John B. Turner LLM Program Chair in Law
The University of Oklahoma College of Law
Norman, Oklahoma
Stacey Tovino, JD, PhD, serves as the John B. Turner LLM Program Chair in Law and Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Research at the University of Oklahoma College of Law. An elected member of the American Law Institute and an invited fellow of the American Bar Foundation, Professor Tovino's current research focuses on patient privacy and health information confidentiality, mental health law, substance use disorders and the law, and virus and vaccine law. Professor Tovino publishes her interdisciplinary research in textbooks, casebooks, encyclopedias, law reviews, medical and science journals, and ethics and humanities journals. Her recent scholarship has placed in Fordham Law Review (forthcoming 2024), Boston College Law Review (2024), Emory Law Journal (2023), William and Mary Law Review (2023), Cardozo Law Review (2023), Duke Law Journal (2022), Alabama Law Review (2020), Notre Dame Law Review (2019), Iowa Law Review (2019), Alabama Law Review (2018), Washington and Lee Law Review (2017), Minnesota Law Review (2016), Boston College Law Review (2016), and Washington Law Review (2016).
Within the legal academy, Professor Tovino has served as Chair of the AALS Section on Law and Mental Disability (2024 and 2009), Chair of the AALS Section on Biolaw (2024), Chair-Elect of the AALS Section on Law Professors with Disabilities and Allies (2024), Chair of the AALS Section on Law and the Humanities (2023), Chair of the AALS Section on Law, Medicine, and Health Care (2022), Chair of the AALS Section on Torts and Compensation Systems (2018), and Chair of the Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS) Mentor Committee (2023-2025). Professor Tovino also recently completed two-year terms on the Executive Committee of the AALS Section on Teaching Methods (2020-2022) and the Planning Committee of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities (2018-2020).
A Cross-Disciplinary Approach to Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Inequities
Thursday, September 19, 2024
9:15 AM – 10:15 AM CT