BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//精东影业 - ECPv6.3.2//NONSGML v1.0//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH X-WR-CALNAME:精东影业 X-ORIGINAL-URL: X-WR-CALDESC:Events for 精东影业 REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H X-Robots-Tag:noindex X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20250309T100000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20251102T090000 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250903T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250903T133000 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250826T200737Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250828T210421Z UID:10006360-1756902600-1756906200@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:FALL 2025 ADR SPEAKER SERIES What Makes People Tick: A Mediator鈥檚 Introduction to Internal Family Systems DESCRIPTION:聽 \nFALL 2025 ADR SPEAKER SERIES\nWhat Makes People Tick: A Mediator鈥檚 Introduction to Internal Family Systems\nDavid Hoffman\nJohn H. Watson\, Jr. Lecturer on Law\nHarvard Law School\n聽 \nWednesday\, September 3\, 2025\n12:30 鈥 1:30 P.M. PST\nVia Zoom\n\n聽 \nRSVP Here: https://forms.gle/dLJXnkQTRyxUrgaK8\nThe Zoom link will be emailed approximately 24 hours prior to the presentation. \n聽 \nDavid A. Hoffman is the John H. Watson\, Jr. Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School\, where he teaches three courses: Mediation; Legal Profession: Collaborative Law; and Diversity and Dispute Resolution. David includes in each of those courses a discussion of the IFS model. David is also an attorney\, mediator\, arbitrator\, and founding member of Boston Law Collaborative\, LLC\, where he handles cases involving family\, business\, employment\, and other disputes. \nPrior to founding BLC in 2003\, David was a litigation partner at the Boston firm Hill & Barlow\, where he practiced family law\, employment law\, and general litigation for 17 years. He is past-chair of the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolution and a recipient of Lifetime Achievement Awards from the American College of Civil Trial Mediators and the Academy of Professional Family Mediators. David has published three books (including 鈥淏ringing Peace into the Room鈥) and more than 100 articles on law and dispute resolution. \nDavid is a graduate of Princeton 精东影业 (A.B. 1970\, summa cum laude)\, Cornell 精东影业 (M.A. 1974\, American Studies)\, and Harvard Law School (J.D. 1984\, magna cum laude)\, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. David鈥檚 TEDx talk about 鈥淟awyers as Peacemakers鈥 can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JKXv1_Sqe_4. David lives in a cohousing community in Acton\, Massachusetts with his wife\, Leslie Warner\, who is a career coach. Together they have five adult children\, an adolescent cat\, and a rescued Golden Retriever from Serbia. Links to his publications can be found here: https://blc.law/team/david-hoffman. \n聽 URL:/event/fall-2025-adr-speaker-series-what-makes-people-tick-a-mediators-introduction-to-internal-family-systems/ LOCATION:Zoom\, San Francisco\, CA\, United States CATEGORIES:Students,Alumni,Featured,Public,Faculty END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250904T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250904T193000 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250731T222826Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250731T225458Z UID:10006347-1757007000-1757014200@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:UC Law SF Portland Alumni Mixer 鈥 September 4 DESCRIPTION:聽 \nPortland Area Alumni\, You're Invited!\n\nThursday\, September 4\, 2025\n5:30 鈥 7:30 PM\nK&L Gates LLP\n1 SW Columbia Street\, Suite 1900\nPortland\, OR 97204\n\nWe鈥檙e excited to invite you to our UC Law SF Portland Alumni Mixer\, generously hosted by K&L Gates LLP.\n\nJoin fellow alumni for an evening of connection and conversation overlooking downtown Portland. Enjoy hosted appetizers\, drinks\, and city views from the 19th floor of K&L Gates鈥 beautiful space.\n\nTickets\n$5 for recent alumni (Class of 2015鈥2025)\n$10 for all other alumni\nAll proceeds support Student Scholarships\n\n馃憠 RSVP here: https://give.uclawsf.edu/e/uc-law-sf-portland-alumni-mixer-september-4/\n\nQuestions? Contact Charles Wollin at wollincharles@uclawsf.edu\n\nSpecial thanks to Brittany Vulcan 鈥17 and the team at K&L Gates for sponsoring this event and making it possible. URL:/event/uc-law-sf-portland-alumni-mixer-september-4/ LOCATION:K&L Gates\, 1 SW Columbia St\, Portland\, Oregon\, 97204 CATEGORIES:Alumni,Featured,Public ORGANIZER;CN="Alumni Association":MAILTO:alumni@uclawsf.edu END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250911T181500 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250911T194500 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250828T205219Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250828T205219Z UID:10006364-1757614500-1757619900@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:International Mediation Development and Leadership Institute (IMDLI) Wine & Appetizer Reception DESCRIPTION:聽 \nCenter for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution (CNDR)\nInternational Mediation Development and Leadership Institute (IMDLI)\nWine & Appetizer Reception\n聽 \nJoin us for a reception with the participants of CNDR鈥檚 annual training program\, organized in collaboration with the JAMS Foundation and the Weinstein JAMS International Fellowship Program.