Thoughtful reflections on the implications for law and religion in the United States’ crises of the past six months: the coronavirus pandemic and economic and racial justice emergencies
Moderators:
Kathleen Brady, Emory University School of Law
Doriane Coleman, Duke University School of Law
Carolina Mala Corbin, University of Miami School of Law
Cole Durham, Founding Director ICLRS, BYU Law School
Jeffrey Hammond, Faulkner University
Michael DeBoer, Faulkner University
Samuel Levine, Touro Law Center
Daniel Bennett, John Brown University
Andrew Lewis, University of Cincinnati
Angela Carmella, Seton Hall Law School
E. Isabel Park, Graduate of University of Michigan
Joanna Smith, University of North Carolina
Robin Fretwell Wilson, University of Illinois College of Law
Matthew Cavedon, Criminal defense attorney, Gainesville, Georgia
Patrick Hornbeck, Fordham University
Dwight Newman, University of Saskatchewan College of Law
Daniela Tarantino, Università di Genova, Italy
Alejandro Gonzalez-Varas, University of Zaragoza, Spain
Mary Anne Case, University of Chicago Law School
Christopher Lund, Wayne State University Law School
Adelaide Madera, University Of Messina, Italy
Zachary Pohlman, Notre Dame Law School
Paul Marshall, Institute for Studies of Religion, Baylor University
Terri Montague, Emory University School of Law
Brett Scharffs, Director ICLRS, BYU Law School
Anton Sorkin, Doctoral candidate, Emory Law School
George Walters-Sleyon, Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University