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DTSTART:20221118T143000Z
DTEND:20221118T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260608T044508
DESCRIPTION: In-person registration for the conference is now closed. You can livestream the conference&nbsp;here.\nFor most of our history, when Americans argued and fought about how to organize our political economy—the role of government, the extent and reach of redistribution, the tension between democracy and concentrated private wealth and power—advocates on all sides of these questions made constitutional arguments. For generations, a main current in American constitutional thought held that oligarchy—too much economic and political power concentrated in too few hands—threatens the “Republican form of government” at the heart of the Constitution.\n\nThe main arenas for all these constitutional arguments were the political branches and the public sphere. Today, the dominant mode of constitutional argument is different: it is far more focused on—and far more deferential to—the Supreme Court, which is now busy reviving the reactionary, anti-redistributive outlook of the Lochner Era.\n\nSpurred by the publication of Joseph Fishkin and William E. Forbath’s book The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution: Reconstructing the Economic Foundations of American Democracy (Harvard 2022), this conference brings together cutting-edge thinkers and scholars working in a variety of areas to explore what it would mean to put constitutional arguments at the core of Law & Political Economy (LPE), and to return political economy arguments to the heart of constitutional politics. \n\nThis conference explores the provocative question: what if we revived this progressive tradition of constitutional political economy? What work could anti-oligarchy principles and arguments do in our current moment? How can legislators, executive branch officials, and ordinary Americans draw on these traditions to challenge and counter, check and balance an out-of-control Supreme Court.\n\nSchedule of Events\nIntroductions\n9:30 – 9:45 a.m.\nPanel I: Is it a Good Idea to Constitutionalize Political Economy?\n9:45 – 11:30 a.m.\nE.J. Dionne, Jr., Distinguished University Professor, Georgetown University\nWilly Forbath, Lloyd M. Bentsen Chair in Law; Associate Dean for Research, UT Austin Law\nCaroline Fredrickson, Distinguished Visitor from Practice, Georgetown University Law Center\nMichael Kazin, Professor of History, Georgetown University\nSabeel Rahman, Associate Professor of Law, Brooklyn Law School\nBertrall Ross, Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law; Director, Karsh Center for Law and Democracy, UVA Law\nCoffee Break\n:30 – 11:45 a.m.\nPanel II: Legislative & Administrative Constitutional Political Economy\n:45 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.\n\nJosh Chafetz, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center\nRyan Doerfler, Professor of Law, Harvard Law School\nVictoria Nourse, Ralph V. Whitworth Professor in Law, Georgetown University Law Center\nGanesh Sitaraman, New York Alumni Chancellor's Chair in Law; Director, Program in Law and Government, Vanderbilt Law School\nLunch&nbsp;\n:30 – 2:15 p.m.\nKeynote Speech\n2:15 – 2:45 p.m.\nJamie Raskin, U.S. Representative, Maryland's 8th Congressional District\nPanel III: New Directions in Constitutional Political Economy\n3:00 – 4:45 p.m.\nYochai Benkler, Jack N. and Lillian R. Berkman Professor for Entrepreneurial Legal Studies; Faculty Co-Director, Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School\nSanjukta Paul, Professor of Law, Michigan Law\nBrishen Rogers, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center\nDorian Warren, President, Community Change&nbsp;\nFelicia Wong, President and CEO, Roosevelt Institute\n&nbsp;**********************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************&nbsp;\n\nInstructions for Visiting Georgetown University:\n\nGeorgetown University looks forward to your upcoming visit.\n\nTo help protect the health and safety of the Georgetown community, including our guests, all visitors ages 12 and older to University-owned or operated buildings must be up to date on COVID-19 vaccination (i.e., primary series and, when eligible, an additional dose), or attest to having a medical or religious exemption from being vaccinated.\n\n\nPlease follow the steps below that are required before your visit.\n\n\nStep #1: Anytime between now and the day before your visit, please submit documentation showing you are up to date on COVID-19 vaccination with a vaccine authorized for emergency use or granted approval by the&nbsp;U.S. Food and Drug Administration&nbsp;(FDA) or&nbsp;the World Health Organization&nbsp;(WHO). Acceptable proof of vaccination includes, but is not limited to:\no CDC COVID-19 Vaccine Card\no WHO Vaccine Booklet\no Documentation provided by a healthcare organization or country\n\n\nNote: If you are not up to date on COVID-19 vaccination but attest to having an appropriate medical or religious reason for not being vaccinated, you will be able to indicate this as part of Step #1 and proceed with the process required to visit our campus. You will be required to submit to the University proof of a negative PCR test taken within 48 hours prior to your arrival time on our campus when you submit your health attestation on the day of the event.\n\n\nStep #2: Assuming successful completion of Step 1, you will receive a short health attestation form via email on the morning of the event date. Please complete this form, attesting that you are symptom free before coming to campus. If you indicate any symptoms consistent with COVID-19, you will not be permitted to visit a Georgetown-owned or managed campus or building until you are symptom free.\n\n\nClick Here to Complete Step #1:&nbsp;https://gucovid.force.com/visitor/s/?event=VE5863\n\n\nYour event or meeting host will be able to monitor your progress on Step #1 above, and they may contact you if they see if you have not yet completed this step ahead of your scheduled time on campus. While event hosts are not provided information about your COVID-19 vaccination or your religious or medical exemption from vaccination, they are notified of the outcome of any COVID-19 test required by the University in connection with a claimed exemption and whether you have reported having COVID-19 symptoms or being in close contact with anyone who has tested positive.\n\nFor details, click here: https://getinvolved.acslaw.org/component/events/event/1165
SUMMARY:Reviving Progressive Constitutional Political Economy
ORGANIZER;CN=American Constitution Society:MAILTO:info@acslaw.org
UID:1165-2022-11-18 09:30:00@americanconstitutionsociety.nonprofitsoapbox.com
SEQUENCE:0
LOCATION: 500 First Street NW, 9th Floor, Washington, DC, 20001
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