Our December Bloggers Are Here

Please join me in welcoming our two guest bloggers for the month of December.

Our Alumni Blogger for December is Christopher “Chal” Little.  After graduating cum laude from Marquette University Law School, Chal joined Meissner Tierney Fischer & Nichols as an Associate this year.  At Marquette he served as an Academic Success Program Leader, participated in the American Association for Justice 2016 Student Trial Advocacy Competition, was a member of the Moot Court Executive Board, the Business Law Association, and was the Marquette University Law School Student Liaison to the Wisconsin Bar Association Appellate Practice Section.  While in law school, Chal also served as a Summer Honors Intern at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C..

Our Student Blogger for the month of December is Anjali Sharma.  Anjali is currently 2L who is interested in Patent Law as well as Transactional Law. She is on the board of the Intellectual Property Society, and serves as a member of the Intellectual Property Law Review. She graduated from the University of North Dakota prior to coming to Marquette Law School.

We look forward to your posts!

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Study Abroad in Germany This Summer

overview_2016-participantsThe campus of the Justus Liebig University in Giessen, Germany will be the location of the Ninth Annual Summer Session in International and Comparative Law offered jointly by Marquette University, the University of Wisconsin, and the Justus Liebig University- Giessen.  This program brings together up to sixty students from law schools all over the world to take classes in comparative and international law over a four week session lasting from July 15 through August 12. In addition to students from the United States and Germany, over the years the program has attracted students from Russia, India, Columbia, Brazil, South Africa, Ethiopia, Spain, Vietnam, Italy, the United Kingdom, the Dominican Republic, Korea, Australia, Indonesia and Kazakhstan, among other countries.  Class instruction is in English, and the international student body provides for a unique learning experience.

Faculty will be drawn from the U.S. and Europe.  Each student will select two courses (each course worth 2.0 law school credit hours) out of a total of four courses in the curriculum.  In addition to coursework, the curriculum includes two overnight field trips to Berlin and Hamburg to visit courts, other governmental institutions, and historical sites.  In addition, the program includes speakers on a variety of topics including a panel discussion on differences and similarities in legal education and practice around the world and a discussion of opportunities for further legal study and internships in Europe.

Classes will be held Monday through Thursday, during the day, over the four weeks of the program.  This schedule leaves students with time to explore the cities, villages and countryside around Giessen and nearby Frankfurt, and the opportunity to travel throughout Europe.  Paris to the west and Berlin to the east are a mere 300 miles from Giessen.

Past participants in the program have given high marks to both the substantive learning experience and the opportunity to form international friendships.  Enrollment is open to students who have completed one year of instruction in any U.S. law school.  Students enrolled in law schools outside of the United States should apply through the Justus Liebig University.

A general program overviewtravel and tuition details, course descriptions and faculty biographies can be viewed online.  An application form can be downloaded here.  Apply now and I will see you in Germany this summer!

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Welcome November Blogger

Our Alumni Blogger for the month of November is Mathew O’Neill.  Matt is a shareholder at Fox, O’Neill & Shannon, S.C. His practice focuses on commercial litigation, appeals, arbitration, shareholder disputes, and election and campaign finance law. Matt graduated from Marquette Law School in 1991, in the old building. Since 2004, Matt has trained lawyers to observe at the polls on behalf of the Democratic Party, vigorously trying to ensure that every eligible voter gets to cast a vote that is counted. In 2005 Matt testified before Congress about voting rights issues, including voter suppression efforts, the real problems with heavy turnout elections, and the absence of voter fraud. He has litigated numerous election issues in the past, including HAVA cross-check challenges, attempted City of Milwaukee registration roll purges, and ballot access cases.  Welcome aboard, Matt!

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