Faces of LLS
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Charles Fairchild
Tax LLM Degree Diversifies General Counsel’s Expertise
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Orientation 2021
Welcoming Students Back to LLS Campus for Orientation and Fall Semester
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Orientation 2020
Expanded Orientation Brings Incoming Students Together in Innovative Ways
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Linda Whitfield
LLS Assistant Dean Recognized For Efforts to Promote Diversity & Inclusion
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LLS Alumni Recognized in Variety’s 2020 Legal Impact Report
Nine LLS alumni are noted for their starring roles in the field
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Steve Riley
Second-year Shares Positive Perspective on Law School Life
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Dev Das
Evening Student Sees JD as Tool to Expand Union Advocacy Skills
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Ellen Aprill
Loyola Tax-Law Leadership Exemplified in Conference
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LIJC Nov 2016
Facing Uncertain Future, Immigrants Find Hope in Loyola Clinic
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Emma Merangulyan
Former Music Major Finds Entertainment Law Hits all the Right Notes
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Joshua Ramirez
Joint JD/Tax LLM Degree Accelerates Career of Recent Alumnus
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Hayden Adams
A Sense Of Community
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Clemency Project 2016
Clemency Project Experience Life-Changing for Students and Clients
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Avrohom Feinstein
Mastering the Fundamentals
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Tribute Dinner 2016
Students Reap Networking Benefits of Loyola Events
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Nerses Aposhian
Third-year Advocates for Armenian Community
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Kathleen Becket
Social-Justice Minded Student Uses Evening Program For Career Reboot
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Jessica Levinson
Protecting the Electoral Process
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Estevan Fernandez
For JD/Tax LLM Student with Tax Background, Loyola an Obvious Choice
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Jennifer Kowal
Networking and Developing Practical Skillsets Means Everything to This Tax Professor
Professor Garners National Attention for Work on Antidiscrimination and Constitutional Law Issues
Professor Kimberly West-Faulcon’s scholarship takes an interdisciplinary and empirical approach to examining antidiscrimination and constitutional law issues. Her article Exposing the Deceit About Disparate Impact in the Hofstra Labor & Employment Law Journal (2023) provides the first scholarly response to Professor Amy Wax’s article contending that American whites are cognitively superior to African Americans and Latinos. In doing so, the article defends Title VII disparate impact law’s presumption of racial group job ability equivalence as justified by industrial-organizational (I/O) psychology research findings.
Several of West-Faulcon's recent and forthcoming publications focus on current challenges to affirmative action and other inclusion-motivated race attentiveness after the Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College. In Affirmative Action After SFFA v. Harvard: The Other Defenses in the Syracuse Law Review (2024), West-Faulcon identifies compelling interests other than diversity for inclusion-motivated consideration of race, and in The SFFA v. Harvard Trojan Horse Admissions Lawsuit in the Seattle University Law Review (2024), she analogizes attacks on inclusion-motivated civil rights laws and policies like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and race-based affirmative action to battle tactics employed by the Greek army in its war against the Trojans as told in Virgil’s The Aeneid. Her forthcoming article in the Northwestern University Law Review focuses on the fallaciousness of using the term “colorblind” to describe recent attacks on inclusion-motivated race attentiveness.
West-Faulcon’s insights in this area have garnered national media attention. In August 2024, she participated as an expert in the White House Racial Equity Roundtable convened by the Office of the White House Counsel.