Alison Dundes Renteln will examine the ways in which laws address and protect traditional beliefs, stories and cultural ideas.
USC Dornsife News
Images of famine or poverty are often used by human rights groups to galvanize support. And they often do. The ethics of these images is a more complex story. [5 3/4 min read]
Experts weigh in on President Trump’s nominee, the options available to Congress and what Kavanaugh’s confirmation could mean for the country.
As President Donald Trump’s executive order banning refugees and travelers from a list of predominantly Muslim countries from entering America triggers a storm of protest across the United States and the globe, USC Dornsife scholars examine why it is causing such a widespread backlash.
In his new book, Dust-Up: Asbestos Litigation and the Failure of Commonsense Policy Reform, USC Dornsife’s Jeb Barnes uses an interbranch perspective to explore the most recent congressional efforts to reform asbestos litigation.
Three USC Dornsife faculty will incorporate Holocaust witness testimony into their courses with awards from the USC Shoah Foundation Institute.