Faculty in the News
- Dean S. James Anaya welcomed Rosa Celorio, associate dean for international and comparative legal studies at The George Washington University Law School, to Colorado Law to speak as part of the International Human Rights Speaker Series on Sept. 26,
- Associate Professor Ming Hsu Chen wrote a piece in The Conversation about a study published on Sept. 12 by the Colorado Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, of which she is a member, that found the backlog in naturalization
- Amie Stepanovich, director of Colorado Law's Silicon Flatirons Center, discusses concerns about the consequences of developing artificial intelligence so quickly without creating guardrails to regulate it.
- Doug Kenney discusses how climate change could mean less farming in the West: "It’s clear that agriculture is going to have to use less water. It’s the only way to make the numbers balance," says Kenney. "The question is: How painful will the
- Agriculture is the largest user of water in Colorado, but as Colorado’s cities and suburbs have grown, municipal water managers in need of more water for new residents have increasingly looked to farmers and ranchers for supplies. Doug Kenney
- Associate Professor Ming H. Chen discusses a recent report that revealed how delays in becoming a U.S. citizen are getting longer.
- Associate Professor Ming H. Chen led a report that illuminates backlogged naturalization applications are impeding on voting rights.
- Associate Professor Ming H. Chen discusses how Colorado's backlog of more than 7,500 naturalization applications is negatively impacting applicants' voting and civil rights.