Below the Line Northwestern University Law Review
-
- Education
-
Below the Line is a podcast produced by the Northwestern University Law Review. We feature interviews with legal scholars and practitioners, panels hosted on campus, and other relevant topics in legal news.
-
Fraud & the Erosion of Trust: Practitioner Roundtable
In 2022, the Northwestern University Law Review presents a symposium on Fraud and the Erosion of Trust, which brings together scholars of history, sociology, economics, psychology, business, and corporate and consumer fraud with a diverse array of practitioners to explore the most effective ways to redress the rise in fraud and accompanying decline in public trust.
Key inquiry:
Has widespread fraud so significantly undermined trust in individuals, government, and market institutions that American society is confronting a reckoning?
If so, what are the best policies and approaches to reduce misrepresentation and deceit to less disruptive levels and thus reconstitute versions of trust and trustworthiness that make sense in the interconnected 21st century? -
Fraud & the Erosion of Trust: Conversation Between Judge Rakoff & Prof. Edward Balleisen
In 2022, the Northwestern University Law Review presents a symposium on Fraud and the Erosion of Trust, which brings together scholars of history, sociology, economics, psychology, business, and corporate and consumer fraud with a diverse array of practitioners to explore the most effective ways to redress the rise in fraud and accompanying decline in public trust.
Key inquiry:
Has widespread fraud so significantly undermined trust in individuals, government, and market institutions that American society is confronting a reckoning?
If so, what are the best policies and approaches to reduce misrepresentation and deceit to less disruptive levels and thus reconstitute versions of trust and trustworthiness that make sense in the interconnected 21st century? -
Fraud & the Erosion of Trust: Keynote Lunch with Judge Jed Rakoff (SDNY)
In 2022, the Northwestern University Law Review presents a symposium on Fraud and the Erosion of Trust, which brings together scholars of history, sociology, economics, psychology, business, and corporate and consumer fraud with a diverse array of practitioners to explore the most effective ways to redress the rise in fraud and accompanying decline in public trust.
Key inquiry:
Has widespread fraud so significantly undermined trust in individuals, government, and market institutions that American society is confronting a reckoning?
If so, what are the best policies and approaches to reduce misrepresentation and deceit to less disruptive levels and thus reconstitute versions of trust and trustworthiness that make sense in the interconnected 21st century? -
Fraud & the Erosion of Trust: The Evolution of Anti-Fraud Regulation
In 2022, the Northwestern University Law Review presents a symposium on Fraud and the Erosion of Trust, which brings together scholars of history, sociology, economics, psychology, business, and corporate and consumer fraud with a diverse array of practitioners to explore the most effective ways to redress the rise in fraud and accompanying decline in public trust.
Key inquiry:
Has widespread fraud so significantly undermined trust in individuals, government, and market institutions that American society is confronting a reckoning?
If so, what are the best policies and approaches to reduce misrepresentation and deceit to less disruptive levels and thus reconstitute versions of trust and trustworthiness that make sense in the interconnected 21st century? -
Fraud & the Erosion of Trust: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Fraud
In 2022, the Northwestern University Law Review presents a symposium on Fraud and the Erosion of Trust, which brings together scholars of history, sociology, economics, psychology, business, and corporate and consumer fraud with a diverse array of practitioners to explore the most effective ways to redress the rise in fraud and accompanying decline in public trust.
Key inquiry:
Has widespread fraud so significantly undermined trust in individuals, government, and market institutions that American society is confronting a reckoning?
If so, what are the best policies and approaches to reduce misrepresentation and deceit to less disruptive levels and thus reconstitute versions of trust and trustworthiness that make sense in the interconnected 21st century? -
Law Review Live: Redeeming Justice
Law Review Live: Redeeming Justice by Northwestern University Law Review
Customer Reviews
Great Start
Excellent start to a podcast with Professor Roser-Jones. Can’t wait for more!