\n\n\n聽 \nThursday\, Sept 11\, 2025\n6:15 鈥 7:45 PM\n\n聽 \nUC Law San Francisco\nDeb Colloquium Room & Skydeck\nCotchett Law Center\n333 Golden Gate Ave\, 5th Floor\n聽 \nRSVP Here: https://forms.gle/WTJWUVp4uW7BgzTS6 \n聽 URL:/event/international-mediation-development-and-leadership-institute-imdli-wine-appetizer-reception/ LOCATION:333 Deb Colloquium and Sky Deck\, 5th Floor Cotchett Law Center\, 333 Golden Gate Avenue\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94102\, United States CATEGORIES:Faculty,Students,Alumni,Featured,Staff,Public ORGANIZER;CN="Center for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution (CNDR)":MAILTO:cndr@uclawsf.edu END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250917T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250917T133000 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250826T210535Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250826T233004Z UID:10006362-1758112200-1758115800@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:FALL 2025 ADR SPEAKER SERIES The Practical Realities of Seeking Disability Accommodations: Burdens\, Backlashes\, and Conflict Resolution Breakthroughs DESCRIPTION:聽 \nFALL 2025 ADR SPEAKER SERIES\nThe Practical Realities of Seeking Disability Accommodations: Burdens\, Backlashes\, and Conflict Resolution Breakthroughs\nDan Berstein\, MHS\nMH Mediate\n聽 \nWednesday\, September 17\, 2025\n12:30 鈥 1:30 P.M. PST\nVia Zoom\n聽 \nRSVP Here: https://forms.gle/29h6gbfNh7HsHUvC9\nThe Zoom link will be emailed approximately 24 hours prior to the presentation. \n聽 \nDan Berstein is a mediator living with bipolar disorder working to empower all mental health stakeholders using conflict resolution best practices that promote mental health empowerment and prevent mental illness discrimination. Dan鈥檚 book\, Mental Health and Conflicts: A Handbook for Empowerment\, was originally published by the ABA in 2022 and is being republished this year by DRI Press. Through Dan鈥檚 company\, MH Mediate\, Dan has helped thousands of organizations become more accessible\, trauma-informed\, and consistent when responding to challenges. In 2023\, the AAA-ICDR foundation funded BiasResistantCourts.org\, a free platform Dan developed in collaboration with the CUNY Dispute Resolution Center and court systems around the country\, teaching court-connected professionals twelve core skills for becoming bias-resistant and trauma-informed. In 2024\, Dan led the 鈥淒emystifying Distress鈥 event co-sponsored by Mediate.com\, ACR\, APFM\, NAFCM\, and CPR. The free resources from this event have helped dispute resolution professionals to manage their own distress while reducing distress for the parties they serve. In 2025\, Dan launched free resources to help people living with mental health conditions use conflict resolution best practices when seeking support\, reorienting from rejection\, and pursuing disability accommodations\, all as part of projects funded by the New York State Office of Mental Health鈥檚 statewide stigma reduction efforts and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene鈥檚 Office of Consumer Affairs. Recently\, Dan has been celebrating twenty years since his first hospitalization and diagnosis of bipolar disorder as part of his 20 Years Embracing Bipolar project accessible at www.danberstein.com/20years URL:/event/fall-2025-adr-speaker-series-the-practical-realities-of-seeking-disability-accommodations-burdens-backlashes-and-conflict-resolution-breakthroughs/ LOCATION:Zoom\, San Francisco\, CA\, United States CATEGORIES:Alumni,Featured,Public,Faculty,Students,UC LAW SF 精东影业 ORGANIZER;CN="Center for Negotiation and Dispute Resolution (CNDR)":MAILTO:cndr@uclawsf.edu END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250918T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250918T193000 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250805T203944Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250805T204026Z UID:10006348-1758216600-1758223800@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:Sacramento Alumni Chapter Launch! DESCRIPTION:We鈥檙e thrilled to officially launch the UC Law SF Sacramento Alumni Chapter 鈥 and we鈥檙e celebrating in style \non Thursday\, September 18 from 5:30 to 7:30 PM at Alaro Craft Brewery in Midtown Sacramento!\n\nJoin Chancellor and Dean David Faigman and chapter leaders Niki (Anderson) Roman 鈥09\, Erica Connolly 鈥12\, and Steven Ward 鈥22 \nfor a fun and meaningful evening of connection\, community\, and conversation.