UC Irvine Law Celebrates Endowed Faculty Appointments of L. Song Richardson and Michael Robinson-Dorn 


UC Irvine Law honored Professors L. Song Richardson and Michael Robinson-Dorn at a special celebration recognizing their endowed appointments and the creation of a new chair in environmental law. Prof. Richardson was recognized for her appointment as a Chancellor’s Professor of Law and Prof. Robinson-Dorn was named the inaugural Myron and Sonya Glassberg Chair in Environmental Law. The Glassberg Chair was established through a generous pledge from the Mysun Charitable Foundation.


Learn more | Photos


Board of Visitors News: Seven New Members Appointed to UC Irvine Law's Board of Visitors


UC Irvine Law appointed seven new members to its Board of Visitors, a distinguished advisory body of legal, business, and community leaders who support the school's mission, students and programs. Chaired by John C. Hueston, founding partner of Hueston Hennigan LLP, the board welcomes its newest members:


  • Martin Estrada (B.A. '98), Partner, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP;
  • Alexis Paschedag Federico ('16), Partner, Bienert Katzman Littrell Williams LLP and the Law School's first alumna member;
  • Sara Haji, Executive Director, Social Justice Legal Foundation;
  • Mack E. Jenkins, Partner, Hecker Fink LLP;
  • Joe Kiani, Founder and Executive Chairman, Willow Laboratories;
  • Michael M. Purpura, Partner, Hueston Hennigan LLP; and
  • Naeun Rim, Partner, Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP.


Learn more

Graduate Tax Program News: UC Irvine Law Graduate Tax Program Celebrates Four Inaugural Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic Scholars


Four students in the Class of 2026 Graduate Tax Program received the inaugural LITC Scholarship. This scholarship is among the first of its kind to provide support between a public university and low-income taxpayer clinics across the nation. Meet our inaugural LITC Scholars: Kevin Allec Arreola, Fanpu Meng, Soemi Photavath, and Annie Zwarg. 


Learn more

Faculty News: Prof. Jane Stoever Received the Foundation for Improvement of Justice's 2025 Paul H. Chapman Award


Prof. Jane Stoever was honored by the Foundation for Improvement of Justice with a 2025 Paul H. Chapman Award in recognition for her work “envisioning, drafting, proposing, testifying on, and passing legislation that has dramatically strengthened protections for child and adult abuse survivors.”



Learn more

Faculty News: Prof. Mario Barnes Named Chair-Elect of the National Fellows of the American Bar Foundation


Prof. Mario Barnes has been named chair-elect of the National Fellows of the American Bar Foundation (and is a board member). Additionally, he serves as president of the Law and Society Association and he recently delivered the Jerome M. Culp, Jr. Lecture at Duke University School of Law.



Learn more

Center News: Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality Files Amicus Briefs on Temporary Protected Status Termination, California Racial Justice Act


The Korematsu Center represented 137 members of Congress in an amicus brief filing on the SCOTUS emergency docket in National TPS Alliance v. Noem, a lawsuit challenging the early termination of TPS for Venezuelans. The Center also filed four amicus briefs on California's Racial Justice Act on behalf of race centers and scholars — three amicus briefs in the California Supreme Court seeking to educate the Court about implicit bias and how the Racial Justice Act provides a pragmatic remedy (People v. Bankston, People v. Chhuon and Pan, and People v. Barrera), and one amicus brief in the California Court of Appeal on the use of statistical evidence of disparity under the Racial Justice Act (People v. Henderson).


Learn more


Faculty News: Prof. L. Song Richardson Leads New Course on Mindfulness and the Law


Prof. L. Song Richardson is teaching a new course this fall, Self-Leadership, Creativity, and the Law. The highly experiential seminar invites students to explore how mindfulness and self-reflection can shape legal education, practice, and leadership. Prof. Richardson is also currently developing a book on “contemplative jurisprudence."


