Loyola Law - 2012-13 DEAN'S ANNUAL REPORT - page 28-29

Steven Ramirez,
Lawless Capitalism:
The Subprime Crisis and the Case for an
Economic Rule of Law
(NYU Press, 2012).
Alan Raphael,
Criminal Procedure:
From Bail to Jail
(Tower Publishing
Company, 2012).
Anne-Marie Rhodes,
Art Law &
Transactions: Teacher’s Manual
(Carolina
Academic Press, 2012);
Art Law &
Transactions
(Carolina Academic
Press, 2011).
Allen Shoenberger,
New Illinois
Rules of Evidence
(Illinois State Bar
Association, 2011).
Alexander Tsesis,
Constitutional
Design
(Oxford University Press,
forthcoming 2014);
For Liberty and
Equality: The Life and Times of the
Declaration of Independence
(Oxford
University Press, 2012).
Spencer Waller,
Antitrust and
American Business Abroad
(Thomson/
West, 2009, 2010, 2011).
Michael Zimmer,
Cases and Materials
on Employment Discrimination
(8th ed.,
Aspen, 2013) (with Sullivan and White);
The Global Workplace: International and
Comparative Employment Law
(2d ed.,
Aspen, 2012) (with Blanpain, Bisom-
Rapp, Corbett, and Josephs).
Articles
in top
journals
John Bronsteen,
“Well-Being
Analysis vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis,”
62
Duke Law Journal
1603 (2013)
(with Christopher Buccafusco and
Jonathan Masur).
Samuel Brunson,
“Taxing Polygamy,”
Washington University Law Review
(forthcoming 2013); “Repatriating
Tax-Exempt Investments: Tax Havens,
Blocker Corporations, and Unrelated
Debt-Financed Income,” 106
Northwestern Law Review
225 (2012).
James Gathii,
“The Neo-Liberal Turn
in Regional Trade Agreements,” 86
Washington University Law Review
421 (2011).
Michael Kaufman,
“Messy Mental
Markers: Inferring Scienter from
Core Operations in Securities Fraud
Litigation,” 73
Ohio State Law Journal
507 (2012); “Fraud Created the
Market,” 63
Alabama Law Review
275
(2012); “Toward a Just Measure of
Repose: The Statute of Limitations for
Securities Fraud,” 52
William and Mary
Law Review
1547 (2011).
FACULTY EXCELLENCE
FACULT Y EXCEL LENCE
DIGITAL DEAN
David Yellen,
Dean and Professor
Yellen, who has expertise in criminal law, was a guest blogger at
Above the Law
and
The Faculty Lounge,
and served as a
member of the executive committee of the Association of American Law Schools Section on the Law School Dean, the ABA
Task Force on the Future of Legal Education, and the ABA New Deans Workshops.
Jeffrey Kwall,
“When Should Asset
Appreciation Be Taxed?: The Case for
a Disposition Standard of Realization,”
86
Indiana (Bloomington) Law Journal
77 (2011).
Juan Perea,
“On Race and
Constitutional Law: Recognizing
the Proslavery Constitution,” 110
Michigan Law Review
1123 (2012)
(book review of George Van Cleve,
A Slaveholder’s Union
); “The Echoes
of Slavery: Recognizing the Racist
Origins of the Agricultural and
Domestic Worker Exclusion from the
National Labor Relations Act,” 72
Ohio
State Law Journal
95 (2011).
Matthew Sag,
“Orphan Works As
Grist for the Data Mill,” 27
Berkeley
Technology Law Journal
1503 (2013);
“League Structure & Stadium Rent
Seeking—the Antitrust Role
Reconsidered,”
Florida Law Review
(forthcoming 2013) (with David
Haddock and Tonja Jacobi);
“Predicting Fair Use,” 73
Ohio State
Law Journal
47 (2012).
Nadia Sawicki,
“Patient Protection
and Decision Aid Quality: Regulatory
and Tort Law Approaches,” 54
Arizona
Law Review
621 (2012).
Barry Sullivan, Cooney and
Conway Chair in Advocacy,
“FOIA
and the First Amendment:
Representative Democracy
and the People’s Elusive ‘Right
to Know,’” 72
Maryland Law
Review
1 (2012).
Alexander Tsesis,
The New
Privacy on the Internet,
48
Wake
Forest Law Review
(forthcoming
2014); “Footholds of Constitutional
Interpretation,” 91
Texas Law
Review
1593
(2013); “Maxim
Constitutionalism,” 91
Texas Law
Review
1609
(2013) (lead article);
Inflammatory Speech: Outrage
versus Intimidation,” 97
Minnesota
Law Review
1145 (2013) (lead arti-
cle); “Gender Subordination and
the Thirteenth Amendment,” 112
Columbia Law Review
1641 (2012);
“Into the Light of Day: Relevance
of the Thirteenth Amendment to
Contemporary Law,” 112
Columbia
Law Review
1447 (2012); “Self-
Government and the Declaration
of Independence,” 97
Cornell
Law Review
693 (2012) (lead arti-
cle); “Congressional Authority
to Interpret the Thirteenth
Amendment,” 71
Maryland Law
Review
40 (2012); “Due Process in
Civil Commitments,” 68
Washington
and Lee Law Review
253 (2011).
Spencer Waller,
“Antitrust’s
Democracy Deficit,” 81
Fordham
Law Review
2543 (2013) (with
Harry First); “Social Networking
and Competition Policy,” 90
North
Carolina Law Review
1771 (2012).
David Yellen,
“The Impact of
Rankings and Rules on Legal
Education Reform,” 45
Connecticut
Law Review
1389 (2013).
Michael Zimmer,
“Inequality,
Individualized Risk, and Insecurity,”
2013
Wisconsin Law Review
1.
FACULTY EXCELLENCE
FACULT Y EXCEL LENCE
CON LAW CONNECTOR
Alexander Tsesis,
Professor
Tsesis used his expertise in constitutional law, civil rights, and civil liberties to organize and speak at two symposia: the
Columbia Law Review
’s “Thirteenth Amendment: Meaning, Enforcement, and Contemporary Implications” and the
Texas
Law Review
’s “Constitutional Foundations.”
2 0 1 2 – 1 3 D E A N ’ S A N N U A L R E P O R T
2 9
2 8
L O Y O L A U N I V E R S I T Y C H I C A G O S C H O O L O F L A W
Front Cover...,8-9,10-11,12-13,14-15,16-17,18-19,20-21,22-23,24-25,26-27 30-31,32-33,Back Cover
Powered by FlippingBook