\n\n馃嵒 First drink and appetizers hosted馃師 $5 for recent alumni (2015鈥2025)馃師 $10 for alumni from 2014 and earlier鉁 All proceeds support student scholarships\n\nWe can鈥檛 wait to see you there and build this next chapter together.馃憠 RSVP here\n\nQuestions? Reach out directly to alumni@uclawsf.edu URL:/event/sac25/ LOCATION:Alaro Craft Brewery\, 2004 Capitol Ave\, Sacramento\, 95811\, United States CATEGORIES:Alumni,Featured,Public ORGANIZER;CN="Alumni Association":MAILTO:alumni@uclawsf.edu END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250919T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250919T163000 DTSTAMP:20260501T005431 CREATED:20250715T184212Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251014T221100Z UID:10006336-1758285000-1758299400@www.uclawsf.edu SUMMARY:2025 Japanese Law Symposium: Rights and Reparations of the Ainu and Settler Colonialism DESCRIPTION:This year鈥檚 Japanese Law Symposium will assess the rights of the Ainu people and examine broader issues of settler colonialism from a comparative perspective. \n聽 \nThe Ainu are an Indigenous people who live in Hokkaido and the northern part of Honshu\, as well as in southern Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands. After the collapse of the Tokugawa shogunate\, the new Meiji government established the Kaitakushi (Hokkaido Development Commission) in 1869. The purpose the Kaitakushi was to defend against the rapidly advancing Russians and develop the resources of Hokkaido. In order to achieve this\, the Kaitakushi encouraged immigration from the mainland south of Honshu and allocated these immigrants land where the Ainu people lived. In 1899\, the Former Aborigines Protection Law was enacted. Although a small amount of land was allocated to the Ainu\, the Law promoted forced assimilation and prohibited use of the Ainu language and religious ceremonies. From this perspective\, the Meiji government鈥檚 Hokkaido colonization policy is an example of what is known today as settler colonialism. \n聽 \nPursuant to such policies\, the Japanese government denied the existence of Indigenous peoples. However\, after the United Nations adopted the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 2007\, there was a growing movement in Japan to recognize the Ainu as an Indigenous people. In 2019\, the so-called 鈥淣ew Ainu Law鈥 was enacted\, recognizing the Ainu as an Indigenous people and requiring national and local governments to raise awareness of Ainu culture and traditions. In addition\, it has become easier to obtain permission to carry out traditional events such as salmon 铿乻hing. Even so\, compensation for past damages is still inadequate\, and the collective right to carry out traditional events has not been recognized. Litigation over these issues continues to this day. \n聽 \n聽 \nSymposium Schedule \n12:00 Light lunch \n12:30 Welcome Remarks: Senior Professor Emeritus Setsuo Miyazawa and Center Director Keith Hand \n1:00 Keynote Speech: Professor Kunihiko Yoshida \n1:45 Break \n2:00 Commentary: Professor Jo Carrillo and Professor Natsu Taylor Saito \n2:45 Break \n3:00 Discussion and Q&A \n4:00 Closing Remarks: Senior Professor Emeritus Setsuo Miyazawa \n聽 \n聽 \nSymposium Participants \n聽 \nKeynote Speaker \n聽 \nProfessor Kunihiko Yoshida\, Ph.D. is Yunshan Professor of Law at the Guangdong 精东影业 of Foreign Studies in China. \n聽 \nProfessor Yoshida earned a Ph.D. in Civil Law from Tokyo 精东影业\, Japan\, and has visited numerous law schools in the United States\, including Northwestern Law School (1989-1991)\, Stanford Law School (1994-1995)\, Harvard Law School /Harvard Yenching Institute (2002-2003)\, the 精东影业 of Miami Law School (2012-2013)\, and the 精东影业 of Colorado Law School (2018-2019). He has written more than 100 articles and case reports and has published ten monographs on a wide range of topics\, including contracts\, torts\, health law\, critical legal studies\, and critical race theory. His recent publications have focused on property theories\, specifically housing\, city making\, environment\, immigration\, and reparations. The relational perspective developed by the late Professor Ian Macneil at Northwestern is the common thread across these fields. \n聽 \nProfessor Yoshida has visited numerous East Asian countries in recent years to conduct collaborative work on reparations issues related to 鈥渃omfort women鈥 for the Japanese Army\, the Nanjing massacre\, the Chongqing bombings\, and the Jeju tragedies. He has held visiting appointments at universities in Korea\, Taiwan\, China\, Thailand and Cambodia. Since retiring from Hokkaido 精东影业\, he has served as the distinguished Yunshan Professor of Law at the Guangdong 精东影业 of Foreign Studies. \n聽 \nProfessor Yoshida is an expert on reparations for the Ainu people\, the indigenous people in Hokkaido\, from a civil law perspective. His current research focuses on repatriation\, environmental injustice\, and traditional Indigenous knowledge