Reading Groups

Students and Faculty members at the Law School have the opportunity to intellectually connect with one another outside of conventional coursework through reading groups. Reading groups are small groups organized either by students or faculty members that meet regularly during the semester to discuss a set of readings on a chosen topic. Designed to engage students in new ways and with salient topics that may or may not be addressed in other coursework, reading groups increase student-faculty interaction, enhance the intellectual life of the school, and provide a mechanism to address new and emerging topics of legal inquiry. These reading groups will provide intellectual space for participants to sharpen critical skills related to textual analysis, the framing of legal issues, and the integration of new knowledge. Reading groups can address any topic with a relation to law, from food law to race and reparations or moral philosophy. Previous reading groups have addressed topics like feminist legal theory, mindfulness, tax policy, and decarceration.
  • Spring 2023
    • Alex Clay Hutchings: Science Fiction and the Law (one credit). 
      Information coming soon.
    • Julie McConnell: The Rage of Innocence (one credit).
      This reading group will study Kristen Henning’s book, The Rage of Innocence:  How America Criminalizes Black Youth.  The book is an analysis of racist policing in America: the day-to-day brutalities, largely hidden from public view and endured by Black youth growing up under constant police surveillance and the persistent threat of physical and psychological abuse In addition to reading the book together, we will review several trainings that have been created around various chapters.  Prof. Henning brings in experts from across the country to explore the themes in the book.

    • Robin Meier: Klara and the Sun (one credit).
      This one-credit reading group will focus on Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel Klara and the Sun and the growing impacts of artificial intelligence in our society. Using the novel as a launching point, we will read various articles and discuss the use and misuse of technology in business and particularly in the legal profession. Members of the legal community will join some of the sessions to help guide our discussion.

    • Doron Samuel-Siegel: Examining Whiteness: An Introduction (no credit).
      The practice and study of law in the U.S. often fail to account for the racialized nature of U.S. society. Among these gaps are explorations of the ways whiteness functions to apportion privilege, normalize inequity, and dictate convention. In this reading group, we will begin to explore the meaning and operation of whiteness in the law and our own lives regardless of racial identity.
  • Fall 2022
    • Janice Craft and Laura Webb: Mentoring & Leadership (one credit).
      This reading group explores skills for good mentoring and leadership in the legal profession. Participants will discuss how to effectively cultivate mentoring relationship and thoughtfully use those relationships (both as mentors and mentees) to develop, and foster the development of others, as lawyers and professionals. In this group, students will develop skills to mentor others within the profession as mentors and to identify, develop, and maximize mentoring relationships as mentees; develop a deeper understanding of mentoring relationships and how mentors and mentees can grow within these relationships; develop professional and leadership skills; and develop metacognition and reflective skills.
    • Alex Clay Hutchings: Science Fiction and the Law (one credit). 
      Science fiction authors often use imagination and speculation to address topics relevant to the world today. Often these topics are directly related to the law – legal “personhood” and AI, cloning and genetic alteration, dystopian governments, and more. This 1-credit reading group will meet to discuss some of the legal issues addressed by selected science fiction classics. The group will plan on reading two novels and watching their film adaptations. We will meet at least 5 times over the semester. This semester we will read Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K. Dick and Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. 
    • Molly Lentz-Meyer: Zombie Apocalypse and the Law (one credit, full year).
      Does the rule of law go out the window with the zombie apocalypse or become more important than ever? Using Mira Grant’s Newsflesh series as a jumping off point, this reading group will explore such wide-ranging topics as bioethics, election law, cloning, and more.
    • Luke Norris and Allison Tait: Law and Inequality (one credit).
      Inequality is pervasive in law and society, but discussion of it is too often absent in law school classrooms. This reading group will shift that focus by concentrating on law’s relationship to inequality. It will introduce students to legal research mining that relationship spanning across different areas of law, axes of inequality, and disciplinary approaches to understanding inequality.
    • Kenny Reveredo (J.D. ’23): Hang Out, Free Food, Cool Book (no credit).
      This reading group provides a space for thoughtful discussion of left-wing political literature through readings of philosophical works including, this semester, Assata: An Autobiography by Assata Shakur. 
    • Andy Spalding: Corruption, Human Rights, Orientalism, and Qatar (one credit).
      This group will first examine the corruption and human rights allegations surrounding Qatar’s 2022 FIFA Men’s World Cup.  It will then engage the question of whether commentary on those issues reflects what scholars have long called "orientalism:" prejudices toward the Islamic Middle East that serve to reinforce traditional structures of privilege and domination.
    • Tamar Schwarz and Laura Webb: The Mindful Lawyer. 
      The Mindful Lawyer explores how lawyers can use mindfulness to manage stress, improve overall well-being, and become stronger practitioners. Class sessions include mindfulness practice as well as discussion of readings on relevant topics such as developing physical and cognitive well-being, cultivating a growth mindset, fostering optimism and resilience, finding balance in our lives, and humanizing the law school experience and the practice of law.
  • Spring 2022
    • Erin Collins and Patrick Rice (L’22): Decarceration and Prison Abolition (no credit).
      This reading group identifies and critically explored ideas surrounding decarceration and prison abolition through a careful reading of Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Davis.  
    • Meredith Harbach: Selected Topics on Regulating Reproduction
      This reading group aims to develop students’ understanding of the interrelationship of legal rules, politics, ideology, and socio-economic realities that shape reproductive rights and justice. Students will explore meaning of “reproductive rights” and “reproductive justice,” and consider several topics, including access to contraception and reproductive health services, historical and contemporary state control over procreation (including sterilization), abortion regulation, and the state and federal roles in reproductive justice.
    • Alex Clay Hutchings: Science Fiction and the Law.
      Science fiction authors use imagination and speculation to address topics relevant to the world today. Often these topics are directly related to the law – legal “personhood” and AI, cloning and genetic alteration, dystopian governments, and more. This non-credit reading group will meet to discuss some of the legal issues addressed by selected science fiction classics. The group will plan on reading one sci-fi novel and meeting three times over the semester. This semester we will read Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton. We will debate the issues of bio-ethics, cloning, and property rights in bio-medicine. Lastly, we will watch the 1993 film adaptation of Jurassic Park and discuss the differences between the book and film treatments of these controversial topics, as well as the changing perceptions of genetic alteration in the 30 years since Jurassic Park’s publication.
    • Kenny Reveredo (L’23): Hang Out, Free Food, Cool Book (no credit).
      This reading group provides a space for thoughtful discussion of left-wing political literature through readings of philosophical works such as The Society of the Spectacle by Guy Debord and The Motorcycle Diaries by Ernesto "Che" Guevara.

    • Allison Tait and Abby Dreiling (L’24)1L Doctrine and Inequality Reading Group (no credit).
      This reading group addresses the ways in which the 1L curriculum and the doctrines taught in 1L classes overlooks or occludes inequalities that law creates through such doctrines. This group addressed questions of false neutrality, the framing (or ignoring) of marginalized and minoritized identities, and the wages of these oversights. 
  • Spring 2019
    • Erin Collins and Allison Tait: Feminist Legal Theory (one credit).
      This reading group takes up questions within feminist theory, queer theory, and other critical theories in order to examine constructions of gender and the roles legal systems play in those constructions. We will explore some of the general themes and debates that have emerged as feminists attempt to understand and critique law’s explicit and implicit constructions of gender. We will also discuss developments and disagreements within the feminist literature about how to understand gender and how best to approach questions of gender and legal regulation.