Logo
    Search

    Compulsory Vaccine Laws with Vincent Racaniello and Erwin Chemerinsky

    enMay 15, 2019

    About this Episode

    This episode features Sam Matthews, STLR Executive Submissions Editor, discussing the constitutionality of compulsory vaccine laws Professor Vincent Racaniello of Columbia University and Dean Erwin Chemerinsky of Berkeley Law School.

     

    ----

     

    Vincent Racaniello is Higgins Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Columbia University. He has done laboratory research on viruses for over 30 years. Following on his belief that scientists must communicate their work to the public, he has co-authored a virology textbook, distributed videocasts of his virology lectures online, written a blog about viruses, and produced podcasts on viruses, parasites, bacteria, evolution, and immunology. His goal is to be Earth’s Virology Professor.

     

    Professor Racaniello’s virology lectures can be found online at youtube.com/profvrr. His Podcasts can be found at microbe.tv, and his virology blog can be found at virology.ws.

     

    ---

     

    Erwin Chemerinsky became the 13th Dean of Berkeley Law on July 1, 2017, when he joined the faculty as the Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law. Prior to assuming this position, from 2008-2017, he was the founding Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law, and Raymond Pryke Professor of First Amendment Law, at University of California, Irvine School of Law. Before that he was a professor at Duke University from 2004-2008, and from 1983-2004 was a professor at the University of Southern California Law School.

     

    He is the author of eleven books, including leading casebooks and treatises about constitutional law, criminal procedure, and federal jurisdiction.  His most recent books are: We the People:  A Progressive Reading of the Constitution for the Twenty-First Century (Picador Macmillan) published in November 2018, and two books published by Yale University Press in 2017, Closing the Courthouse Doors: How Your Constitutional Rights Became Unenforceable and Free Speech on Campus (with Howard Gillman). He frequently argues appellate cases, including in the United States Supreme Court.

     

    In 2016, he was named a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.  In January 2017, National Jurist magazine again named Dean Chemerinsky as the most influential person in legal education in the United States.

     

    Dean Chemerinsky’s Essay, Compulsory Vaccination Laws are Constitutional, was published in 2016 by the Northwestern University Law Review.

    ---

     

    To find all of our podcast episodes, and our other content content examining the intersection of science, technology, and the law, visit our website, STLR.org.

     

    We’d love your help in making this podcast better. If you like what we’re doing, please subscribe, rate, and give a review on iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. We’d also love to hear from you. Please send us an email at STLRpodcast@gmail.com.

     

    Nothing in this podcast should be considered legal advice. If you think you need legal assistance, consult a lawyer, not a podcast.

     

    Music by Jonathan Coulton ("The Future Soon,” “First of May,” and "Ikea")

    Recent Episodes from STLR Conversations

    Prof. Alicia Solow-Niederman -- Do Cases Generate Bad AI Law? (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 6)

    Prof. Alicia Solow-Niederman -- Do Cases Generate Bad AI Law? (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 6)

    This is the sixth and final episode in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."

     

    Author: Alicia Solow-Niederman, Associate Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School

    Commentator: Shyamkrishna Balganesh, Sol Goldman Professor of Law, Columbia Law School

    Moderator: Matthew Tracy, Columbia Law School, J.D. ’24

     

    A link to slides will be posted here when available.

    Prof. Paul Ohm -- Focusing on Fine-Tuning: New Pathways for Fixing What Is Wrong with Generative AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 5)

    Prof. Paul Ohm -- Focusing on Fine-Tuning: New Pathways for Fixing What Is Wrong with Generative AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 5)

    This is the fifth episode of six in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."

    Author: Paul Ohm, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center

    Commentator: Timothy Wu, Julius Silver Professor of Law, Science and Technology, Columbia Law School

    Moderator: Amanda Orbuch, Columbia Law School, J.D. ’24

     

    A link to slides will be posted here when available.

    Prof. Catherine Sharkey -- A Products Liability Framework for AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 4)

    Prof. Catherine Sharkey -- A Products Liability Framework for AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 4)

    This is the fourth episode of six in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."

     

    Author: Catherine Sharkey, Segal Family Professor of Regulatory Law and Policy, NYU School of Law

    Commentator: Thomas Merrill, Charles Evans Hughes Professor of Law, Columbia Law School

    Moderator: Sarah Al-Shalash, Columbia Law School, J.D. ’24

    A link to slides will be posted here when available.

