Audrey Wolfson Latourette

Audrey Wolfson Latourette

Audrey Wolfson Latourette, J.D., is a cum laude graduate of Temple University School of Law where she was an associate editor of the Temple Law Quarterly. Formerly associated with a large Philadelphia law firm, Latourette is a distinguished professor of law at Stockton University in New Jersey where she was named Faculty of the Year 2012-2013 from the School of Business by the Student Senate. She has given numerous presentations at regional, national and international conferences, garnering several Best Paper Awards, and has been invited to speak at colleges and universities throughout the country. Latourette’s publications include, among others, “Copyright Implications for Online Distance Education,” 32 The Journal of College and University Law 613-654 (2006); “Papish v. Board of Curators of University of Missouri,” in Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court of the United States (Macmillan Press, 2008); “Plagiarism: Legal and Ethical Implications for the University,” published by Notre Dame Law School and the National Association of College and University Attorneys as the lead article in 37 The Journal of College and University Law 1-91 (2010), “Legal Implications of Academic Advising,” Advising Administration (National Academic Advising Association, 2011); “Transfer Students: Legal Issues Regarding Policies,” invited submission, in Advising Transfer Students: Strategies for Today’s Realities and Tomorrow’s Challenges (Monograph Series, Number 24, 2012) published by the National Academic Advising Association (NACADA); “Universities’ Compliance with Title IX OCR Directives: Do the New Sexual Harassment/Sexual Offense Policies Advance Social Justice?” (Spring 2016) Network: A Journal of Faculty Development published by the Faculty Resource Network of New York University; “Title IX Office of Civil Rights Directives: An Assault Against Due Process and First Amendment Rights,” 23 Journal of Law, Business & Ethics 1-19 (2017) and “Abortion and American Federalism” (coauthor Keith William Diener) in Federalism in America: An Encyclopedia (2018).