ԭ

UC Law SF Launches 'Law and the Pandemic' Podcast

UC Law SF has launched a short-form podcast series, “,” to share insights relating to some of the most pressing legal issues arising from the COVID-19 health and economic crisis.

In each episode, faculty tackle some of the thorniest questions of the moment, from whether the government has the authority to impose shelter-in-place restrictions to how patent law may make it more difficult to bring life-saving drugs to market at an affordable cost. Some episodes focus on practical questions, such as the barriers to creating advance care directives online or who qualifies for a stimulus check. Some episodes address theoretical issues, such as how creating online bank accounts for all individuals would even the playing field between consumers and big banks and get needed relief funding distributed more quickly. The latest episode explores the racial disparities laid bare by the pandemic.

“Right now, what we need most is information we can trust,” said producer and co-host Areca Smit, Associate Director for Electronic Media at UC Law SF. “We launched this podcast to share our faculty’s expertise with the public and, in that sense, do our share in working toward solutions.”

“We have scholars who have been working on issues that are very pertinent to this crisis. We wanted to create a vehicle for sharing their knowledge and expertise in a way that could help individuals, businesses, advocates, and policymakers access that knowledge.”

The series is co-produced by , UC Law SF’ Center on Legal Technology and Innovation. LexLab Director Drew Amerson serves as producer and co-host with Smit. “We wanted to cover both practical information and ask serious legal questions about how the law can help us manage the pandemic,” Amerson said.

Episodes:

  • Professor Hadar Aviram on why people inside the are so susceptible to COVID-19 and how their plight presents risks for the rest of us
  • Professor Matt Coles on the government’s ability to impose and what rights citizens have under the U.S. Constitution
  • Professor Dorit Reiss on and other tools being deployed to combat COVID-19
  • Professor Robin Feldman on potential obstacles to the development and distribution of a and how Big Pharma’s use of the patent system may make widespread dissemination more challenging
  • Professor Joan C. Williams on how the pandemic is and the long-term implications of widespread telework
  • Professor Manoj Viswanathan on the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act () and who is getting what money and why
  • Professor Amy Spivey on the and logistical questions about who gets a check and when
  • Professor Sarah Hooper on how to complete an in the age of social distancing
  • Professor Alice Armitage on law firm economics and the
  • Professor Matt Coles on the legality of following the death of George Floyd
  • Professor John Crawford about the role of the Federal Reserve in managing the economic crisis and his proposal that the to every American
  • Professor Abe Cable on UC Law SF’s and what’s next
  • Professor Karen Musalo on the pandemic-era punitive
  • Professor Shanin Specter on whether are a viable legal strategy or a deterrence tactic
  • Professor Sarah Hooper on why communities of color are hospitalized and dying at
  • Perkins Coie attorneys Paula Goodwin ’79 and Jody Bryson speak about their project to health care workers on the front lines of the COVID-19 response

Access these wherever you get your podcasts or via the podcast home site, . Additional episodes are in production.

For media inquiries, please contact Susan Kostal at kostalsusan@uclawsf.edu.