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Share this email: July 23, 2021 From the Dean Next week, law school graduates across the nation will be taking bar exams. Everyone at FSU Law sends their best wishes to all of our recent graduates who will be sitting for the exams. We know they are well equipped for success and we stand ready to offer support in the next few days before the exam. Although many graduates have been studying remotely and will be taking the exams remotely, including those who are taking the Florida Bar Examination, it has been a top priority to help our alumni as they studied. This summer, we offered weekly bar workshops with Professors Jonathan Grossman and Phil Sandon, who have been instrumental in helping our alumni prepare for success in the past. We also matched exam takers with alumni who served as bar mentors, set up a Spear the Bar Facebook group to provide information to exam takers and help them connect, and encouraged journaling and its mental health benefits through complimentary Spear the Bar journals and weekly journal prompts. Last week, we also sent care packages to the bar exam takers. We know this has been a trying time for our recent graduates, but we are confident that they have the knowledge and tools they need. Good luck to all of our graduates who are taking bar exams next week; please reach out if you have any last minute questions or could use some extra encouragement in these final days of preparation! -Dean Erin O'Connor Prof. Landau Publishes Book on Abusive Constitutionalism David Landau, the Mason Ladd professor and associate dean for international programs, recently published a co-authored book, Abusive Constitutional Borrowing (with Rosalind Dixon) (Oxford University Press 2021). The book explains how autocrats are utilizing comparative borrowing from liberal democratic constitutional practices to erode democracy rather than to strengthen and improve democratic institutions and policies. Abusive constitutional borrowing, the authors argue, constitutes a dark side of legal globalization. The book addresses current patterns of democratic retrenchment and illustrates the rise of abusive constitutional practices. The book further considers the role of ideologies that help support different modes of abusive constitutionalism and addresses ways to prevent abuse. “In this era where populism is surging and democracy appears to be on the retreat in so many countries, it is more important than ever to understand the legal and constitutional means that would-be authoritarians use to attack their democratic constitutional orders,” said Landau. “A range of practices closely identified with liberal democracy—rights and courts, for example—are frequently fashioned into dismayingly efficient tools to attack rather than fortifying democracy. Scholars and policymakers must be more alive to the risks of these abusive forms of borrowing and less complacent about increasing legal globalization and the protection provided by the merely formal existence of liberal democratic norms and institutions.” Landau is a recognized scholar on constitutional theory, constitutional design and comparative constitutional law. His recent work has focused on a range of issues with contemporary salience in the United States and elsewhere around the world, including constitutional change and constitution-making, judicial role and the enforcement of rights, impeachment, and the erosion of democracy. He has published in leading law journals including the University of Chicago Law Review, Iowa Law Review, George Washington Law Review, International Journal of Constitutional Law and Harvard International Law Journal . Alum Profile: Kweku A. Darfoor (’11) Kweku A. Darfoor is the managing shareholder at Darfoor Law Firm in Fort Lauderdale, where he represents plaintiffs in a wide variety of personal injury, consumer protection and wrongful death cases. Prior to founding the firm in 2014, Darfoor had a successful career advising business clients, working in a state government agency, a private law firm, an alternative financing company, a specialty finance/factoring company and a commercial real estate company. He is engaged in numerous professional and community organizations, including the Broward County Bar Association and Urban Philanthropies—a non-profit community development organization serving underserved communities in South Florida. Darfoor also serves on the Florida Atlantic University Alumni Association Board of Directors. “The practice of personal injury law has instilled in me a burning sense of seeking justice for my clients; something that I wake up excited to attack every day. I turn to my connections and network established while attending FSU College of Law often to speed up the learning curve when I’m faced with issues I’ve yet to encounter.” Student Profile: 2021 Grad Rayanna Riecss Desired Practice Location: Orlando/Central Florida area. Also open to Washington, D.C. Field of Law Sought: Public interest law Rayanna Riecss is from Weeki Wachee, Florida. She earned her bachelor’s degree in English literature with minors in women's and gender studies and in writing and rhetoric from the University of Central Florida. She graduated from FSU Law in April. During the spring semester, Riecss served as a housing justice fellow at Legal Services of North Florida, where she helped clients with rental assistance applications and worked on eviction cases on a pro-bono basis. In the fall of 2020, Riecss worked as a certified legal intern with FSU’s COVID-19 Veterans Legal Clinic. There, she worked on cases involving veterans affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in consumer, housing, SNAP benefits, stimulus check and unemployment benefits issues. Along with a partner, Riecss also presented a webinar to veterans on accessing SNAP benefits in Florida. During the summer after her 2L year, Riecss was a student advocate with FSU Law’s Children’s Advocacy Clinic, where she worked on cases affecting children in foster care, juvenile delinquency, health care, special education, disability, social security and criminal law cases. Riecss primarily advocated for and monitored children with disabilities in the foster care system. She also worked on an appeal of an Agency for Persons with Disabilities decision, which denied services to a child with a previously established intellectual disability. Riecss was also a student advocate with FSU Law’s Children’s Advocacy Clinic during the fall of her 2L year and worked on family law cases and presentations. She primarily assisted clients with issues relating to child custody, visitation and child support, and also presented to incarcerated individuals on family law issues, specifically dependency and dissolution of marriage. During the summer after her 1L year, Riecss worked as a law student assistant with FSU Law’s Office of Development and Alumni Affairs, where she contacted alumni to update their information and seek contributions to the College of Law. During her time at FSU Law, Riecss was a law student member of the William H. Stafford American Inn of Court as a 3L, and chapter co-founder of the student organization If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice, where she also served as president from 2019-2021. Riecss was an articles and notes editor for the Journal of Transnational Law & Policy as a 3L and a sub-citer as a 2L. She also served as the Women's Law Symposium’s 1L representative and as their external vice president during her 2L year. If you are interested in connecting with or hiring Riecss after graduation, visit her LinkedIn profile. “My time as an undergraduate at UCF in Orlando inspired my passion for justice and advocacy, and the last three years at FSU have sharpened and strengthened that passion. I am grateful for the experiences and opportunities that the College of Law has given me, particularly from my work at the Public Interest Law Center. I am excited to put that hard work to good use in the form of new experiences and challenges as I begin my career as a lawyer.” GET INVOLVED SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE SHARE MY TORCH MOMENT MAKE A GIFT ABOUT US | ACADEMICS | ADMISSIONS & FINANCIAL AID | OUR FACULTY | ALUMNI | CAREERS | STUDENTS If you unsubscribe from the FSU Law Focus, you will only be unsubscribed from the newsletter and not other emails from FSU Law. Manage your preferences | Opt out using TrueRemoveGot this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails. View this email online. 425 West Jefferson Street Tallahassee, FL | 32306 US This email was sent to . To continue receiving our emails, add us to your address book. Subscribe to our email list.

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July 23, 2021

From the Dean

Next week, law school graduates across thenation will be taking bar exams. Everyone atFSU Law sends their best wishes to all of ourrecent graduates who will be sitting for theexams. We know they are well equipped forsuccess and we stand ready to offer support inthe next few days before the exam. Althoughmany graduates have been studying remotelyand will be taking the exams remotely,including those who are taking the Florida BarExamination, it has been a top priority to helpour alumni as they studied. This summer, weoffered weekly bar workshops with ProfessorsJonathan Grossman and Phil Sandon, who have been instrumental in helpingour alumni prepare for success in the past. We also matched exam takers withalumni who served as bar mentors, set up a Spear the Bar Facebook group toprovide information to exam takers and help them connect, and encouragedjournaling and its mental health benefits through complimentary Spear the Barjournals and weekly journal prompts. Last week, we also sent care packages tothe bar exam takers. We know this has been a trying time for our recentgraduates, but we are confident that they have the knowledge and tools theyneed. Good luck to all of our graduates who are taking bar exams next week;please reach out if you have any last minute questions or could use some extraencouragement in these final days of preparation!

-Dean Erin O'Connor

Prof. Landau Publishes Book on AbusiveConstitutionalism

David Landau, the Mason Laddprofessor and associate dean forinternational programs, recentlypublished a co-authored book, AbusiveConstitutional Borrowing (with RosalindDixon) (Oxford University Press 2021).The book explains how autocrats areutilizing comparative borrowing fromliberal democratic constitutionalpractices to erode democracy rather thanto strengthen and improve democraticinstitutions and policies. Abusive constitutional borrowing, the authors argue,constitutes a dark side of legal globalization. The book addresses currentpatterns of democratic retrenchment and illustrates the rise of abusiveconstitutional practices. The book further considers the role of ideologies thathelp support different modes of abusive constitutionalism and addresses waysto prevent abuse.

“In this era where populism is surging and democracy appears to be on theretreat in so many countries, it is more important than ever to understand thelegal and constitutional means that would-be authoritarians use to attack theirdemocratic constitutional orders,” said Landau. “A range of practices closelyidentified with liberal democracy—rights and courts, for example—arefrequently fashioned into dismayingly efficient tools to attack rather thanfortifying democracy. Scholars and policymakers must be more alive to the risksof these abusive forms of borrowing and less complacent about increasinglegal globalization and the protection provided by the merely formal existenceof liberal democratic norms and institutions.”

