In The News: William S. Boyd School of Law

Las Vegas Review Journal
A one-of-a-kind center, where gaming regulators worldwide can meet to exchange ideas and discuss emerging issues, will be created at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Boyd School of Law after state lawmakers designated $1 million for the program.
Wall Street Journal

Chivalry is not dead in the U.S. courts of appeal, according to a new study.

Las Vegas Sun
Although the Caesars Entertainment bankruptcy is playing out in a Chicago court far from Nevada, it’s still closely connected to Las Vegas, including through one local academic involved in the case.
Salon

DOJ lawyers: Before telling a court free speech doesn’t apply to a group of people in the US, check with your boss

Forbes

In early 2014, a small team of international programmers created Popcorn Time, an app that enables free online streaming of movies and television shows using BitTorrent file-sharing protocols. Just over a year later, the app's popularity has already reached Netflix-like levels, largely due to its slick interface and higher-quality streams than those on many piracy sites.

Las Vegas Sun
Even from the shadows, Nevada’s undocumented immigrants pay state and local taxes, which in 2012 added up to nearly $94 million, according to a Washington think tank. Nationwide, immigrants living illegally in the United States contributed $11.8 billion.
Nevada Business
The National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges (NCJFCJ) and the UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law conducted an informative summit on recent developments in adoption and family law in April 2015.
Conversation

In 2008 she ran a "manly" campaign. This year's has started off more feminine. Is this what is needed to win Clinton the White House?

Daily Mail

Attorneys for President Barack Obama will have a chance on Friday to defend his executive action meant to help undocumented immigrants before a federal appeals court, where they may find a friendlier audience than they have had before.

The U.S. Justice Department and attorneys for 26 states will make their oral arguments Friday before the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in New Orleans regarding the Obama administration's immigration executive actions that were halted by a Texas court.
Services Find a Niche by Making It Simple to Watch Shows From Abroad.
Washington Post
This is the third in a four-part explainer about the past, present, and future of religious liberty laws.