"Supreme Court Revives Havana Docks Suit Against Cruise Lines Use of Cuban Port”
The Daily Journal quoted Bill Dodge in this article on the Havana Docks Suit.
GW Law faculty members are scholars and practitioners with strong reputations in the legal community.
Our faculty members are among the most cited law faculty in the nation, appearing in print, online, and on-air, in world-renowned media outlets. But first and foremost, each faculty member is devoted to teaching.
Jason Belk Appointed Associate Dean of Students
February 1, 2023
Since 2019, Jason Belk has served in the Dean of Students office bringing over a decade of law school administrative experience.
William Kovacic: DOJ’s Antitrust Lawsuit Draws from FTC’s Missed Opportunities to Rein in Google
January 30, 2023
“These aren’t strange concepts. The case has a coherent story, and it’s zeroing on missed opportunities from the past,” Kovacic tells Politico.
GW Law's Richard Pierce's Essays Highlighted by The Regulatory Review
January 25, 2023
Professor Pierce's Essays were highlighted as their top regulatory essays of 2022.
"Supreme Court Revives Havana Docks Suit Against Cruise Lines Use of Cuban Port”
The Daily Journal quoted Bill Dodge in this article on the Havana Docks Suit.
"Oregon prosecutors said she didn’t protect her baby. She says she was surviving abuse.”
Jefferson Public Radio, from a story written for InvestigateWest, quoted Joan Meier.
"JONATHAN TURLEY: House Minority Leader Jeffries' brother sounds chilling call to arms."
Jonathan Turley wrote this article for Fox News.
Our faculty are leading scholars and practitioners—experts whose experience and passion for teaching shape the study and practice of law. Learn more about publications and other work written by our faculty.
Daniel J. Solove
Breached!: Why Data Security Law Fails and How to Improve It
Rosa Celorio
Women and International Human Rights in Modern Times: A Contemporary Casebook
Dayna Bowen Matthew
Just Health: Treating Structural Racism to Heal America
Catherine J. Ross
A Right to Lie? Presidents, Other Liars, and the First Amendment