Fordham Notes: Fordham Law School
Showing posts with label Fordham Law School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fordham Law School. Show all posts

Monday, November 24, 2014

Pace: Job Is Not Done in War Against Extremist

America’s failure to commit to Afghanistan and Iraq for the long haul has created an environment in which extremists are once again creating chaos in the countries we sought to liberate from despotic regimes, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told a Fordham University audience this week.

“When you go in and occupy a country, when you occupy Afghanistan, when you occupy Iraq, you take on a 40- or 50-year responsibility,” said retired Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace on Nov. 19 following a leadership lecture at the Fordham Law School.

“Not four years or five years. Not ‘let’s go in, topple the government, give them a little bit of help’ and then say ‘good luck’ and leave.”

Pace served as the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs under President Bill Clinton and chairman under President George W. Bush. Both men, he said, made thoughtful, considered decisions on the use of military force, but Bush’s decisions were not accompanied by a strongly made case to his constituents.

“President Bush could have done a better job of educating the American people about what this really means,” Pace said of the wars.


Friday, November 21, 2014

Lockheed Martin Exec Shares Secrets to Success


Maryanne Lavan
Photos by Vicky Song 
If you want to get a legal job at Lockheed Martin, be prepared to answer some very important interview questions. 

On Nov. 18, Maryanne Lavan, general counsel/senior vice president at the Washington D.C.-based defense contract company and a member of the University's President's Council, shed some light on those questions for aspiring lawyers at Fordham Law School. 

-What did you do in the first 90 days of your last job?
(Her Answer: Worked with former colleagues whom she now supervises.)

-What’s been your biggest challenge?
(Her Answer: Leading an ethics investigation against a colleague.)

-How would people who work for you describe you? 
(Her Answer: Hardworking, but a nice person.)

-What’s one area you’d like to improve, and what are you doing about it? 
(Her Answer: Self-doubt.)

Why should we hire you?
(Her Answer: “It’s my privilege to work for the corporation, and that’s the way I approach it every day.”)

Lavan, who oversees 115 lawyers at a company with 113,000 employees in 70 countries, was there as part of the college’s Business Law Practitioner Series. She emphasized the importance of humility and remembering one’s roots, as one makes the way up the corporate ladder.

“I’m fortunate to have the career that I’ve have, and I couldn’t have had it without my family and the people who’ve helped me along the way,” she said. “I’d like you to think about this in five, 10, 15 years, and find a way to give back, because there will be people who will help you.”

She ascended to her current position in 2010 after serving as corporate secretary, and before that, president, internal audit. (She initially lost the position to James Comey, who went on to become head of the FBI. She applied again and got it.) Her job entails everything from mergers and acquisitions, compliance issues such as Sarbanes Oxley, securities filings, employment issues, and intellectual property law, which she said was a growing area. 

She noted that the one major area that Lockheed/Martin does not handle in-house is litigation, because to do it effectively, you have to do it consistently.


“I feel sometimes like it’s an inch deep and a mile wide. I used to be much more in-depth . . . to know a ton about government contracts . . .  a ton about litigation. Now I know a little about everything,” she said. 

Besides humility, other top leadership values included empathy, authenticity, good humor, a can-do attitude, and resiliency. 

In fact, she said she witnessed a perfect example of people who didn’t understand “empathy” when her train broke down en route to New York from Washington D.C that morning, delaying her Fordham talk by 20 minutes.

“There were people on the train today who were yelling not at the conductor, but at the person who had been serving us food. He had nothing to do with it,” she said.

“Sometimes as you progress in your career, you’ll see that kind of ethos in people. That’s not how I like to operate.”

She offered advice for where to seek out employment: Read the annual reports, listen to the earnings calls, and learn all you can about the board of directors at the company you want to work for. 

And when you do get a job and you’re filing papers, check, recheck, and triple-check the filing deadline.

“I say this to my children. Proof, reproof, proof again, and edit strongly. It’s easy to write a long paper, it’s a lot harder to write a short, concise paper,” she said.

—Patrick Verel



Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Mary Jo White Honored at Law School Ceremony

Fordham President Joseph M. McShane, S.J., congratulates
Mary Jo White.
Photo by Chris Taggart
Securities and Exchange Commission chair Mary Jo White was honored on Tuesday, Nov. 18 with one of Fordham Law School's highest honors, the Fordham-Stein Prize.

