Faces of LLS
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Juvenile Innocence and Fair Sentencing Clinic
Loyola Launches Juvenile Innocence and Fair Sentencing Clinic
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Ethan Bearman
Evening Student Juggles On-Air and In-Class Duties
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Semester-in-Practice
Semester-in-Practice Makes Perfect
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Ran Zhang
Top Chinese Legal Counsel Advances Her Career with an LLM Degree from Loyola
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Akemi Arakaki '98
Hon. Akemi Arakaki '98: A Team Player On and Off the Bench
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Yungmoon Chang
From Engineer to Future IP Lawyer
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Levitt to DOJ
Professor Justin Levitt Named to U.S. Department of Justice Post Overseeing Voting
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Ana Dahan: Ethics Commission
Like Professor Before Her, a Student of Political Law Becomes a Participant
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Justice Entrepreneur Initiative
New Incubator Program Opens Doors for New Attorneys
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Byrne Team 2014 Success
Setting a High Bar: Byrne Trial Team Has Record-Setting Year
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Andrew Arons
Want to Buy an Election? Consult Alumnus Andrew Arons
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The Dotted Line Reporter
Student Blog: The Dotted Line Reporter
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Introducing Executive Director Paula Mitchell
Distinguished Appellate Attorney Paula Mitchell Appointed to Lead Project for the Innocent at Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
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Dean Conklin '14
A Voice for Juvenile Rights
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Gary Williams
Prof. Williams Prepares Future Generations of Public Interest Lawyers
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Cesar Callejas
For MLS Alum, Degree a Fast Track to Management Success
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SCOTUS Round Up
Loyola Professors Enrich Supreme Court Conversation
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Yulia Terentyeva
Equipped with Loyola LLM, Foreign Attorney Lands U.S. Lawyer Job
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.