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Academic CenterChicago-Kent College of Law is home to a community of scholars who study the United States Supreme Court and its jurisprudence, with expertise ranging from intellectual property law to constitutional law to empirical scholarship. Many Chicago-Kent faculty also argue and brief cases on behalf of both parties and amici. ISCOTUS builds on this foundation and will offer new opportunities, such as law review symposia, public lectures and continuing legal education, to showcase the significant intellectual contributions of Chicago-Kent’s faculty. Through ISCOTUS, Chicago-Kent students will learn from appellate advocates with experience in the Court and from prominent jurists. ![]() On September 12, 2011, ISCOTUS held its inaugural program, welcoming United States Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer to discuss themes from his book Making Our Democracy Work--A Judge's Perspective. Justice Breyer's thought-provoking presentation to students, faculty, alumni and friends culminated with an audience Q&A session. The entire 90-minute event is available for viewing in a playlist on Chicago-Kent's YouTube channel. Oyez ProjectThe Oyez Project, which came to Chicago-Kent in 2011, leverages information technology to make materials related to the Supreme Court instantly accessible around the world. The website, www.oyez.org, which has tens of thousands of visitors a day, provides immediate access to nearly 10,000 hours of courtroom audio and is adding merits briefs and amici briefs to its already comprehensive database. The Oyez Project’s goal is to become the authoritative clearinghouse for information about the Supreme Court. At the same time, the Oyez Project continues to leverage new technology with the release of its free app, OyezToday, for iPhone, iPad, and Android devices, giving users easy and interactive multimedia access to the Court's work. Civic Education ProjectISCOTUS merges its academic and technological dimensions to promote public education about the Supreme Court and its role in our constitutional system of government. Over time, activities of the Civic Education Project may include outreach to the media about current Supreme Court cases and conferences oriented toward educators to provide them with both useful technologies and substantive materials about the Supreme Court. |
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