Judicial Clerkships and Externships with the Oregon Appellate Courts
February 27th, 2009Career Services speaker series
Judicial Clerkships and Externships with the Oregon Appellate Courts
February 26, 2009
Career Services | What Can I do With a Court of Appeals Clerkship? (.pdf)
In this podcast, panelists provide an overview of the clerkship application process, timing, and interviewing for clerkships with the courts.
Information is provided about how an appellate level state court clerkship can provide an opportunity to gain Full Post »
Rethinking School Lunches
February 27th, 2009Student Group Speaker Series
Rethinking School Lunches
Cory Schreiber, February,26 2009
Student Advocates for Business and Environmental Responsibility | “Cory Schreiber to lead farm-to-school effort for ODA“
In this podcast, a guest speaker talks about the challenges, opportunities, and innovative methods for school lunch programs, engaging farm to school and economic development through promotion and use of Oregon foods in Oregon schools.
Cory Schreiber uses his background as a chef and restaurateur at the Oregon Department of Agriculture, where he manages a program bringing local produce to Oregon’s school food programs. The goal is to get kids’ diets to reflect the quality and nutrition of fresh local fare. This is a win-win for Full Post »
Marine Protected Areas in Oregon
February 25th, 2009Student Group Speaker Series
Marine Protected Areas in Oregon
February 25, 2009
Our Oregon Ocean | Student Animal Legal Defense Fund | Northwest Environmental Defense Center
In this podcast, a panel of speakers talks about the marine protected areas in Oregon. The speakers are from Our Oregon Ocean, a coalition of conservationists, scientists, ocean users, local leaders Full Post »
New Lawyers Division Panel: Tips for Surviving the Bar Exam
February 25th, 2009Career Services Speaker Series
New Lawyers Division Panel: Tips for Surviving the Bar Exam
February 25, 2009
Career Services
In this podcast, bar representatives talk about the nuts and bolts of the exam. Recent graduates who took and passed the Oregon Bar Exam talk about their experiences.
What tips do they have about studying for the bar and surviving the “day of” jitters? Speakers also talk about how they balanced studying for the bar exam and looking for a job. Full Post »
Women in the Law Panel
February 25th, 2009Women’s Law Caucus Speaker Series
Women in the Law Panel
February 23, 2009
Women’s Law Caucus
In this podcast, women for four different areas of practice discuss their specialty area of the law. The panelists are: Full Post »
Practical Experience Through the Community Development Law Center
February 24th, 2009Law School Event
Practical Experience through the Community Development Law Center
Nancy Murray, Cindy Cumfer, Casey Barnard
February 24, 2009
The Community Development Law Center
In this podcast, the Community Development Law Center (CDLC) is discussed. The CDLC works in partnership with Lewis & Clark Law School to provide a Community Development Law Practicum. Full Post »
OSB Board of Bar Examiners Bar Exam Q&A
February 17th, 2009Career Services Speaker Series
Oregon State Bar Board of Examiners Bar Exam Q&A
February 17, 2009
Career Services | Bar Handout | Grad Reality Check
In this podcast, representatives from the Oregon State Bar Examiners Office answer questions and provide an overview of the bar exam. Although they will be providing advice specific to the Oregon Bar Exam, their advice will be applicable regardless of where you plan to sit for the Bar. Full Post »
2008 Symposium on Environmental Affairs Agenda
February 16th, 20092008 Symposium on Environmental Affairs
2008 Symposium on Environmental Affairs Agenda
October 11-16, 2008
Environmental Affairs: Scales of Sustainability
Sustainability, as the definitive environmental vision of our times, stands in danger of succumbing to its recent success. Today, as college campuses, corporations, and cities across the country scramble to embrace sustainability, it is worth asking what exactly we are trying to achieve.
In fall 2008, Lewis & Clark College’s 11th Annual Symposium on Environmental Affairs drew together students, scholars, practitioners, and community members, who considered how sustainability operates in time and space. Does, for instance, sustainability mean eternal equilibrium, or is there a role for destruction and restoration? Are local systems always more sustainable than larger-scale systems, for instance in the case of food? What exactly would global sustainability look like in today’s complex world? Must sustainability address ecological, economic, and social processes all together, or is there a justification for piecemeal sustainability?
Environmental Affairs Symposium 2008 was part of an ongoing effort to deepen Lewis & Clark’s embrace of sustainability as a learning community that values the interface of thought and action.
Some of these events were captured as videocasts. They are:
Micro-Managing Sustainability – Household Management and the Failure of State Legislation
Dr. Susan Buckingham
Climate Change and International Development
Lance Gunderson
Michelle Diggles
Jay Odenbaugh
Robert Brown
Pondering Scales of Sustainability: From People to the Planet
Dr. Lance Gunderson
The program was held at Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon on October 14-16th, 2008.
Climate Change and International Development
February 16th, 20092008 Symposium on Environmental Affairs
Climate Change and International Development
October 15, 2008
Environmental Affairs: Scales of Sustainability
In this podcast, a panel of experts discuss climate change and international development. The environmental studies program summarizes the panel with: Full Post »
Micro-Managing Sustainability – Household Management and the Failure of State Legislation
February 16th, 20092008 Symposium on Environmental Affairs
MiMicro-Managing Sustainability – Household Management and the Failure of State Legislation
October 14, 2008
Environmental Affairs: Scales of Sustainability
In this podcast of her keynote address, Dr. Susan Buckingham, Director of the Centre for Human Geography at Brunel University, explores the relationship between scales, particularly between the national and the household. Full Post »

