Illinois College of Law Juvenile Life Sentences & Constitutional Limitations

Illinois College of Law: Juvenile Life Sentences & Constitutional Limitations CLE - 7/21

CLE: JUVENILE LIFE SENTENCES AND CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATIONS

Event TypeProfessional DevelopmentSponsorUniversity of Illinois College of LawVirtualDateJul 21, 2021 12:00 - 1:00 pm SpeakerMargareth Etienne, Associate Dean for Graduate and International Programs & Carl L. Vacketta Professor of Law CostFree, but registration requiredContactHeather Ball, Director of Events & Alumni Programming E-Mailhball@illinois.edu Views26

University of Illinois College of Law 

CLE: Juvenile Life Sentences and Constitutional Limitations

Wednesday, July 21, 2021
12-1 P.M. (CST)

The University of Illinois College of Law will apply for 1.00 hour (Illinois) MCLE credit for this session.

This session will explore recent U.S. and Illinois Supreme Court cases on sentencing juveniles to life (or defacto) life sentences.

Presented by:
Margareth Etienne, the Carl L. Vacketta Professor of Law, is the inaugural associate dean for graduate and international programs, where she oversees the College of Law’s JSD, LLM, and MSL programs. She served as the College’s associate dean for academic affairs from 2012-13, the head of the University of Illinois’s Department of African American Studies from 2011-12, and as a provost fellow for the University of Illinois from 2009-11. She has also served on the executive board of the AALS Section on Professional Responsibility from 2006-09.

Professor Etienne teaches criminal law and procedure, sentencing, education law and children in the law. Her research focuses on legal decision-making and ethics in institutions ranging from criminal courts to schools and families. In 2004, she was awarded a Fulbright Grant to conduct judicial training on white-collar crime in Senegal.

Her select publications include “Understanding Parity As A First principle of Sentencing” (58 Stanford L. Rev., 2006); “The Ethics of Cause Lawyering: An Empirical Examination of Criminal Defense Lawyers as Cause Lawyers” (95 J. Crim. L. & Criminology, 2005); “The Declining Utility of the Right to Counsel in Federal Court: An Empirical Study on the Role of Defense Attorney Advocacy Under the Sentencing Guidelines” (92 California Law Review, 2004); “Remorse, Responsibility, and Regulating Advocacy: Making Defendants Pay for the Sins of Their Lawyers” (78New York University Law Review, 2003). Her article, “Addressing Gender Based Violence in an International Context,” appeared in 18 Harvard Women’s Law Journal139 (1995). She was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago Law School in 2007-08 and has made presentations at Stanford Law School, the University of Chicago Law School, Northwestern University Law School, Yale Law School, Fordham Law School, University of Oregon Law School, Notre Dame Law School, and the American Bar Foundation.

Professor Etienne received her bachelor’s degree in history with honors from Yale University, and earned her law degree from Yale Law School. Following law school, Etienne clerked for Judge Diana G. Motz on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. Before joining the Illinois faculty in 2001, she practiced criminal law in state and federal courts for several years.

Free, but registration required. 
REGISTER HERE

Join Zoom Meeting
https://illinois.zoom.us/j/81302138540?pwd=MTByZ0lVM1l1eCtOUEcveGRWMnhZUT09

Meeting ID: 813 0213 8540
Password: 841682

StartsWed Jul 21 2021, 12:00pm CDTEndsWed Jul 21 2021, 01:00pm CDT

Sarah Croft