Chicago Booth alumni are invited by the University of Chicago Law School for dinner and conversation with Law Professor Randal Picker.

Where

Restaurant Uniturm
.
Zurich, Switzerland

Event Details

Prof. Randal Picker will be known to some of you

  • as the co-author of the seminal work "Game Theory and the Law",
  • as professor giving bankruptcy and corporate reorganization classes, and
  • as expert on the impact of new technologies (Napster etc.) on copyright laws.

Prof. Picker will be in Zurich early in May, where he will hold a lecture in the "Law and Finance" series, hosted by Prof. Gérard Hertig, in the afternoon of May 2 and May 3 (check it out).

If you are interested in attending the event, please email your details to Kateryna Yakuntseva. Thank you in advance. 

Cost

TBC

Registration


Register By Email

Please email Kateryna your details and Booth graduation year to indicate your interest in this event. Thank you. 

Deadline: 4/20/2017

Speaker Profiles

Randal C. Picker (Speaker)
James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago

Randy Picker graduated from the University of Chicago in 1980 cum laude with a BA in economics and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He then spent two years in the Department of Economics, where he was a Friedman Fellow, completing his doctoral course work and exams. He received a master's degree in 1982. Thereafter, he attended the Law School and graduated in 1985 cum laude. He is a member of the Order of the Coif. While at the Law School, Picker was an Associate Editor of the Law Review. After graduation, Picker clerked for Judge Richard A. Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. He then spent three years with Sidley & Austin in Chicago, where he worked in the areas of debt restructuring and corporate reorganizations in bankruptcy.

Picker is a member of the National Bankruptcy Conference and served as project reporter for the Conference's Bankruptcy Code Review Project. He is also a commissioner to the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and serves as a member of the drafting committee to revise Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.

Picker's primary areas of interest are the laws relating to intellectual property, competition policy and regulated industries, and applications of game theory and agent-based computer simulations to the law. He is the co-author of Game Theory and the Law. He currently teaches classes in antitrust, network industries, and secured transactions. He also regularly teaches bankruptcy and corporate reorganizations. He served as Associate Dean from 1994 to 1996.

Questions

Daniel Daeniker, LL.M. '96