    Alice Xiang -- Fairness and Privacy in an Age of Generative AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 3)

    Alice Xiang -- Fairness and Privacy in an Age of Generative AI (2023 Symposium Edition Episode 3)

    This is the third episode of six in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."

     

    Author: Alice Xiang, Global Head of AI Ethics at Sony

    Commentator: Talia Gillis, Associate Professor of Law and Milton Handler Fellow, Columbia Law School

    Moderator: Nancy Lu, Columbia Law School, J.D. ’24

    A link to slides will be posted here when available.

    Prof. Mark Lemley -- How Generative AI Turns Copyright Upside Down (2023 symp. ed. ep. 2)

    Prof. Mark Lemley -- How Generative AI Turns Copyright Upside Down (2023 symp. ed. ep. 2)

    This is the second episode of six in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."  

    Author: Mark Lemley, William H. Neukom Professor of Law, Stanford Law School

     

    Commentator: Matthew Sag, Professor of Law and Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and Data Science, Emory University School of Law

     

    Moderator: Joshua Simmons, Partner, Kirkland & Ellis

     

    A link to slides will be posted here when available.

     

    Prof. Christopher Yoo -- Beyond Algorithmic Transparency for Generative AI (2023 symp. ed. ep. 1)

    Prof. Christopher Yoo -- Beyond Algorithmic Transparency for Generative AI (2023 symp. ed. ep. 1)

    This is the first episode of six in the special 2023 Symposium Edition Podcast of STLR Conversations. We are sharing the recordings of our Symposium titled “Accountability and Liability in Generative AI: Challenges and Perspectives."

    Paper Author: Christopher Yoo, John H. Chestnut Professor of Law, Communication, and Computer & Information Science, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

    Commentator: Eric Talley, Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law, Columbia Law School

    Moderator: Abby Graegin, Columbia Law School, J.D. ’24

    A link to slides will be posted here when available. 

    Should Tiktok be Banned? A Conversation with FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr

    Should Tiktok be Banned? A Conversation with FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr

    This week, FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr joins STLR host Mariam Kamal to discuss the natonal security concerns surrounding Tiktok. Commissioner Carr was appointed to the FCC in 2018 by former President Donald Trump. Recently, Comissioner Carr wrote a letter to Apple and Google urging them to remove Tiktok from their app stores and testified in Congress about Tiktok's security threat.

    Before the interview, Mariam and co-host Ben Faber provide some background information on the Tiktok controversy and discuss why Comissioner Carr believes Tiktok is a threat to national security. 

    STLR Conversations
    enNovember 17, 2022

    Disparities in the Startup Ecosystem with Lynisse Pantin

    Disparities in the Startup Ecosystem with Lynisse Pantin

    This week, Professor Lynisse Pantin joins STLR host Mariam Kamal to discuss the startup ecosyem and the challenges that minorities face when starting a company.

    Professor Pantin is the founding director of the Entrepreneurship and Community Development Clinic at Columbia Law School and author of "The Wealth Gap and Racial Disparities in the Startup Ecosystem."

    STLR Conversations
    enNovember 14, 2022

    Second-Wave Content Moderation with Evelyn Douek

    Second-Wave Content Moderation with Evelyn Douek

     

    Should social media companies continue to rely on ex post standards to regulate what their users post? Or should platforms look to free speech jurisprudence to make these determinations? Are these companies publishers entitled to free speech protections? Or are they just platforms primarily concerned with hosting their users' content? 

    As this debate goes on, Evelyn Douek thinks this framing misses the point. Douek, of Harvard Law School and the Knight First Amendment Foundation, argues that a free-speech paradigm gives social media entities a possibly undeserved amount of authority to shape domestic and international events. Instead of trying to draw the line between "good" and "bad" speech, she recommends a systems level ex ante regulatory in which online platforms are treated as bureaucratic agencies and regulated using administrative law norms such as accountability and transparency. 

    You can find more about Evelyn Douek's work on her website, and you can follow her on Twitter

     

    STLR Conversations
    enApril 25, 2022

    Inside Big Tech Accountability with Colin Stretch

    Inside Big Tech Accountability with Colin Stretch
    For our next two episodes, STLR Conversations will be discussing where to start with the ever-growing call for regulation of social media. This week, Colin Stretch and Mariam Kamal discuss the former's path from working in the public sector as a judicial clerk to liaising with the public sector as general counsel of Facebook. This interview, conducted last semester, provides important context for understanding the regulatory opportunities and constraints facing internet platforms.
    STLR Conversations
    enMarch 30, 2022