Loyola Law - Spring 2013 - page 28-29

Tort Law Implications of Extra-Clinical
Decision Support Tools,” 20
Annals
of Health Law
1 (2012); “The Abor-
tion Informed Consent Debate: More
Light, Less Heat,” 21
Cornell Journal of
Law & Public Policy
1 (2011); “Judging
Physicians: The Person and the Profes-
sional,” 13
Virtual Mentor: American
Medical Association Journal of
Ethics
718 (2011); “Peculiar Institution:
America’s Death Penalty in an Age of
Abolition,” 18
Ethical Perspectives
702
(2011) (book review).
Lea Krivinskas Shepard,
“Toward
a Stronger Financial History Antidis-
crimination Norm,” 53
Boston College
Law Review
1695
(2012); “Creditors’
Contempt,” 2011
Brigham Young Uni-
versity Law Review
1509.
Allen Shoenberger,
“Loyola Law
School, State Secrets, the American
Revolution, the War of 1812: The
Maritime Connections of the Middle
Temple,” 43
Journal of Maritime Law
and Commerce
293 (2012); “Loyola
Maintains a Connection to the Middle
Temple Inn of Court,”
Chicago Daily
Law Bulletin
(February 13, 2012).
Barry Sullivan, Cooney and
Conway Chair in Advocacy,
Think-
ing, Fast and Slow—
A Lawyer’s Per-
spective,”
Loyola University Chicago
Law Journal
(forthcoming 2013)
(with Charles Murdock);
“Law and
Discretion in the Supreme Court: A
Response to Professor Lubet,”
Val-
paraiso Law Review
(forthcoming
2013); “FOIA and the First Amend-
ment: Representative Democracy
and the People’s Elusive ‘Right to
Know,’” 72
Maryland Law Review
1
(2012); “‘Death Is Different’ No Longer:
Graham v. Florida
and the Future of
Eighth Amendment Challenges to
Noncapital Sentences,” 2011
Supreme
Court Review
327 (with Alison Siegler);
“Methods and Materials in Constitu-
tional Law: Some Thoughts on
Access to Government Information
As a Problem for Constitutional
Theory and Socio-Legal Studies,”
13
European Journal of Law Reform
4 (2011); “The Executive’s Authority
Over Enemy Combatants: Due Process
and Its Limits,” 2011
Criminal Law and
Procedure Review
94 (with Megan
Canty); “Formal and Informal Aggran-
dizement of Executive Power,” 2 (12)
Societas/ Communitas
44 (2011); “The
Humanity of Advocacy,” 42
Loyola
University Chicago Law Journal
xxiii
(2010) (Cooney & Conway Inaugural
Chair Lecture); “There’s More to the
Law Than ‘Practice-Ready,’”
Chronicle
of Higher Education
(October 23, 2011)
(with Alfred S. Konefsky).
Alexander Tsesis,
The New Privacy
on the Internet,
48
Wake Forest Law
Review
(forthcoming 2014); “Foot-
holds of Constitutional Interpretation,”
92
Texas Law Review
(forthcoming
2013); “Maxim Constitutionalism,” 92
Texas Law Review
(forthcoming 2013)
(lead article);
Inflammatory Speech:
Outrage versus Intimidation,” 97
Minnesota Law Review
1145 (2013)
(lead article); “Gender Subordination
and the Thirteenth Amendment,” 112
Columbia Law Review
1641
(2012);
“Into the Light of Day: Relevance of
the Thirteenth Amendment to Con-
temporary Law,” 112
Columbia Law
Review
1447 (2012); “Self-Government
and the Declaration of Indepen-
dence,” 97
Cornell Law Review
693
(2012) (lead article); “Congressional
Authority to Interpret the Thirteenth
Amendment,” 71
Maryland Law Review
40 (2012); “Due Process in Civil Com-
mitments,” 68
Washington and Lee
Law Review
253 (2011). Solicited book
reviews: Erik Bleich,
The Freedom to
Be Racist?: How the United States and
Europe Struggle to Preserve Freedom
and Combat Racism,
127
Political Sci-
ence Quarterly
511
(2012)
;
G. Edward
White, 1
Law in American History,
Tulsa Law Review
(forthcoming 2013);
Peggy Pascoe,
What Comes Naturally:
Miscegenation Law and the Making of
Race in America, American Historical
Review
(2011); Brian McGinty,
John
Brown’s Trial, Journal of Southern His-
tory
(2011); Beverly Gage,
The Day
Wall Street Exploded: A Story of America
in Its First Age of Terror,
29
Law and
History Review
319 (2011).
Spencer Waller,
Antitrust’s
Democracy Deficit
,” 81 Fordham Law
Review 2543 (2013); (with Harry
First);
“The Next Generation of Global
Competition Law,” 1
William E. Kovacic,
An Antitrust Tribute
95 (2013);
“Use
of Dominance, Unlawful Conduct
and Causation under Section 36 of
New Zealand’s Commerce Act: A
United States Perspective,” 18
New
Zealand Business Law Quarterly
333 (2012) (with Jeffery M. Cross,
J. Douglas Richards, Maurice E.
Stucke); “Thurman Arnold,”
Oxford
Encyclopedia of American Business,
Labor, and Economic History
(2012);
“Social Networking and Competition
Policy,” 90
North Carolina Law Review
1771 (2012); “Access and Information
Remedies in High-Tech Antitrust,”
8
Journal of Competition Law and
Economics
575 (2012); “Corporate
Governance and Competition
Policy,” 18
George Mason Law Review
833 (2011).
