News
- A group of about 20 University of Colorado Law School students traveled to reservation counties across North Dakota to ensure the votes of tribal reservation members were counted in the Nov. 6 election.
- The Princeton Review and student voters commended the University of Colorado Law School for its inclusive and cooperative environment, abundant opportunities for experiential learning, accessibility of faculty, and more in its 2019 annual ranking lists of the best law schools, released on Nov. 7, 2018.
- The University of Colorado Law School will celebrate seven alumni and friends of the law school at its annual awards banquet on Thursday, March 14, 2019, at Broncos Stadium at Mile High in Denver.
- Professors Sarah Krakoff and Mark Squillace each submitted law professor amicus briefs challenging the Trump administration's actions to shrink Bears Ears National Monument and Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument, respectively.
- Jon Sibray, senior IT director at Colorado Law, was one of four CU Boulder staff selected for the 2018 Chancellor's Employee of the Year Award in recognition of and appreciation for exceptional job performance and remarkable contributions to the campus community.
- On Nov. 6, University of Colorado Law School Professor Phil Weiser was elected to serve as the attorney general for the state of Colorado.
- Professor Ahmed White’s book tells the story of one of the most important labor disputes in American history.
- Associate Clinical Professor Carla Fredericks is leading a group of law students and Boulder area residents to North Dakota to ensure the votes of tribal reservation members are counted in Tuesday's election.
- This year's John (’74) and Katherine Rosenbloom Endowed Lectureship Series, in partnership with the Conference on World Affairs, focused on "Foreign Policy and the Rule of Law."
- The Samuelson-Glushko Technology Law and Policy Clinic, directed by Associate Clinical Professor Blake E. Reid, secured a slew of renewals and modifications to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), as announced in a ruling by the Library of Congress Oct. 26.