Law Schools Are Lagging in AI Instruction, Newly Released MJLST Analysis Indicates

When a person writes software, makes a medical diagnosis, creates art or orders a drone strike, the law resolves many issues that arise. Take the coder, the physician, the artist or the military leader out the picture — as artificial intelligence (AI) is doing and increasingly promises to do — and the law will struggle.

Professor Francis X. Shen

Professors Hill, Painter & Ponomarenko Take on Key Leadership Roles in ALI Projects

The American Law Institute has, for nearly a century, brought together federal and state judges, prominent lawyers, and law professors to clarify and simplify the law, and secure the better administration of justice. ALI projects include Restatements, primarily addressed to courts, Principles, primarily addressed to legislatures, administrative agencies and private actors, and Codes, intended to be enacted by legislatures. One ALI project was the Model Penal Code, which became the foundation for criminal law in more than half of the United States.

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Associate Dean Joan Howland Receives ABA's Prestigious Kutak Award

Joan S. Howland, associate dean for information and technology and Roger F. Noreen Professor of Law, has been named the 2021 recipient of the prestigious Robert J. Kutak Award. 

The American Bar Association Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar and the national Kutak Rock law firm established the Robert J. Kutak Award in 1984. The Kutak award is awarded annually to honor an individual who has made significant contributions to the collaboration of the academy, the bench, and the bar.

A May 24, 2021 Bloomberg Law article titled Apple Points to IP in Bid to Defeat an Epic Antitrust Claim discusses Apple's efforts to defeat one of the antitrust claims plaintiff Epic has raised in a high-stakes antitrust lawsuit against the smartphone maker. More specifically, Epic claims that federal antitrust law requires Apple to permit competing app distributors like Epic to have access to Apple's iOs platform as an "essential facility," even though the platform incorporates some IP-protected features.

Kao Ly Ilean Her '94, U of M Regent, Dies at 52

Kao Ly Ilean Her '94, the first Hmong person elected by the Minnesota Legislature to serve on the University of Minnesota Board of Regents, has died at the age of 52.

Her was elected by the Legislature to a six-year term as a regent in 2019. She was also the first Hmong woman admitted to the Minnesota Bar Association, and was a committed activist for Asian Americans and a beloved member of the state's Hmong community.

Kao Ly Ilean '94