Conviser Law Center

News and Media

Read the latest Chicago-Kent headlines

Recent News

Black Markets and Contraband: Chicago-Kent Hires Expert in Human Trafficking

Alexandra F. L. Yelderman joined the faculty at Chicago-Kent College of Law in fall 2025. Between 2012 and 2020, Yelderman practiced at the Human Trafficking Legal Center in Washington, D.C...

The Conviser Connection: Fall 2025 Edition of Chicago-Kent Magazine Released

The fall 2025 edition of Chicago-Kent Magazine is now available online. This edition features two alumni who are running intellectual property firms while creating employment opportunities for Chicago-Kent College of...

Legal Triage: Chicago-Kent Students Get Real-World Immigration Law Training

“It’s not something you can necessarily prepare for,” says Gaby Treviño-Gutiérrez ’26. “It’s like legal triage, in a sense.” In May 2025, Treviño-Gutiérrez and four other Chicago-Kent College of Law...

In the Media

Supreme Court Poised to Let President Fire Heads of Independent Agencies, Says Law Professor Harold Krent

“For the most part the idea of an independent-expert-type agency will be over” if 90-year-old precedent allowing Congress to limit the president's ability to fire independent agency officials is overturned, said Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Harold Krent. “It's incredibly significant. It gives the president even more powerful control over these agencies.”

Raw Story

Government's Victory in Appellate Court Likely a Factor in Chicago Media Groups’ Decision to Drop Use of Force Lawsuit, Says Professor Richard Kling

“(Attorneys are) thinking, ‘What’s the likelihood they’re going to affirm the decision or they’re going to reverse the decision?'” said Richard Kling, clinical professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law. “Obviously they thought it was in their advantage to dismiss it.”

Block Club Chicago

Supreme Court Doesn’t Seem to Think There’s an Emergency Justifying National Guard Troops in Chicago, Says Law Professor Carolyn Shapiro

“Even the lower courts that have ruled against the president believe that the president is entitled to a fair amount of deference. I don’t think that’s a controversial view. But the (federal) government is taking the position that the president’s decisions in this are completely unreviewable,” said Carolyn Shapiro, founder and co-director of the Chicago-Kent College of Law’s Institute on the Supreme Court of the United States. “I think that’s completely wrong, and it seems unlikely to me that there are five votes for that position, because if there were, they would have already granted a stay.”

Chicago Tribune

Chicago-Kent Magazine

Chicago-Kent Magazine

To read past editions, visit our Alumni site.