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Chicago Colloquium on Criminal Justice
The Chicago Colloquium on Criminal Justice brought together criminal justice scholars from the University of Chicago with scholars in the Chicago area and from other universities and schools in the region. The group met to discuss five papers presented by leading criminal justice researchers from around the country. The Colloquium was designed to accomplish a level of sustained interactive analysis of critical issues in criminal law that no single institution could achieve on its own.

Winter and Spring 2002 Seminars


January 14, 2002 Darryl K. Brown, Washington & Lee, "Third Party Interests in Criminal Law."
   
February 4, 2002 Stephen J. Morse, University of Pennsylvania, "Guiding Goodness."
   
February 25, 2002 Dan M. Kahan, Yale University, "A Cultural Theory of Gun-Risk Perception."
   
April 1, 2002
Paul Butler, George Washington University, "Utilitarianism, Terrorism and Criminal Law."
   
April 22, 2002
Kim Taylor Thompson, New York University, "States of Mind/States of Development."