This week at Quinnipiac University, human trafficking is at the forefront of conversation. Through panels, a screening, and even trivia, law students are...
Edgar Becerra, a migrant worker from Guatemala, will remain at 200 Peck St. as he awaits his pending workers’ compensation complaint against his employer MDF Painting & Power Washing.
January is Human Trafficking Prevention month. It is a crime that is happening across the U.S., and sadly in Connecticut. “There is no quintessential human...
Law student plans to use her degree to advocate for underserved people qu.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from qu.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Pericles Lewis, the Douglas Tracy Smith Professor of Comparative Literature, professor of English, vice president for global strategy, and vice provost for academic initiatives, has been appointed the next dean of Yale College, Yale President Peter S
An internationally recognized expert on the qualities and purposes of a liberal education, Lewis brings to the role over two decades of leadership experience.
SHS grads offer training on preventing human trafficking through Quinnipiac University
SHS grads offer training on preventing human trafficking through Quinnipiac University
Quinnipiac University law student Kaylyn Fagan stands on the school campus Wednesday in North Haven. Fagan, a Southington High School graduate, is co-chair of the universityâs Human Trafficking Prevention Project. Dave Zajac, Record-Journal
March 12, 2021 08:25AM By Devin Leith-Yessian, Record-Journal staff
SOUTHINGTON â Two Southington high school graduates will hold a virtual training session on preventing human trafficking in April.
âPart of our training is to dispel myths,â said Kaylyn Fagan, a Quinnipiac University law student and co-chair of the universityâs Human Trafficking Prevention Project. Sheâs hosting the program with fellow Southington High School graduate and Quinnipiac law student Chris Iverson.
Webinar addresses vacating the records of human trafficking victims January 13, 2021
Share This A proposed bill that would expunge criminal convictions for Connecticut’s trafficking victims was the focus of the Quinnipiac School of Law’s January 8 webinar, “Fighting Human Trafficking by Decriminalizing Victims: Expanding Connecticut’s Vacatur Laws.”
The webinar, part of an ongoing series to raise awareness of human trafficking, was planned by the law school’s Human Trafficking Prevention Project. Nearly 250 viewers listened as a diverse group of lawyers and experts weighed in on the bill, which was drafted by the school’s Civil Justice Clinic and HTPP.