Upcoming Manhattan Family Justice Center Core Trainings

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Upcoming Manhattan Family Justice Center Core Trainings

The NYC Family Justice Center in Manhattan is happy to announce our next round of core trainings. Our core training program provides professional development on the most relevant topics for service providers working with victims and survivors of intimate partner violence, sex trafficking, and elder abuse.

Ø  Criminal Justice

Monday, June 23rd 9 am – 12 pm

Facilitated by Manhattan District Attorney’s Office & NYPD

Ø  Immigration Law: Options and Remedies

Monday, June 23rd 1-4 pm

Facilitated by Her Justice

Ø  Risk Assessment & Safety Planning

Tuesday, June 24th 9 am – 12 pm

Facilitated by MFJC Staff

Ø  Shelter & Housing

Tuesday, June 24th 1-4 pm

Facilitated by New Destiny Housing & MFJC Staff

Ø  Family & Matrimonial Law

Wednesday, June 25th 1-4 pm

Facilitated by NY Legal Assistance Group

Ø  Domestic Violence Dialogue

Thursday, June 26nd 11 am – 1 pm

Facilitated by Urban Justice Project

Ø  Self-Sufficiency & Economic Empowerment

Friday, June 27th 10 am – 1 pm

Facilitated by MFJC Staff

Ø  Culture Conversations: LGBTQ Communities

Tuesday, July 29th 1-4 pm

Facilitated by NYC Anti-Violence Project and NY Legal Assistance Group

All trainings will be held in the MFJC Training Room at 80 Centre Street (cross street Worth St.), 5th Floor, New York, NY 10013. More training details will follow soon.

NYU Symposium on Perry v. Brown

The N.Y.U. Review of Law & Social Change and NYU OUTLaw invite you to attend our upcoming symposium, Making Constitutional Change: the Past, Present, and Future Role of Perry v. Brown. The symposium will focus closely on this landmark Ninth Circuit case– holding California’s Proposition 8 in violation of the U.S. Constitution– and gathers many of its key players, including the lead Perry litigators themselves.

On Friday, October 5, at 9:00 a.m., MSNBC host Rachel Maddow will interview Perry litigators David Boies (LL.M. ‘67) and Theodore B. Olson. After, from 11:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., three panels will address Perry’s effect on the larger LGBTQ-rights movement, its effect on other marriage-equality litigation strategies, and how, in an ideal world, Perry should be decided if it goes to the Supreme Court. Panelists include Matt ColesErwin ChemerinskyDavid Cruz ’94Jon W. DavidsonWilliam Eskridge, Jr.Roberta A. KaplanMelissa MurrayJennifer C. Pizer ’88Reva SiegelPaul M. SmithTherese StewartAndrea J. RitchieAdam UmhoeferEvan Wolfson, and Kenji Yoshino, Chief Justice Earl Warren Professor of Constitutional Law at NYU School of Law.

Five and a half CLE credits are available for those attending all of the events on Friday, October 5.

We will also be hosting a staged reading of the American Foundation for Equal Rights and Broadway Impact’s 8, a play by Oscar-winning screenwriter Dustin Lance Black the night before, on Thursday, October 4 at 7:00 p.m. The play draws verbatim on Perry’s trial transcript and supplemental interviews. Will Pomerantz, of Epic Theater Ensemble, is directing and producing our show. The 90-minute reading will be followed by a discussion with Perry lay witness Ryan Kendall, Executive Director of the American Foundation for Equal Rights Adam Umhoefer, Executive Director of Epic Theater Ensemble Ron Russell, and the performers. Vice Dean Randy A. Hertz will moderate a conversation about how stories change minds. The panelists will also take questions from the audience. 

All events are free and open to the public and will be at NYU School of Law, in Vanderbilt Hall, at 40 Washington Square South, New York, New York.

To attend any of these events, please register at http://nyulaw.imodules.com/makingconstitutionalchange.

Please click here to view the flyer and schedule of the event.

Cordially,
Mateya Kelley
Symposium Editor
N.Y.U. Review of Law & Social Change

Geoffrey Wertime
Co-Chair
NYU OUTLaw