Communities and Courts
Date/Time:Sep 17/4:00 PM
Location: Academic Dates
Location: Swartz Conference Room A
This fall, the Honorable Judge Karoline Mehalchick, along with other distinguished legal professionals from our region, will be leading a workshop series on campus titled The Courts and Our Community: Civics Engagement. These sessions are designed to introduce students to key legal concepts and to foster civic awareness through direct engagement with judges, attorneys, and legal scholars.
All workshops will take place from 4:00–5:30 p.m. on the dates listed below. We invite you to consider incorporating this opportunity into your course. If you choose to participate, students would attend all six workshops as part of your class requirements, with attendance and engagement contributing approximately 15% of the course grade. For students unable to attend, this portion of the grade may be reallocated to other course components (e.g., exams, assignments).
Constitution Day Talk by Dr. Adam Shprintzen: Black Suffrage, Birthright Citizenship, & the Battle Over US History
Date/Time:Sep 17/7:00 PM
Location: Learning Commons 331
The end of the Civil War provided an opportunity for a re-definition of rights, citizenship, and democracy in the United States. For a brief moment in time, the country looked to live up to its principles of equality and work towards the first true interracial democracy. The collapse of Reconstruction unraveled this revolutionary moment and placed the country on a path to segregation and inequality that continues to impact today. This Constitution Day talk looks at this moment in time and considers the power of how we misremember these years and will consider the ties between voting rights, suffrage, and the histories that we tell and the histories we don't tell.
Communities and Courts
Date/Time:Oct 1/4:00 PM
Location: Academic Dates
Location: Swartz Conference Room A
This fall, the Honorable Judge Karoline Mehalchick, along with other distinguished legal professionals from our region, will be leading a workshop series on campus titled The Courts and Our Community: Civics Engagement. These sessions are designed to introduce students to key legal concepts and to foster civic awareness through direct engagement with judges, attorneys, and legal scholars.
All workshops will take place from 4:00–5:30 p.m. on the dates listed below. We invite you to consider incorporating this opportunity into your course. If you choose to participate, students would attend all six workshops as part of your class requirements, with attendance and engagement contributing approximately 15% of the course grade. For students unable to attend, this portion of the grade may be reallocated to other course components (e.g., exams, assignments).