—are a third pillar of constitutional democracy. Self-governance requires informed voters, whose opinions rest on shared knowledge. Law schools today help fulfill the roles that President George Washington contemplated for a national university—to educate citizens in knowing their rights, knowing the law, knowing how to evaluate their representatives, and understanding government. Yet higher education, of which law faculties are a part, faces serious challenges, including new partisan divides about its value, and concerns about fair access. Other challenges confront the press, which supports democracy by reporting on matters of public concern, and government offices charged with responsibility for data collection. We should ask our students to reflect on how law sustains those institutions central to the epistemic foundations of democracy.
Finally, we should recognize that institutions can only do so much—character and attitude matter. Constitutionalism and democracy are supported by such lawyerly civic virtues as open-mindedness, fairness, integrity, and courage—the courage to stand up for equality, as did Justice Thurgood Marshall, and the courage to make compromises that enable our representative government to function.
Working together, we, as legal educators, and our students can help strengthen the pillars of constitutional democracy.
Vicki C. Jackson AALS President and Harvard Law School ,
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11:00 am - 6:30 pm
AALS Information Desk
Type: AALS Office
Short description is not available at this time.
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11:00 am - 7:00 pm
Nursing Parents Room
Type: AALS Office
Short description is not available at this time.
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11:00 am - 8:00 pm
AALS Registration
Type: AALS Registration
Short description is not available at this time.
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
AALS Arc of Career Program
Type: AALS Arc of Career Programs
Tweeting, Gramming: Social Media for the Legal Academic
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
AALS Discussion Group
Type: AALS Discussion Groups
The Role of Women as International, Regional, and National Judges
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Children and the Law
Type: Section Programs
A Time of Momentum in Child Welfare Advocacy, Policy, and Research
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Continuing Legal Education
Type: Section Programs
Beyond the Socratic Method - Thinking Entrepreneurially about Executive Programs
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Criminal Justice
Type: Section Programs
New Frontiers in State Post-Conviction Litigation
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Disability Law
Type: Section Programs
Reconsidering Disability Benefit Programs
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1:30 pm - 3:15 pm
Jewish Law
Type: Section Programs
The Rise and Fall of the Jewish Law Firm
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Daisy Soderberg-Rivkin
Organization: R Street
Jasmine C. Abdel-khalik
Organization: University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law
Heather R. Abraham
Organization: Georgetown University Law Center
Aviva Abramovsky
Organization: University at Buffalo School of Law, The State University of New York
Kerry Abrams
Organization: Duke University School of Law
Jamie R. Abrams
Organization: University of Louisville, Louis D. Brandeis School of Law
Eleanor Acer
Organization: Human Rights First
William E. Adams
Organization: American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar
Sarah Adams-Schoen
Organization: University of Oregon School of Law
Walter Edward Afield
Organization: Georgia State University College of Law
Afra Afsharipour
Organization: University of California, Davis, School of Law
Afra Afsharipour
Organization: University of California, Davis, School of Law
Maryam Ahranjani
Organization: University of New Mexico School of Law
Richard Albert
Organization: The University of Texas School of Law
Richard Albert
Organization: The University of Texas School of Law
Josh Albertson
Organization: Association of American Law Schools
Catherine R. Albiston
Organization: University of California, Berkeley School of Law
Mark C. Alexander
Organization: Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law
Lisa T. Alexander
Organization: Texas A&M University School of Law
Michèle Alexandre
Organization: Stetson University College of Law
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