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23.07.2020 | Online-Seminar

Professor Yankah from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, New York is sharing his expertise and opinion about the present developments regarding the recurrent problem of police brutality and unjust punishment in the United States’ Justice System.

Professor Yankah’s areas of expertise include Criminal Law and Procedure, Election Law, Jurisprudence and Torts. In his research he addresses the intersection of law and society, focussing among many other topics on election reform, criminal justice and police brutality.

He presents a review of how the caustic problems of race are treated by law of policing in the U.S. and how that reflects more broadly and spurred the demands of the Black Lives Matter Movement.

Sprecher:

Professor Ekow N. Yankah holds degrees from the University of Michigan, Columbia Law School and Oxford University. His work focuses on questions of criminal theory and punishment and political theory and particularly, questions political obligation and its interaction with justifications of punishment. His work has appeared in law review articles and peer reviewed legal theory journals and books including NOMOS, Ratio Juris, Law and Philosophy, Criminal Law and Philosophy and the Illinois Law Review. He has been a visiting fellow at the Israeli Institute of Advanced Studies (IIAS), a Visiting Professor of Law at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya and a Distinguished Visiting Faculty Member at the University of Toronto School of Law.

He has been recognized numerous times by his students for his dedication to teaching; most recently he was awarded the Cardozo Alumni of the Year Award by Cardozo BALLSA, becoming the first non-Cardozo graduate or faculty member to be recognized.  His interests have also led him to develop expertise in voting rights and election law and he serves as the co-chair of the New York Democratic Lawyers Council, the voting rights arm of the New York Democratic party and the coordinating arm of the DNC believed to be the largest voting rights group in the country.  He sits on the Board of the Innocence Project and was awarded as an Advocate of Justice (2017) and has served on the Board of the American Constitution Society (NY Chapter).  He maintains a public presence writing for publications spanning The New York Times, The New Yorker and The Huffington Post, among others, and has been a regular commentator on criminal law issues on television and radio including MSNBC, BBC, BBC International, PBS and NPR.

Moderation:

Marie Pflüger

Marie Pflüger
Head of DAJV Student Division 

Lukas Pietrek
DAJV Student Division Bochum