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The UNC School of Law is home to several centers that focus on issues of state and national interest: [19] Center for Banking and Finance - Lissa Broome, Director; Center for Civil Rights - Theodore Shaw, Director. Center for Climate, Energy, Environment & Economics - Jonas J. Monast, Director
UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt, right, confers with Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs Clayton Somers Monday, Dec. 3, 2018.
Michael J. Gerhardt is the Samuel Ashe Distinguished Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of North Carolina School of Law in Chapel Hill. [1] He is also the director of the Center on Law and Government at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is an expert on constitutional law, separation of powers, and the legislative process. [2]
Psychology and political science / law: Current Governor of North Carolina and former North Carolina Attorney General: Steve Cowper: 1960 / Grad. History / law: Former governor of Alaska Locke Craig: 1880: Former governor of North Carolina Walter H. Dalton: 1971 / Grad. Law Former Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: Mike Easley: 1972 ...
In August 1961, Clayton joined the McKissick and Berry Law Firm in Durham. [1] In October, he partnered with a white attorney, James D. Gilliland, to form the firm of Gillian and Clayton in Warrenton. Clayton was the first black person to practice law in Warren County. Interracial legal partnerships were unusual at the time, but Gillian was ...
Brinkley began his career by serving as a law clerk to Chief Judge Sam J. Ervin, III of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. He then entered the practice of law in Raleigh, North Carolina, first with Moore & Van Allen, PLLC, where he became a partner in 1998, and from 2003 to 2015, with Smith, Anderson, Blount, Dorsett, Mitchell & Jernigan, LLP.
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Established in 1922, the North Carolina Law Review is the oldest law journal in the state [1] and tied for the seventh oldest in the American South. [nb 1] In its first volume, the founding editors wrote that the journal would provide "a supplement to the routine daily class work of the School, [and] it will afford to the second and third year students, a means of intensive training in legal ...