Archive

  • Sykes in the Classroom: Contracts

    In Contracts, a required first-year course each fall, we use one opinion by Judge Diane Sykes. And this past year, a second of the judge’s opinions shaped my final exam. The case we study together is Karma International, LLC v. Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC, a 2019 Seventh Circuit decision. The opening line draws us in:…

  • Sykes in the Classroom: Property

    I switch over late in the semester in first-year Property from traditional common-law doctrine to modern zoning law. The students for the most part welcome the switch, but some find the abundant map amendments, conditional permits, special uses, and assorted variances as problematic additions to existing zoning ordinances. Fortunately for instructor and students alike, Justice…

  • Sykes in the Classroom: Copyrights and Civil Procedure

    We have used opinions by Judge Diane Sykes in two of my classes. In both instances, I looked for an opinion that presented a complicated doctrinal issue in clear terms that students could understand and debate. In Copyrights, for many years, I supplemented the casebook with Kelley v. Chicago Park District, a Seventh Circuit decision…

  • Sykes in the Classroom: Advanced Civil Procedure

    Some cases break ground or set precedent, while others are less well-known but useful for their representativeness of a doctrine or concept. In Advanced Civil Procedure, an upper-level elective offered each spring, we have occasion to read all or parts of five opinions by the Hon. Diane Sykes. One we consider for its role in…

  • Judge Sykes in the Classroom

    The hundreds of opinions written by the Hon. Diane S. Sykes in her career on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and the Wisconsin Supreme Court make up a wealth of material about the law. In the links below, seven members of the Marquette Law School faculty discuss how various of Sykes’s…

  • Restorative justice and the return of purpose: A law student’s reflection

    This is the first of three blog posts, at the end of the academic year, by Mary Triggiano, director of Marquette University Law School’s Andrew Center for Restorative Justice.

  • Marquette Law School Poll finds 4 out of 5 say Wisconsin legislature should have passed Evers/GOP property tax, rebates, and special education bill

    Also: Please note: Complete Poll results and methodology information can be found online at law.marquette.edu/poll MILWAUKEE — A new Marquette Law School Poll finds 80% of Wisconsin adults say the legislature should have passed a proposed bill using the projected state budget surplus to reduce property taxes, increase special education funding, and provide rebates to…

  • College of Nursing announces 2026 preceptor awards

    The Marquette College of Nursing is proud to recognize the winners of its annual preceptor awards.

  • Increased Physical Therapy Clinic availability in summer months; satellite location opens  

    The Marquette Physical Therapy Clinic has expanded appointment availability for faculty, staff and students seeking care.  

  • Marquette Business announces new Business Analytics minor

    The minor is open to all students and will launch in Fall 2026.