Learn more


Clinic News: UC Irvine Law Clinics Host Screening of Documentary Ninety Minutes Later


The Intellectual Property, Arts & Technology (IPAT) Clinic and Defending Democracy Clinic hosted a screening of Ninety Minutes Later, a documentary by Cyndy Fujikawa about the fatal police shooting of actress Vanessa Marquez. The film was supported by years of collaboration with the IPAT Clinic’s Filmmaker Services team and Press Freedom Project. Following the screening, Professors Susan Seager, Jack Lerner, and Paul Hoffman joined Fujikawa and others for a panel discussion.


Learn more


Faculty Roundup: Pathbreaking Scholarship and Intellectual Community


Read this month's compilation of UC Irvine Law faculty's groundbreaking work, including recent scholarship, conferences and influential leadership.


Learn more

Meet the Law School: Get to Know the UC Irvine Law Community Through our Video Series


This series includes recent videos with Alfred Hwang ('24), Emma Kantor (2L) and Hayley Penan ('16).


View the videos

Center News: The Latest Updates from UC Irvine Law's Korea Law Center 


The Korea Law Center's monthly newsletters highlight announcements, events, and milestones by students, faculty, visiting scholars, alumni and collaborators.


Read the latest newsletter

Q&A with Preston Taylor, Third-Year Law Student and Editor-in-Chief of the UC Irvine Law Review


Preston Taylor is a 3L at UC Irvine Law. Preston is originally from Cleveland, Ohio, and graduated from the University of Cincinnati with a B.A. in Political Science and International Affairs. At UC Irvine Law, Preston serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review, competed in the 2024-2025 Moot Court Competition, and is an advanced student in the International Justice Clinic.

 

Following his graduation in spring 2026 and sitting for the California bar, Preston will join Irell & Manella LLP in Los Angeles as an associate to practice intellectual property litigation. In his free time, he enjoys watching sports and playing fantasy football.


Q: What motivated you to pursue a law degree and why did you choose UC Irvine Law?


More than anything, I wanted to find a career path that would challenge me, and law felt like the right fit. I had taken undergraduate classes in International and Constitutional Law, which sparked my interest in law, and from there I decided to go for it.

 

I chose UC Irvine primarily because I was drawn to the strong clinical program. I wanted to go to a school that placed an emphasis on building real-world skills, and UC Irvine Law delivered on that. And the beautiful Southern California location did not hurt, either. 


Q: What has been your proudest accomplishment at UC Irvine Law?


My proudest achievement has been being elected Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review. The confidence of my classmates means a lot to me, and my work with the Law Review has been challenging yet incredibly rewarding.

 

I also take a lot of pride in my pro bono work. Throughout my two years thus far I have volunteered with the Clean Slate Expungement Clinic and Bet Tzedek's Employment Rights Project. It has been very rewarding to help provide services to underserved communities, and hopefully make an impact in people's lives. 


Q: What has been your favorite class and/or clinic experience at UC Irvine Law?


I think the answer has to be my experience with the International Justice Clinic, with Professor David Kaye and Hinako Sugiyama. I have had an amazing experience learning about and working with cutting-edge digital rights issues, and in particular, advocating against intrusive surveillance practices. Criminal Procedure with Professor Song is a close second!


Q: What advice would you give to prospective students who are thinking about going to law school?


I would encourage students to get involved with pro bono projects in their first year. UC Irvine provides so many great opportunities to get involved. It is no secret that law school is challenging and time-consuming, but if you can find time to do one or two projects, you should. Pro bono work breaks up the monotony of the semester, teaches you new skills, and most importantly gives you an opportunity to apply the new skills you learn in school to make a genuine difference in people's lives.

 

More practically, buy lots of highlighters. However many you think you need, it's not enough, buy more.

 

Q: As Editor-in-Chief of the Law Review, what are your goals for this year?


I want to continue the excellent trajectory the Law Review is already on: publishing high-quality scholarship and making the Law Review a positive and rewarding experience for our staff. This upcoming year we are working on Volume 16, where we will be publishing 24 articles and six student notes. We are fortunate to have an excellent team of 96 editors, split between 2Ls and 3Ls, and I am excited to see what we are able to accomplish.