to support the pressing agenda of Ainu reparations. In advancing this research\, he draws on 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and other Indigenous peoples鈥 practices across the globe. For example\, he has recently been working on the Brazilian Minamata disease affecting on Indigenous peoples along the Amazon and taken a great interest in the social solidarity economy in the Global South. \n聽 \nModerator \n聽 \nSetsuo Miyazawa\, Ph.D. is Professor Emeritus at Kobe 精东影业 and Senior Director Emeritus and Senior Affiliated Scholar at the Center for East Asian Legal Studies (CEALS) at UC Law San Francisco. He is a legal sociologist who holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from Yale 精东影业 and a Ph.D. in Law from Hokkaido 精东影业. He served as a full professor at four universities in Japan until his mandatory retirement in 2016. Since 1995\, he taught as a visiting professor at ten law schools in North America\, including Harvard\, NYU\, and UC Berkeley\, before beginning his long-term association with UC Law San Francisco in 2008. He taught at UC Law San Francisco nearly every fall semester from 2008 to 2023 and served as Senior Director of CEALS from 2015 to 2023. He has organized an annual symposium on Japanese law almost every fall since 2012. Professor Miyazawa鈥檚 research interests are remarkably broad\, encompassing police\, criminal justice\, legal education\, the legal profession\, and corporate legal behavior. He has been highly active in international academic organizations. He received the Distinguished Book Award from the Division of International Criminology of the American Society of Criminology\, as well as the International Scholarship Prize\, the Stanton Wheeler Mentorship Award\, and the Legacy Award from the Law and Society Association. He was the Founding President of the Asian Law and Society Association and also served as the President of the Asian Society of Criminology. \n聽 \nDiscussants \n聽 \nJo Carrillo J.D./J.S.D. is Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the Indigenous Law Center (ILC) at UC Law San Francisco. For over three decades\, Professor Carrillo has taught and written extensively in property and property-related subjects\, including Federal Indian Law. She earned her B.A. from Stanford 精东影业\, her J.D. from the 精东影业 of New Mexico\, and her J.S.D. from Stanford Law School. As Faculty Director of the UC Law Indigenous Law Center\, Professor Carrillo facilitates a seminar series called Law &. This series brings lawyers\, students\, and California Tribal leaders into the law school classroom to discuss land back and land stewardship issues. To date\, Law & Seminars have covered such topics as Tribal Law\, International Indigenous Peoples Rights Law (a seminar that includes instructors from all common law countries)\, Indigenous Land Acknowledgments (with Jonathan Cordero\, Metush (Chair) of the Ramaytush Tribe and Executive Director of the Association of Ramaytush Oholone) and Enhancing Access to Land and Stewardship (with Curtis Berkey of Berkey Williams and supported by a grant from the Resources Legacy Fund). Recently\, again with assistance from the Resources Legacy Fund\, Professor Carrillo has undertaken to study land back transfer documents. \n聽 \nAs a faculty member\, Professor Carrillo has served on the UC Law SF Legacy Committee. She now serves on the UC Law SF Restorative Justice Advisory Board\, which counsels UC Law SF Chancellor and Dean David Faigman on decanal-initiated restorative justice efforts for Indigenous communities in California. As a long-term project\, Professor Carrillo is co-editing a volume\, with UCLA Professor of History Benjamin Madley\, on redressing 19th century state sponsored harms against California Indigenous Peoples. \n聽 \nNatsu Taylor Saito\, J.D. is a Regents鈥 Professor Emerita at Georgia State 精东影业鈥檚 College of Law in Atlanta\, Georgia\, where she taught courses on race\, indigeneity\, immigration\, international law\, and human rights for almost 30 years. A graduate of Yale Law School and an activist attorney\, she remains involved in efforts to defend Indigenous rights\, contest police and prosecutorial misconduct\, and protect academic freedom. Professor Saito is the author of several dozen law review articles as well as three books: From Chinese Exclusion to Guant谩namo Bay: Plenary Power and the Prerogative State (精东影业 of Colorado Press\, 2006)\, Meeting the Enemy: American Exceptionalism and International Law (New York 精东影业 Press\, 2010)\, and Settler Colonialism\, Race and the Law: Why Structural Racism Persists (New York 精东影业 Press\, 2020) \n聽 \n聽 \nLight lunch to be served. \nRSVP here \n聽 \n聽 URL:/event/japanese-law-symposium/ LOCATION:333 Deb Colloquium and Sky Deck\, 5th Floor Cotchett Law Center\, 333 Golden Gate Avenue\, San Francisco\, CA\, 94102\, United States CATEGORIES:CEALS,CEALS News and Past Events,Alumni,Featured,Faculty,Students END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR