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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Danny LaChance presents "State of Confusion: Social Engineering, Vigilante Distrust, and Capital Punishment in the Contemporary United States"

Danny LaChance will be presenting his paper, "State of Confusion: Social Engineering, Vigilante Distrust, and Capital Punishment in the Contemporary United States" at the U of MN Legal History Workshop. See full entry for an attachment of the paper and more details on the workshop, which is scheduled for Friday, February 20, 2009, at 1:30 pm.

Danny LaChance presents "State of Confusion: Social Engineering, Vigilante Distrust, and Capital Punishment in the Contemporary United States"
Danny LaChance, 2008 Erickson Graduate Fellow, Program in Law and History/PhD Candidate, American Studies, University of Minnesota, "State of Confusion: Social Engineering, Vigilante Distrust, and Capital Punishment in the Contemporary United States."
The Workshop is scheduled for Friday, February 20, 1:30 pm , Room 471 of the Law School (Mondale Hall).
The presentation is a brown-bag format, so please feel free to bring your lunch. Following a brief introduction to the paper by the presenter, we'll open the floor to discussion.