Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Conference announcement: disclosure and its discontents

The Washington Law Review will be hosting an upcoming symposium at the University of Washington School of Law on "The Disclosure Crisis." It invites those in the Pacific Northwest will be able to attend.

Announcement:

Mandatory disclosure is a popular form of regulation. From privacy to healthcare, politics to “payola,” laws requiring disclosure have proliferated in recent decades. This symposium features panel discussions by top scholars and practitioners on why we love—or love to hate—disclosure, why it seems to never work, and what solutions exist. 

Feb. 28, 2013

9:30 AM - 6:30 PM

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF LAW

WILLIAM H. GATES HALL ROOM 138

Register by Feb. 26

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Preliminary Schedule, Subject to Change

 Welcome

Dean Kathryn Watts

 The Failure of Mandated Disclosure

Professor Carl Schneider, University of Michigan Law School

 Responses to The Failure of Mandated Disclosure

Professors Richard Craswell, Stanford University Law School and Ryan Calo, UW School of Law

 Disclosure: Alternative Contexts and Responses

Moderated by: Elizabeth Porter, UW School of Law

Panelists: Jeremy Sheff, St. John's University School of Law, Zahr Said, UW School of Law and Woodrow N. Hartzog, Cumberland School of Law Samford University

Disclosure in the Online Environment

Moderated by: Martin Kaste, National Public Radio, Correspondent, National Desk, Seattle

Panelists: Deven Desai, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, Kathryn Decker, Federal Trade Commission, and Susan Lyon, Cooley, LLP

Keynote Presentation by U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan

Introduction by Dean Kellye Y. Testy

Sponsored by Law, Technology & Arts Group


Reception

Sponsored by Law, Technology & Arts Group

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