
March 21, 2026
Elizabeth Carter Rewrites Rules on Women and Power
Professor Elizabeth Carter is reshaping legal practice to center women — especially Black women, youth, low-income and working-class people, and other marginalized communities.
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March 17, 2026
Law Bootcamp on European Data Privacy
At Seton Hall Law’s CIPP/E Bootcamp, participants—from students to industry professionals—gained hands-on training in European data privacy, learning to navigate GDPR and global compliance challenges.
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March 16, 2026
Gaming Bootcamp Tackles Industry’s New Reality
The annual Gaming Bootcamp convenes regulators, operators and lawyers to examine the fast-changing legal landscape of the multibillion-dollar sports betting industry.
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March 5, 2026
Global Scholars Explore Faith and the Rule of Law
More than 30 scholars from around the world gathered at Seton Hall Law School for the inaugural Faith, Values and the Rule of Law Conference.
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March 3, 2026
Professor Thomas Healy’s Pursuit of Justice
Thomas Healy has built a career at the intersection of journalism, law and academia. His work shows why experience—not logic alone—shapes the law and sustains democracy.
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February 13, 2026
Theologians Discuss the Economy as It's Meant to Be
Theologians D. Stephen Long and Rev. Brent Strawn join David Opderbeck to explore Faithful Exchange, a provocative look at how Scripture and ethics intersect with today’s economy.
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February 11, 2026
The Hidden History of Corporate Bankruptcy
In “To Protect Their Interests,” Professor Stephen J. Lubben traces a century-and-a-half of insider control, revealing how the system consistently favors the powerful while others bear the cost.
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January 26, 2026
Who Decides How AI Shapes Our Lives
Gaia Bernstein argues that, despite AI’s promise, its rapid adoption—especially AI companions—poses serious public-health risks to children and society.
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January 22, 2026
What We Get Wrong About the Economy
Drawing on theology, legal history and contemporary debates over profit and power, Faithful Exchange: The Economy as It’s Meant to Be calls for recentering human dignity in how we think about markets.
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January 22, 2026
Mental Health and Criminal Cases
When defendants with serious mental illness enter the criminal justice system, constitutional safeguards are often treated as formalities rather than meaningful limits.
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January 8, 2026
Space Law Course Coming This Spring
Newly appointed Law School Fellow and Adjunct Professor of Law developed a Space Law course that will be taught in the Law School's Weekend Program this Spring.
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November 13, 2025
Renowned Scholars Present at Annual Faculty Colloquium
Each year, the Seton Hall Law faculty host a series of distinguished and emerging legal scholars for the Faculty Colloquium.
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