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
Dean Kathryn Watts
Professor Carl Schneider, University of Michigan Law School
Professors Richard Craswell, Stanford University Law School
and Ryan Calo, UW School of Law
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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