Prof. Veena Dubal commented to CalMatters, Politico, Los Angeles Times* and San Francisco Chronicle* about the shortcomings of California legislation allowing Uber and Lyft drivers to unionize. READ


Prof. David Kaye was featured in a Q&A on Univision News about recent government actions that signal a historic erosion of First Amendment protections in the U.S. READ


Prof. Carrie Menkel-Meadow's book chapter on Henry Kissinger in the book, "Negotiators Who Changed the World: Timeless Lessons on Leadership and Negotiation," Remigiusz Smolinski, ed. (Springer Nature 2025) was highlighted in indisputably. READ

Dean Austen Parrish co-authored an opinion piece with Kellye Testy in The Hill titled “America’s judges are under attack — lawyers have a duty to defend them.” READ


Hinako Sugiyama, Digital Rights Fellow at UC Irvine Law, co-authored a Tech Policy Press perspective highlighting the International Justice Clinic’s work on AI and human rights. READ


Prof. Ari Waldman's article, "The Evolution of Trust & Safety" (with Danielle Keats Citron), 75 Emory Law Journal __ (forthcoming 2026) was reviewed in a Tech Policy Press perspective. READ



*Requires subscription

Complete list of UC Irvine Law in the media

Brooke Weitzman '14 was elected as a Director at Large of the Orange County Bar Association.


Yashina Burns '16 was profiled in the Orange County Business Journal, highlighting her role as VP, Associate General Counsel for VideoAmp as well as her foray into teaching legal research and writing as a lecturer at UC Irvine Law's LL.M. program. READ


Nancy Sotomayor '16 started a new position as a partner at Grove Law LLP.


Ian Mayr '22 started a new position as an associate at Summers Compton Wells LLC.

Class of 2015 and 2020 Reunite for Their Fifth and Tenth Year Anniversary of Graduating From UC Irvine Law

We loved celebrating our classes of 2015 and 2020 at this year's reunion. Thank you for keeping that special UC Irvine Law spirit alive!

Have an update you'd like to share? Let us know!

>> Oct. 14| 3:45-4:45 p.m. | IICJ | Civil Justice Colloquium: Shauhin Talesh, Insuring Cyberinsecurity: Insurance Companies as Symbolic Regulators

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 17| 9:45 a.m.-2:50 p.m. | CALIF | Cutting-Edge Antitrust Scholarship Conference

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 21| 3:45-4:45 p.m. | IICJ | Civil Justice Colloquium: David Marcus - Managerial Courts

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 24| 9-10 a.m. | IEFV | Amie Zarling - New Ways of Preventing and Treating Domestic Violence through Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 25| 10 a.m.-2:00 p.m. | OCBA Community Fair & Volunteer Appreciation Celebration

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 28| 3:45-4:45 p.m. | IICJ | Civil Justice Colloquium: Seth Endo - Preventive Transparency in Third-Party Litigation Funding

(Details and Registration)


>> Oct. 31| 12-1:15 p.m. | CLSC | Socio-Legal Studies Workshop: Nnamdi Jogwe - "Help or Hindrance? How Inclusionary Zoning Ordinances Violate Fair Housing Laws"

(Details and Registration)


>> Nov. 3| 4-8 p.m. | School of Social Ecology | Día de los Muertos

(Details and Registration)


>> Nov. 4| 3:45-4:45 p.m. | IICJ | Civil Justice Colloquium: Kathryne Young - What Can Legal Knowledge Do for Access to Justice?

(Details and Registration)


>> Nov. 5| 5:30-6:30 p.m.| Mohannad and Rana Malas Lecture in Islamic Legal Studies Presented by Professor Adnan A. Zulfiqar

(Details and Registration)


>> Nov. 7| 4:30-6:00 p.m. | CLEAR | Legal Phantoms: Executive Action and the Haunting Failures of Immigration Law

(Details and Registration)


>> Dec. 5| 5:30-7:30 p.m. | Winter Bar Swearing In Ceremony

(Details and Registration)

Connect with us!
Facebook  Linkedin  Instagram