CC0/Public Domain
Ipse Dixit
Ipse Dixit is a podcast on legal scholarship. Each episode of Ipse Dixit features a different guest discussing their scholarship. The podcast also features several special series. "From the Archives" consists historical recordings potentially of interest to legal scholars and lawyers. "The Homicide Squad" consists of investigations of the true stories behind different murder ballads, as well as examples of how different musicians have interpreted the song over time. "The Day Antitrust Died?" is co-hosted with Ramsi Woodcock, Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of L...
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CC0/Public Domain
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Web del podcast
Último episodio
16 de may. de 2026
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Episodios
Jon Lee on Sanctioning Lawyers Who Commit Crimes 16.05.2026 49:56
In this episode, Jon J. Lee , Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Research and Frank Elkouri and Edna Asper Elkouri Professor in Law at the University of Oklahoma College of Law, discusses his article " Sanctioning Lawyer-Criminals ," which is published in the Washington and Lee Law Review. Lee begins by explaining how the legal profession regulates itself and disciplines lawyers. He descri...
Davies & Ellis on Brakhage & Sartre 07.05.2026 47:25
In this episode, Byron Davies , a Marie Skłodowska-Curie fellowship with the Aresmur research group in aesthetics and art theory at the University of Murcia in Spain, and Addison Ellis , Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the American University in Cairo, discuss their article " Stan Brakhage, Jean-Paul Sartre and Existentialism: Cinema De Trop ," which will be published in the journal Film-Phil...
Philip Hackney on Arts Tax Policy 16.04.2026 42:37
In this episode, Philip Hackney , Professor of Law at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, discusses his draft article, " Arts Tax Policy: Democracy or Plutocracy? ," which will be published in the Loyola L.A. Law Review. Hackney begins by explaining how the tax code conceptualizes art. Then he explains how the tax code conceptualizes charitable organizations and treats them differently fro...
Daniel Schwarcz on AI and Human Legal Reasoning 13.04.2026 41:18
In this episode, Daniel Schwarcz , Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and a Distinguished University Teaching Professor at the University of Minnesota Law School, discusses his draft article " Artificial Intelligence and Human Legal Reasoning ," which he co-authored with Nicholas Bednar , David R. Cleveland , and Allan Erbsen . Schwarcz explains that he and his co-authors wanted to test the c...
Bearer-Friend & Polcz on Taxing AI 11.04.2026 39:53
In this episode, Jeremy Bearer-Friend , Associate Professor of Law at George Washington University Law School, and Sarah Polcz , Acting Professor of Law at UC Davis School of Law, discuss their article " Sharing the Algorithm: The Tax Solution to Generative AI ," which is published in the Columbia Journal of Tax Law. Bearer-Friend and Polcz begin by outlining some of the social problems associated...
Aman Gebru on Truthmarks 05.04.2026 36:44
In this episode, Aman Gebru, Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Houston Law Center, discusses his draft article " Truthmarks ," which will be published in the American University Law Review. Gebru begins by explaining the purpose of trademark law and how it protects trademarks. He describes three uses of trademarks that are inconsistent with the policy goals of trademark law of convey...
Urice & Frankel on Art Law 04.04.2026 36:27
In this episode, Stephen K. Urice and Simon J. Frankel discuss their book Law, Ethics, and the Visual Arts , the sixth edition of which was just published by Cambridge University Press. Urice and Frankel describe the creation of the book and the academic study of art law by John Henry Merryman, and discuss their own respective background in art law. They explain how the study and practice of art l...
Sam Williams on the Jokerfication of Law 31.01.2026 58:56
In this episode, Sam Williams , Associate Professor of Law and Reference and Instruction Librarian at the University of Idaho College of Law discusses several of his articles, including “ The Law is Weirder than AI, ” which was published in 2024 with the Hofstra Law Review, and “ The Jokerfication of Law, ” which was published with Hedgehogs and Foxes. Williams discusses how these pieces she...
Christopher Brooks on Appellate Judicial Section 31.01.2026 26:28
In this episode, Christopher T. Brooks , Professor of History at East Stroudsburg University, discusses his work on appellate judicial selection. He explains that state appellate judges are usually either elected or appointed with the advice of nominating committees. He argues that both methods are flawed, and that it would be better for judges to be appointed by elected nominating committees. Bro...
Valentin Jeutner on Conceptual Legal Writing 04.12.2025 43:34
In this episode, Valentin Jeutner , Associate Professor of Law at Lund University and Retained Lecturer in Law at Pembroke College, Oxford University, discusses his book " [l]ex machina: unlikely encounters of international law and technology ," which is published by Lund University. Jeutner begins by introducing listeners to conceptual legal writing, describing its relationship to conceptual art...
Sharon Yadin on the Nature of Regulation 20.11.2025 42:10
In this episode, Sharon Yadin , Senior Lecturer of Law and Regulation at the Yezreel Valley College School of Public Administration and Public Policy , discusses her draft article " The Hidden Nature of Regulation ," which will be published in the Harvard Negotiation Law Review. Yadin begins by describing the conventional bifurcation of regulation into "hard" and "soft" approaches. She observes th...
Jorge Contreras on Silly Patents 16.11.2025 42:43
In this episode, Jorge L. Contreras , Distinguished University Professor, James T. Jensen Endowed Professor for Transactional Law, and Director of the Program on Intellectual Property and Technology Law at the University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law, discusses his draft article "Silly Patents." Contreras begins by describing why patents exist and how the patent system works. He observes tha...
