Join us in a Zoom discussion with speakers Dr. Anais Mattez, Dr. Sebastian Spitra, and Ms. Maria Perez on April 8, a collaboration with the Berkeley Art, Law, and Finance Project, the University of Geneva’s Art-Law Centre, and the Research Association for Provenance Research.
Legal Provenance and TWAIL: A Discussion
Berkeley Art, Law, and Finance Project: Rewriting Reality—Navigating the Legal Landscape of AR and VR in Art
Join Sheppard Mullin’s Robert Darwell, Head of Global Media and senior partner, Yeeun Kim, associate, and Hala Khalil, a dual-licensed attorney to explore the intersection of augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) with art law, moderated by Berkeley Law Professor Molly Van Houweling.
CCWP & PAC Report Featured in Why California Faces Pressure to Release Elderly Women from Prison
Vanguard News Group, 03/25/2026
Law & Disorder Radio: The Fight to Free Incarcerated Seniors with PAC & CCWP
When Reporting on Indian Country Gets the Story Wrong—A New Partnership Aims to Fix It (3/23/2026)
Berkeley Law and the Indigenous Journalists Association launch a national effort to close the legal knowledge gap in reporting.
New CCWP & PAC Report: California Spends $300 Million Each Year Incarcerating Senior Citizens in Women’s Prisons
The Appeal, 03/17/2026
Hawai’i House Includes PAC Client’s Juvenile Fee Repeal in Criminal Justice Package
Hawai’i House Democrats, 03/11/2026
Disappeared in Plain Sight: Fighting Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan as a Crime Against Humanity
Clinic Director Laurel Fletcher moderated a panel of leading advocates at Berkeley Law to discuss the Taliban regime’s systematic removal of women from public life since 2021. Learn how human rights groups are leading the legal initiative to codify the crime of gender apartheid in a new UN Crimes Against Humanity Treaty.
Artificial Code
In “Artificial Code,” BYU Law Professor Clark D. Asay argues that while AI copyright battles rage in music, journalism, and visual art, the software industry has stayed on the sidelines. The reason? Much AI-generated code may not qualify for copyright protection under current U.S. law — a gap with major implications for the industry.
Canvas, Issue 24
This month, Canvas is packed with stories at the cutting edge of art, law, and the future of creativity—AI copyright wars, fractional art ownership, and Supreme Court decisions.