Feb 25 Thu
2021

Mental Health Alliance Office Hours

03:00PM - 05:00PM Online via Zoom

Looking for help finding and accessing mental health resources? Have a suggestion for how WCL can better support students' mental health? Come to MHA's Office Hours and chat with Student Liaison Riley (she/her)! All communications are confidential unless there is a threat of harm to self or others or permission to share is given.

  • Meeting
  • Open To Students
Feb 25 Thu
2021

Virginia Bar: Character and Fitness Applications

05:00PM - 06:00PM Online via Zoom

 Please join OAE and Robert Stoney of the Virginia State Board of Law Examiners Character & Fitness Committee
for a presentation and Q&A session regarding the Virginia Bar Application.

  • Presentation
  • Open To Alumni AND Students
Feb 25 Thu
2021

Clinical Program Open House!

05:00PM - 07:00PM Washington College of Law

Drop-in to learn more about the Clinics that interest you and speak directly with faculty and current students!

Note - Presentations start every 20 minutes (i.e. 5 PM, 5:20 PM, 5:40 PM, etc.) but students can log in at any time. 

  • Reception
  • Open To Students
Feb 25 Thu
2021

The Power of Unionization in Professional Sports

06:00PM - 07:00PM

WCL's Sports and Entertainment Law & WCL's Labor & Employment Law are happy to host Lara Riddell, Staff Counsel for the MLS Players Association and WCL alumnus, for a conversation about the Power of Unionization in Professional Sports. The event will be hosted by the always insightful Professor Duru so you won’t want to miss this. 

  • Presentation
  • Open To Students
Feb 25 Thu
2021

We Keep Us Safe: Policing as a Reproductive Justice Issue

06:00PM - 07:30PM Online via Zoom

 

In the wake of the resurgence of the Black Liberation movement, there have been calls to defund the police, divest from police and reimagine a world with abolition frameworks. The reproductive justice movement is premised on ensuring that people can raise children and families in a safe place. How are these movements connected? At this event, three experts committed to abolition and reform weigh in how these movements can foster a better future for Black people. 


We will be joined by Nnennaya Amuchie (they/them), a reproductive justice attorney and organizer with the DC chapter of the Movement for Black Lives, Preston Mitchum (he/him), the Director of Policy at URGE: Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity, Whit Washington (they/them), a public defender in DC and founder of the Project for Transgender Incarcerated Survivors.

  • Lecture
  • Open To Students