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Yale Law School (Class of 1982). Private law practice, 1986-2006. Former law associate at Wall Street firm Fried Frank Harris Shriver and Jacobson (1984-86). Summer Associate, Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky and Lieberman (NYC, Summer, 1981), Law Clerk, Center for Constitutional Rights (Summer, 1980), Adjunct Lecturer: Principles of Constitutional Government, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, Cultural Pluralism and the Law (John Jay College, 1990-1995), Constitutional Law I (Separation of Powers and Federalism), Constitutional Law II (Civil Rights and Civil Liberties)(Queens College-CUNY, 1991-1992), Entertainment Law (Baruch College-CUNY, 2001), Music Business, Arts, Entertainment and Media Industries (Florida International University, 2004-2006), Intellectual Property Law (Florida International University College of Law, 2006-2007).
Contributor to Helium.com and www.vheadline.com
Owner, www.PolitiQs2010.blogspot.com, www.themusicbiz2010.blogspot.com, www.912observatorium.blogspot.com
SHARE Monday, March 8, 2010 A Jurisprudence of Doubt
In this article I analyze and comment on the politically charged pro-choice/pro-life debate from a different perspective. My emphasis is on looking at how the parameters of the debate have been framed and what that may indicate about us as a society. In the second article in this series I will seek to link the moral and ethical issues surrounding adoption and how that is a necessary part of the pro-choice/pro-life debate.