Nikola Datzov on AI Judges 04.11.2025 46:03
In this episode, Nikola Datzov , Associate Professor of Law at the University of North Dakota School of Law, discusses his article " AI Jurisprudence: Toward Automated Justice ," which will be published in the Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property. Datzov begins by briefly explaining how AI models works and why judicial systems are primed to use them in certain ways. He prov...
Mark Blankenship on the "Aesthetic Nondiscrimination" Doctrine 03.11.2025 41:41
In this episode, Mark Edward Blankenship, Jr. , Assistant Professor of Law at St. Thomas University College of Law, discusses his article " Reconsidering the 'Aesthetic Nondiscrimination' Doctrine in American Copyright Law ," which is published in the Berkeley Journal of Entertainment and Sports Law. Blankenship begins by describing the origin of copyright's so-called "aesthetic nondiscrimination"...
John Tehranian on Copyright & Inequality 03.10.2025 43:42
In this episode, John Tehranian , Paul W. Wildman Chair and Professor of Law at Southwestern Law School and a founding partner of One LLP , discusses his new book, " The Secret Life of Copyright: Intellectual Property and Inequality in the Age of AI ," which is published by Cambridge University Press. Tehranian begins by describing the critical IP theory movement and how his work fits into that mo...
Stephen Cicirelli on Philosophy, Literature, and Plagiarism 03.10.2025 30:31
In this episode, Stephen Cicirelli , a Lecturer of English at Saint Peter’s University, discusses philosophy, literature, and plagiarism. He begins by reflecting on his studies of Kierkegaard, and how it influenced his later work as an author. He describes some of his recent fiction and how it incorporates elements from his study of philosophy. And he explains how he addresses plagiarism and AI as...
Thomas Basboll on Plagiarism 29.08.2025 53:16
In this episode, Thomas Basboll, a resident writing consultant at the Copenhagen Business School and the author of the Inframethodology blog, discusses his work on plagiarism, among other things. Basboll begins by introducing himself. He then discusses a series of articles he wrote on a plagiarism incident in the discipline of critical management studies. He reflects on the reaction to his article...
Bill Childs on Amusement Park Law 19.08.2025 33:39
In this episode, Bill Childs, a partner at Bowman and Brooke LLP and an adjunct professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law , discusses his new casebook " Recreation and Risk ," which is published by Carolina Academic Press. The book provides all the material for a law school class on the law of amusement parks, which covers torts, contracts, insurance, criminal law, and more. Childs begins by exp...
Courtney Cox on Super-Dicta 17.08.2025 42:29
In this episode, Courtney Cox , Associate Professor of Law at Fordham University School of Law, discusses her new article " Super-Dicta ," which is published in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. Cox begins by explaining what she means by "super-dicta," then reflects on what the concept can tell us about the judging process and jurisprudence more generally. Here is the abstract: A weird th...
Saurabh Vishnubhakat on the Constitutionality of the Appointment of PTAB Judges 16.07.2025 1:08:32
In this episode, Saurabh Vishnubhakat , Professor of Law and Director of the Intellectual Property and Information Law Program at Cardozo School of Law, discusses his draft article " Constitutional Structure in the Patent Office ." Vishnubhakat begins by explaining how the patent application or "prosecution" process works, how the Patent Office adjudication process is structures, and how Patent Of...
Richard Albert & Kevin Frazier on Using AI to Draft Constitutions 15.07.2025 45:40
In this episode, Richard Albert , Hines H. Baker and Thelma Kelley Baker Chair in Law at the University of Texas School of Law, and Kevin Frazier , AI Innovation & Law Fellow at The University of Texas School of Law, discuss their draft article, " Should AI Write Your Constitution? " They begin by explaining how much constitution writing and amending in taking place in the world right now, and...
Laurie Gwen Shapiro on Amelia Earhart & Historical Research 15.07.2025 51:48
In this episode, Laurie Gwen Shapiro , a writer and filmmaker, discusses her new book, " The Aviator and the Showman: Amelia Earhart, George Putnam, and the Marriage That Made an American Icon ," which is published by Viking. Shapiro reflects on the process of researching and writing the book, and shares many fascinating stories and anecdotes about Amelia Earhart's life. She also describes her app...
Jacob Schriner-Briggs on First Amendment Traditionalism 14.07.2025 38:53
In this episode, Jacob M. Schriner-Briggs , a Visiting Assistant Professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law, discusses his article " Against First Amendment Traditionalism ," which will be published in the Kentucky Law Journal. Schreiner-Briggs begins by observing that the Supreme Court has recently suggested that its "history and tradition" based interpretation of the Second Amendment is also appro...
Jade Craig on Rate Covenants in Municipal Bonds 12.06.2025 1:00:06
In this episode, Jade Craig, Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law, discusses his article, "Rate Covenants in Municipal Bonds: Selling Away Civil Rights and Fair Housing Goals." Professor Craig discusses revenue bonds that state and local governments issue to fund projects ranging from improvements to public utilities and toll roads to convention centers and ret...
Franklin Graves on the New Creator Economy 27.05.2025 47:08
In this episode, Franklin Graves , Senior Counsel at LinkedIn, discusses his article " Upload Complete: An Introduction to Creator Economy Law ," which will be published in the Belmont Law Journal. Graves begins by explaining what he means by a creator and the creator economy. He reflects on what made the creator economy possible and the kinds of opportunities it provides to creators, platforms, a...
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