First awarded in 1976, the award is presented annually to a member of the legal profession whose work embodies the highest standards of the legal profession.

Recipients who are chosen exemplify outstanding professional conduct, promote the advancement of justice, and bring credit to the profession by emphasizing in the public mind the contributions of lawyers to our society and to our democratic system of government.

White, who was was sworn in as the 31st Chair of the SEC on April 10, 2013, arrived with decades of experience as a federal prosecutor and securities lawyer.

She served as the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1993 to 2002, the First Assistant U.S. Attorney and later Acting U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York from 1990 to 1993, and an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1978 to 1981 and became Chief Appellate Attorney of the Criminal Division.

Following her service as the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Chair White became chair of the litigation department at Debevoise & Plimpton in New York. Chair White has won numerous awards in recognition of her outstanding work both as a prosecutor and a securities lawyer.

Mary Jo White and Fordham Law Dean Michael Martin
Photo by Chris Taggart

Friday, September 19, 2014

A Stellar Welcome for Fordham's Newest Landmark

Lincoln Center campus' Robert Moses Plaza overflowed with smiling faces yesterday as nearly 1,000 Fordham Law faculty, administrators, students, and alumni joined dignitaries and well-wishers in a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the brand new law school. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor,former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and Cardinal Edward Egan were on hand. (Photos by Chris Taggart and Dana Maxson)










Friday, March 28, 2014

Fordham Law Presents Double Bill on National Security

Harold Koh
The United States may look very different in 2024. 

Among the changes we can expect a decade from now are shifts in the way laws govern issues related to national security. 

To help get a better sense of what the future may hold, the Center for National Security, the Fordham International Law Journal, and the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice, present back-to-back evening talks with former legal advisers for the U.S. Department of State.

 “The Future of National Security Policy,” will feature on Monday John Bellinger, a former legal adviser for the U.S. Department of State, former Senior Associate Counsel to the President, and former Legal Adviser to the National Security Council during the George W. Bush administration.

John Bellinger
He’ll be followed 48 hours later by Harold Koh, a former legal adviser for the Department of State during the Obama administration, and a former Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor during the Clinton Administration.

Monday, March 31 and Tuesday, April 2
6 p.m.
E. Gerald Corrigan Center-12th Floor Lounge, Lowenstein Center, Lincoln Center Campus 

Among the questions that will be raised are: How do we understand the past? What will U.S. collaboration with the international community on counterterrorism look like in the next 10 years? What does the expansion of military capabilities over the last decade mean for security policy? What is the future of the authorization for use of military force? And under what legal authority will the U.S. continue to engage in counterterrorism and military operations around the globe?

For more information and to RSVP, visit the Center for National Security’s website

—Patrick Verel

Friday, February 14, 2014

PEDs discussed at the Fordham Sports Law Symposium



One of the main topics up for discussion in the Fordham Sports Law Forum’s 18th Annual Symposium on Current Legal Issues in Sports on Feb. 14 couldn’t have been more timely.

In a year in which Major League Baseball suspended New York Yankees’ third baseman Alex Rodriguez for performance enhancement drug use for the entire 2014 season, panelists at the Fordham Sports Law Forum Symposium discussed arguments surrounding the permissibility of performance enhancement.

The all-day event also debated hip-hop mogul Jay Z’s venture into sports (“The New Face of Sports Agency: The Runner Rule and Roc Nation’s Challenge to Traditional Notions of Athlete Representation”), and efforts by a group of American Indians who filed a petition in an attempt to cancel all of the Washington ‘Redskins’ and related trademarks registered by the team (Marooning the Mascot: The Implications of Blackhorse v. Pro-Football.)

This is the 18th year for the symposium, which has attracted many of the top practitioners in the industry.

Check out this compilation of tweets during the performance enhancement drugs discussion featuring Marc Edelman, an adjunct at Fordham Law and an associate professor of law at the Zicklin School of Business, Baruch College, and Arthur Caplan, the Drs. William F. and Virginia Connolly Mitty Professor of Bioethics at NYU Langone Medical Center, on STORIFY.

-Gina Vergel