![]() ![]() Risa Goluboff: Guessing it is not about the Ed Sheeran song?Ĭathy Hwang: It would be funny if her bad habits led to late nights writing this paper. So what are we going to be talking about with her today?Ĭathy Hwang: So she has a new paper coming out soon called "Bad Habits." She's also the director of Utah's Center for Law and Biomedical Sciences. ![]() She's brilliant, and most importantly, she was a great office neighbor.Ĭathy Hwang: Her research is interdisciplinary and includes topics at the intersection of law, genetics, neuroscience, medicine and ethics. It's a second take on our last season, which was so much fun, we are doing it again.Ĭathy Hwang: So I have to confess, our next guest is a little outside of the corporate law world, but I know her from my days at the University of Utah S.J. Risa Goluboff: We are now in our fifth season of Common Law, and Cathy is back as one of four co-hosts helping to choose and interview guests connected to their fields, ranging from law and psychology, to privacy, to her own specialty, business law. I'm Risa Goluboff, the dean.Ĭathy Hwang: And I'm UVA law professor Cathy Hwang. Risa Goluboff: Welcome back to Common Law, a podcast of the University of Virginia School of Law. It leads to more reversals than any evidence rule. It leads to more acquittals than any other evidence rule. Teneille Brown: Judges are just always complaining that they don't know how to apply the character evidence rules, they're complicated. ![]() Risa Goluboff: On today's show, bad habits: Should they or other evidence about a defendant's character be admitted in the courtroom? We'll be talking to University of Utah law professor Teneille Brown. She is on the executive committee for the AALS Evidence section and the Utah's Supreme Court Advisory Committee on Evidence. She teaches Torts, Bioethics & the Law, Evidence, Current Issues in Law & Biosciences, and a recent seminar on the opioid crisis. Brown’s work has been highlighted in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and on national NPR outlets. Her interdisciplinary research spans a wide range of issues at the intersection of law, genetics, neuroscience, medicine and ethics. She graduated from the University of Michigan Law School, and completed three postdoctoral fellowships at Stanford, one in the Center for Law and the Biosciences, one on the MacArthur Project for Law and Neuroscience, and one at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics. Quinney College of Law and an adjunct in the Department of Internal Medicine/Center for Health Ethics, Arts, and Humanities. Teneille Brown is a professor of law at the S.J. ![]()
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