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Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
UArizona Law Legal Writing
8 episodes
2 days ago
A podcast that asks the question: how does a profession governed by precedent respond to the unprecedented? Practice in Place investigates how the practice of law and the administration of justice have adapted under the abrupt constraints of the COVID-19 era, how that has affected how and whether we achieve justice, and how those changes and that experience might or should change the practice, the profession, and its procedures forever. Produced by University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law and hosted by Professor Susie Salmon and the Legal Writing Program
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Government
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All content for Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral is the property of UArizona Law Legal Writing and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A podcast that asks the question: how does a profession governed by precedent respond to the unprecedented? Practice in Place investigates how the practice of law and the administration of justice have adapted under the abrupt constraints of the COVID-19 era, how that has affected how and whether we achieve justice, and how those changes and that experience might or should change the practice, the profession, and its procedures forever. Produced by University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law and hosted by Professor Susie Salmon and the Legal Writing Program
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Government
Episodes (8/8)
Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Ep_8 John Dacey, Robert Craig, and Abolish Private Prisons

In past episodes, we have talked about how the pandemic has highlighted existing issues in the criminal justice system. Back in 2016, the Department of Justice's Inspector General concluded that private prisons posed significantly greater danger to inmate rights and safety. In 2020, these concerns arose again with at least two private prisons becoming COVID-19 hotspots and watchdogs questioning the transparency and accuracy of infection reports coming from those facilities. In this episode, Susie Salmon discusses COVID-19 in private prisons and interviews attorneys John Dacey and Robert Craig of Abolish Private Prisons about the lawsuit against the Arizona Department of Corrections asserting that private prisons are unconstitutional. You can see more about Abolish Private Prisons and the litigation at abolishprivateprisons.org. 

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5 years ago
59 minutes 46 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Ep. 7 David Lat, founder of Above the Law

Professor Tessa Dysart interviews David Lat--lawyer, writer, and founder of the Above the Law website--about his personal battle with COVID-19, his recovery, and his insights on how the pandemic has affected and will continue to affect the practice of law, the courts, and the system.

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5 years ago
30 minutes 51 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Ep. 6 Nate Wade

Professor Salmon interviews Nate Wade from the Office of the Pima County Public Defender about being a criminal-defense attorney during the pandemic and efforts to reduce jail overcrowding.

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5 years ago
39 minutes 56 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Practice in Place Ep. 5 - Gerald Sauer and Civil Litigation

Professor Diana Simon interviews Los Angeles civil litigator Gerald Sauer about how the pandemic has impacted complex civil litigation.

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5 years ago
26 minutes 28 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Practice in Place Ep. 4: Sean Marotta and Raffi Melkonian and #AppellateTwitter

Professor Dysart interviews appellate practitioners and active participants in #AppellateTwitter, Sean Marotta and Raffi Melkonian about how the pandemic has impacted their practices, how they've adapted to the challenges, and how they think appellate practice will change forever in the "new normal" of post-pandemic life.

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5 years ago
34 minutes 55 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Practice in Place Ep. 3: Stacy Butler & Innovation for Justice

In this episode, Professor Salmon talks to Professor Stacy Butler about the Innovation for Justice (I4J) Program, designed to train law students to think creatively about how to engineer disruptive change in the legal system and take steps to address the justice gap through technology and other innovations. Professor Butler talks about how the COVID-19 crisis highlights aspects of our broken system and a few of the I4J initiatives tackling some of those issues. 

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5 years ago
30 minutes 7 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Practice in Place Ep. 2: Paul Bennett and the Child and Family Law Clinic

Professor Susie Salmon interviews UArizona Law Professor Paul Bennett about the challenges of representing a child in dependency proceedings when you can't meet in person. 

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5 years ago
28 minutes 32 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral, Ep. One - Judge Laine McDonald

Professor Sylvia Lett interviews Judge Laine McDonald of the Municipal Court for the Town of Marana, Arizona regarding how her court has adapted to continue to serve the public under the constraints imposed by the COVID-19 crisis.

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5 years ago
22 minutes 47 seconds

Practice in Place: Law and Justice Go Viral
A podcast that asks the question: how does a profession governed by precedent respond to the unprecedented? Practice in Place investigates how the practice of law and the administration of justice have adapted under the abrupt constraints of the COVID-19 era, how that has affected how and whether we achieve justice, and how those changes and that experience might or should change the practice, the profession, and its procedures forever. Produced by University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law and hosted by Professor Susie Salmon and the Legal Writing Program