Visual Persuasion Project
Visual Persuasion Project
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
Skip to content
  • Menu
  • Visual Litigation
    • Service Providers
      • Art of Facts
      • 21st Century Forensic Animations
      • Executive Presentations
      • Juris Productions
      • Legal Vista (LVS)
      • Medical Legal Art
      • Precise Presentations
      • Scene Systems
    • Kinds of Visuals
      • Animations
      • 2D and 3D Charts and Stills
      • Computer Graphics
      • Day in the Life (personal injury docs)
      • Montage
      • Reenactments and Simulations
      • Settlement Brochures
      • Virtual Reality
    • Case Illustrations
      • Airplane Accident
      • Contracts
      • Criminal
      • Eminent Domain
      • Environmental Pollution
      • Fraud
      • Intellectual Property
      • Medical Malpractice
    • Litigation Public Relations
      • Tort Reform
      • Attorney Advertising
      • Litigation Services Advertising
      • Bush v. Gore
  • Visual Legal Training
    • About the Course
    • Student Work
    • Related Links
  • Recent Media Events
    • Cases in the News
    • Televised Trials
    • Public Relations Events
    • Related Links
    • Social Networking
  • Law and Popular Culture
    • Popular Legal Studies
    • Law and Film
    • Court TV
    • Law Imitating Art
    • Popular Culture and Law

Court TV

About Court TV:

http://www.courttv.com/about/

Does the public have the right to watch executions? See The Christian Science Monitor.

Search


About the Project

About the Visual Persuasion Project

The goal of the Visual Persuasion Project is to promote a better understanding of the practice, theory, and teaching of law in the current screen-dominated, pervasively visual, digital era. The Project was formed in 2005 to study and advance the cultivation of critical visual intelligence, to inspire creative visualizations of evidence, case narratives, policy analysis, and legal argumentation, and to help lawyers, judges, law students, and the lay public integrate new visual tools into more traditional (textual and verbal) approaches to legal analysis. <Read More>

© 1997-2025 New York Law School | 185 West Broadway New York, NY 10013 | 212.431.2100 | Policies