Title

Smith named president-elect of Association for Law, Property and Society

Abstract

Writer: Lona Panter, 706/542-5172, lonap@uga.edu Contact: Jim Smith, 706/542-5210, jim@uga.edu

Smith named president-elect of Association for Law, Property and Society

Athens, Ga. – University of Georgia School of Law faculty member James C. “Jim” Smith was recently named president-elect of the Association for Law, Property and Society (ALPS) at the organization’s fifth annual meeting held in Vancouver, British Columbia, at the University of British Columbia. Next spring the ALPS annual meeting will be held at the University of Georgia School of Law.

Smith’s term will run from 2014 to 2015, and he will serve as president from 2015 to 2016. He most recently served as treasurer for the organization.

Smith, who holds the law school’s Martin Chair of Law, joined the Georgia Law faculty in 1984, and he specializes in property, real estate transactions and commercial law. He is the co-author of several books, including The Law of Property: Cases and Materials and Real Estate Transactions: Problems, Cases and Materials, and is the editor of Property and Sovereignty: Legal and Cultural Perspectives.

He earned his bachelor’s degree from St. Olaf College and his law degree from the University of Texas. He then served as a judicial clerk for Judge Walter R. Ely of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.

The ALPS is a membership organization for scholars doing interdisciplinary legal scholarship on all aspects of property law and policy, including real, personal, intellectual, intangible, cultural, personal and other forms of property.

UGA School of Law Consistently regarded as one of the nation’s top public law schools, the School of Law at the University of Georgia was established in 1859. With an accomplished faculty, which includes authors of some of the country’s leading legal scholarship, Georgia Law offers three degrees – the Juris Doctor, the Master of Laws in U.S. Law and the Master in the Study of Law – and is home to the renowned Dean Rusk Center for International Law and Policy. The school counts six U.S. Supreme Court judicial clerks in the last nine years among its distinguished alumni body of more than 9,700. For more information, please see www.law.uga.edu.

##

COinS