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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama School
of Law will host “Disability Law: Equality and Difference:
A Symposium on American Disability Law and the Civil Rights Model”
on Friday, Nov. 7, at 9 a.m. at the Law School.
“Disability Law: Equality and Difference” will examine
this conceptual paradox in American disability law. A distinguished
panel of disability law scholars, practitioners, and representatives
of related fields from institutions such as Harvard, Duke, North
Carolina, Florida and UA will comment on the implications of the
disability laws’ desire to promote equality of opportunity
and the simultaneous recognition of difference that is inherent
in a system of accommodations. The luncheon speaker will be Harriet
McBryde Johnson, an attorney and disability rights advocate who
was featured earlier this year in a cover story in the New York
Times Magazine.
The “Equality and Difference” symposium will be the
UA School of Law’s third conference on disability law. In
March 2000 the Law School hosted a national conference on the 10-year
anniversary of the ADA, and in October 2001 sponsored a symposium
on the Supreme Court’s decision in Board of Trustees of The
University of Alabama v. Garrett. Papers from these symposia were
published in special editions of the Alabama Law Review.
For further information, contact Peggy McIntosh at 205/348-5927,
Reuben Cook at 205/348-9710, or see www.law.ua.edu/equality.
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