Landau is a recognized scholar on constitutional theory, constitutional designand comparative constitutional law. His recent work has focused on a range ofissues with contemporary salience in the United States and elsewhere aroundthe world, including constitutional change and constitution-making, judicial roleand the enforcement of rights, impeachment, and the erosion of democracy. Hehas published in leading law journals including the University of Chicago LawReview, Iowa Law Review, George Washington Law Review, InternationalJournal of Constitutional Law and Harvard International Law Journal.

Alum Profile: Kweku A. Darfoor (’11)

Kweku A. Darfoor is the managingshareholder at Darfoor Law Firm in FortLauderdale, where he representsplaintiffs in a wide variety of personalinjury, consumer protection and wrongfuldeath cases. Prior to founding the firm in2014, Darfoor had a successful careeradvising business clients, working in astate government agency, a private lawfirm, an alternative financing company, aspecialty finance/factoring company anda commercial real estate company. He isengaged in numerous professional and community organizations, including theBroward County Bar Association and Urban Philanthropies—a non-profitcommunity development organization serving underserved communities inSouth Florida. Darfoor also serves on the Florida Atlantic University AlumniAssociation Board of Directors.

“The practice of personal injury law has instilled in me a burningsense of seeking justice for my clients; something that I wake upexcited to attack every day. I turn to my connections and networkestablished while attending FSU College of Law often to speed upthe learning curve when I’m faced with issues I’ve yet to encounter.”

Student Profile: 2021 Grad Rayanna Riecss

Desired Practice Location: Orlando/CentralFlorida area. Also open to Washington, D.C.Field of Law Sought: Public interest law

Rayanna Riecss is from Weeki Wachee,Florida. She earned her bachelor’s degree inEnglish literature with minors in women's andgender studies and in writing and rhetoric fromthe University of Central Florida. She graduatedfrom FSU Law in April. During the springsemester, Riecss served as a housing justicefellow at Legal Services of North Florida, whereshe helped clients with rental assistanceapplications and worked on eviction cases on a pro-bono basis. In the fall of2020, Riecss worked as a certified legal intern with FSU’s COVID-19 VeteransLegal Clinic. There, she worked on cases involving veterans affected by theCOVID-19 pandemic in consumer, housing, SNAP benefits, stimulus checkand unemployment benefits issues. Along with a partner, Riecss alsopresented a webinar to veterans on accessing SNAP benefits in Florida.During the summer after her 2L year, Riecss was a student advocate with FSULaw’s Children’s Advocacy Clinic, where she worked on cases affectingchildren in foster care, juvenile delinquency, health care, special education,disability, social security and criminal law cases. Riecss primarily advocated forand monitored children with disabilities in the foster care system. She alsoworked on an appeal of an Agency for Persons with Disabilities decision,which denied services to a child with a previously established intellectualdisability. Riecss was also a student advocate with FSU Law’s Children’sAdvocacy Clinic during the fall of her 2L year and worked on family law casesand presentations. She primarily assisted clients with issues relating to childcustody, visitation and child support, and also presented to incarceratedindividuals on family law issues, specifically dependency and dissolution ofmarriage. During the summer after her 1L year, Riecss worked as a law studentassistant with FSU Law’s Office of Development and Alumni Affairs, where shecontacted alumni to update their information and seek contributions to theCollege of Law.

During her time at FSU Law, Riecss was a law student member of the WilliamH. Stafford American Inn of Court as a 3L, and chapter co-founder of the studentorganization If/When/How: Lawyering for Reproductive Justice, where she alsoserved as president from 2019-2021. Riecss was an articles and notes editorfor the Journal of Transnational Law & Policy as a 3L and a sub-citer as a 2L.She also served as the Women's Law Symposium’s 1L representative and astheir external vice president during her 2L year. If you are interested inconnecting with or hiring Riecss after graduation, visit her LinkedIn profile.

“My time as an undergraduate at UCF in Orlando inspired mypassion for justice and advocacy, and the last three years at FSUhave sharpened and strengthened that passion. I am grateful for theexperiences and opportunities that the College of Law has given me,particularly from my work at the Public Interest Law Center. I amexcited to put that hard work to good use in the form of newexperiences and challenges as I begin my career as a lawyer.”

GET INVOLVED

SUBMIT A CLASS NOTE

SHARE MY TORCH MOMENT

MAKE A GIFT

ABOUT US | ACADEMICS | ADMISSIONS & FINANCIAL AID | OUR FACULTY | ALUMNI | CAREERS | STUDENTS

If you unsubscribe from the FSU Law Focus, you will only be unsubscribed from the newsletter and not other emails from FSU Law.

Manage your preferences | Opt out using TrueRemove™

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425 West Jefferson Street Tallahassee, FL | 32306 US

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