SWLAW Blog | Faculty Scholarship Spotlight
March 18, 2026
Faculty Appearances: February Highlights
Our February faculty digest highlights Southwestern scholars whose work is shaping courts, campuses, national media, and beyond.
Meera Deo
- On February 13, Meera delivered the keynote speech, Women: The Backbone of the Legal Academy, at the hosted by Boston University School of Law. More than 100 attendees participated in the two-day event. Meera shared national findings from the SELFS study, highlighting gender disparities in service, teaching, and research, as well as means of better supporting faculty.

Andrea Freeman
- On February 23, Andrea sat for a live radio interview for KALW Public Media鈥檚 daily call-in program, Your Call, hosted by Rose Aguilar. The episode is entitled .
- On February 18, Andrea was a (virtual) guest lecturer in a Food Policy course at the University of Colorado Boulder, where she spoke with students concentrating on food systems, public health, sustainability, and other disciplines.
- On February 16, Andrea was a guest on the UK podcast, Eat the System, where she discussed her latest book. The episode is entitled .
KJ Greene
- On January 26, KJ attended the 3rd Annual Filmmakers & Screenwriters Legal Forum at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, where he offered a legal perspective regarding issues facing filmmakers on a panel sponsored by the Sports & Entertainment Risk Management Association.

Hila Keren & Danni Hart
- Over many months, Hila and Danni organized a roundtable to interrogate the relationship between contract law and injustice. They invited leading contract law scholars to discuss the myths that contracts are equitable tools, and that contract law serves justice. The took place on February 6-7 in Richmond, Virginia, where Hila and Danni participated in generative conversations that unearthed the many ways in which contract law constructs, legitimizes, perpetuates, and (sometimes) resists injustice.
Faisal Kutty
- On February 25, Faisal participated in a Newsweek roundtable analyzing the State of the Union address: . Faisal argued that Governor Spanberger鈥檚 response resonated with ordinary Americans because it focused on affordability, accountability, and constitutional guardrails, rather than relying on spectacle.
- On February 21, Faisal published an Op-Ed in Newsweek: . In this piece, Faisal examines the resurgence of political campaigns warning of a supposed 鈥淪haria threat,鈥 arguing that such claims have no legal basis and primarily serve to stoke cultural panic and target Muslim communities.
- On February 9, Faisal published an Op-Ed in The Toronto Star: . Faisal examines the Canadian government鈥檚 decision to eliminate dedicated envoys on Islamophobia and antisemitism, arguing that dismantling specialized leadership risks weakening trust with affected communities and undermining progress against hate and discrimination.
Nydia Johnson & Jessica Barclay-Strobel
- On February 27, Jessica and Nydia attended the conference at UC Law San Francisco (co-sponsored by AccessLex Institute). They both presented on the panel, Food for Thought: A Recipe for Responding to California and NextGen Bar Exam Changes. The panel examined how law schools are redesigning bar readiness curricula in response to the evolving California Bar Exam and the forthcoming NextGen Bar Exam, focusing on integrated skills instruction, formative assessment, and strategies to support diverse student populations preparing for multiple licensing jurisdictions.

John Tehranian
- On February 27, John attended the University of Akron School of Law, IP Policy Institute's : An Unhurried View of the Future of Copyright in Orlando, FL. There, John participated in an invitation-only roundtable on copyright law reform with a group of approximately twenty industry leaders, creatives, and academics.
Rachel VanLandingham
- On February 13, Rachel published an Op-Ed in MS Now: . Rachel argues that the Trump Administration鈥檚 鈥渨itch hunt鈥 against Senator Kelly 鈥渋s a threat to all military retirees鈥 freedom of speech and our unique ability to contribute to U.S. national security through that exercise.鈥 In discussing the federal order blocking Hegseth鈥檚 punitive course of action, Rachel explains that 鈥淛udge Leon met the moment by clearly outlining its breathtaking consequences for those of us who served our nation in uniform.鈥
- In February, Rachel continued to engage in national media appearances to educate the public through her expert analysis of the Trump Administration鈥檚 various military actions:
- On February 18, Rachel was quoted in a discussing the Pentagon鈥檚 decision to sever ties with Harvard and place dozens of other colleges under review.
- On February 13, Rachel was quoted in a in which she discussed whether the use of an unmarked military plane to bomb an alleged drug boat was an act of 鈥減erfidy鈥 (i.e., 鈥渁n act that invites the confidence of the enemy to believe they are entitled to protection, with the intent to betray that confidence鈥).
- On February 11, Rachel was spotlighted in an , for which she also offered substantive contributions, discussing how military lawyers are being 鈥渦sed, abused, and sidelined.鈥
- On February 6, Rachel was interviewed for a televised regarding a federal judge鈥檚 decision blocking the Pentagon from taking punitive action against Senator Mark Kelly for his participation in a video made by democratic lawmakers calling for troops to disregard illegal orders.