The decision last month to hire renowned legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky as founding dean of UC Irvine’s new law school was a stroke of genius. Rescinding that action, as the university’s chancellor did Tuesday, is an act of intellectual cowardice and self-destruction. So writes the LA Times.

Erwin

The decision last month to hire renowned legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky as founding dean of UC Irvine’s new law school was a stroke of genius. Rescinding that action, as the university’s chancellor did Tuesday, is an act of intellectual cowardice and self-destruction that brands the school as a haven for political correctness and threatens its academic integrity two years before it even opens its doors.

It won’t be much of a lesson for students in the fall of 2009 as they sit down to their contracts class, either. Chancellor Michael V. Drake offered Chemerinsky the post, and the professor accepted and began doing exactly what everyone knew he would do: building an unparalleled board of advisors and founding faculty. Offer, acceptance, binding contract.

Chemerinsky said Drake told him that conservatives were “out to get” him. Drake said the hired-and-dumped dean was not dismissed for his politics, but merely because he was not the “right fit” for Irvine.

What makes Chemerinsky stand out is not his liberalism but the intellectual rigor of his analysis and the effectiveness of his argument. He works well with scholars of other viewpoints, as attested to by the cries of outrage from conservative scholars at his treatment by UC Irvine. Chemerinsky also sets a fine example for law students by putting his abilities to work not just in the courtroom and the classroom but in service to community. He co-wrote the current Los Angeles City Charter. He conducted, for the Police Protective League, a study of the LAPD’s handling of the Rampart corruption scandal.


Law giant Akin Gump has taken six lawyers from UK giants DLA Piper and Allen and Overy to bolsters its developing Beijing office.

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Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld has bagged six new lawyers for its fledgling Beijing arm after a double raid on U.K. giants DLA Piper and Allen & Overy.

DLA Piper corporate partner Janet Jie Tang joins Akin Gump as a partner along with a three-lawyer team, comprising corporate lawyers Lu Ying and Zeng Linyan and intellectual property lawyer Wang Yuanming.

Recent deals for Tang include advising on the acquisition of two Chinese cosmetics companies, as well as acting on the negotiation of data management contracts with a domestic telecoms outfit.

The team is joined by capital markets lawyer Holly Smith, who moves from the local arm of London giant A&O, while IP specialist Lien Yea-Ling joins from Catch IPR Consultancy in Taipei.

The hires effectively double Akin Gump’s presence in the region, with the Texas-based law firm now boasting 11 lawyers in Beijing, some nine months after launching the office.

Commenting on the hires, Akin Gump Beijing chief Eliot Cutler said: “Our new colleagues round out our ability to provide a full range of legal services to Chinese clients investing overseas and to foreign companies doing business in China.

“This expansion demonstrates our commitment to China and to helping our clients take advantage of the tremendous opportunities that characterize this period of remarkable development and change.”

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