AnitaWeinberg,
“Neglected,
Abused, and Dependent Children—
Dispositions and Permanency
,” Illinois
Juvenile Law and Practice
(2012) (with
Bruce Boyer).
Neil Williams,
“Taking and Perfect-
ing Security Interests in Collateral
Subject to Specialized Rules: Deposit
Accounts, Commercial Tort Claims,
Intellectual Property,” 10
DePaul Busi-
ness & Commercial Law Journal
515
(2012);
“Two Men and Twenty Years
of Meetings: Norman Amaker, Derrick
Bell, and the Midwestern People of
Color Legal Scholarship Conference
from 1990- 2010,” 42
Loyola University
Chicago Law Journal
i (2011).
David Yellen,
“The Impact of Rank-
ings and Rules on Legal Education
Reform,”
Connecticut Law Review
(forthcoming 2013); “Current Crisis
Reshapes Legal Education,”
Chicago
Lawyer
(September 2012); “Advancing
Transparency in Law School Employ-
ment Data: The ABA’s New Standard
509,”
The Bar Examiner,
December
2012; BLOGS:
The Downsizing of
Legal Education,”
The Faculty Lounge
(Feb. 1, 2013), “The Dean’s Office: An
Introduction”
Above the Law
(Feb. 7,
2013); “The Changing Law School
Learning Experience,”
The Faculty
Lounge
(Feb. 8, 2013); “Loosening
the ABA’s Grip on Law Schools,”
The
Faculty Lounge
(Feb. 21, 2013); “Three
Questions About Legal Education”
Above the Law
(Feb. 21, 2013); “Why
the ABA Is Resistant to Change,”
Above
the Law
(March 7, 2013).
Michael Zimmer,
“Is the
Antidiscrimination Project Being
Ended?” 1
Indiana Journal of
Law & Social Equality
(forthcoming
2013); “Inequality, Individualized Risk,
& Insecurity,” 2013
Wisconsin Law
Review
1; “North American Border
Wars: The Role of Canadian and
American Scholarship in U.S. Labor
Law Reform Debates,” 30
Hofstra
Labor & Employment Journal
1 (2012)
(with Susan Bisom-Rapp);
“Wal-Mart
v. Dukes:
Taking the Protection Out
of Protected Classes,” 16
Lewis & Clark
Law Review
409 (2012); “Unions & the
Great Recession: Is Transnationalism
the Answer?” 15
Employee Rights and
Employment Policy Journal
123 (2011).
PRESENTATIONS,
AWARDS, AND
HONORS
Emily Benfer
recently presented
“Health Justice Project: A Model for
Law School Medical-Legal Partnership
Clinics” at Southern Illinois University
Health Policy Institute; “Advancing
Social Justice and Clinical Teaching
FACULTY NEWS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 27)
through Policy and Legislative Clinics”
at an AALS Clinical Legal Education
Association Annual Conference in
Puerto Rico; and “Professional Self-
Care and Social Justice Lawyering” at
the Norman Amaker Public Interest
Law and Social Justice Retreat. Last
year she presented “Supervising
Law Students and Fellows” at the
Public Interest Law Initiative in
Chicago; “Theory and Praxis for the
Development of a Public Health
Policy Clinic” at Johns Hopkins School
of Public Health; and “Mind the Gap:
(Re)Designing Clinical Teaching to
Serve Cross-Generational Student
and Community Needs” at the Clinical
Legal Education Association Annual
Conference held in Los Angeles.
Bruce Boyer
recently gave a
presentation for the Cook County
Domestic Relations Court, “Handling
International Child Abduction Cases.”
He also presented in two separate
sessions for the Annual Conference of
the National Association of Counsel
for Children in Chicago on “Recent
Developments in Dependency Law”
and on “Analyzing and Preparing
Cases Involving Medically Based
Allegations of Child Abuse.”
John Bronsteen’s
paper “Well-Being
Analysis vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis”
was the subject of the
Duke Law
Journal’s
annual symposium, where
it was commented upon by several
leaders in the field of administrative
law. Bronsteen also presented
that paper at the American Law
& Economics Association Annual
Meeting at Stanford Law School, at
the Law & Society Association Annual
Meeting in Honolulu, and at a faculty
workshop at Loyola. He presented his
paper “Retribution and the Experience
of Punishment” at the Southeastern
Association of Law Schools Annual
Meeting in Amelia Island, Florida.
He also gave a panel presentation
on “Teaching Emerging Areas of the
Law” at the aforementioned Law &
Society conference. He was a panel
moderator last spring at the
Loyola
University Chicago Law Journal
conference “The Future of Class
Action and Its Alternatives.”
Samuel Brunson
presented his paper
“Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes?
Protecting the Tax System from I.R.S.
Abuse” at the Chicago Junior Faculty
Workshop this fall.
Sacha Coupet
presented “Reforming
Courts to Meet the Needs of Abused
and Neglected Children” at the 20th
Annual Colloquium of the American
Professional Society on the Abuse of
Children where she participated as an
invited panelist. She was an invited
copanelist at the annual conference
of the Council on Contemporary
Families where she presented
“Changing Families and Children’s
Rights: How Shifting Paradigms
Can Impact Child Protection.” She
also presented her work on “Gender
Identity Rights for Transgender and
Gender Non-Conforming Children”
at the University of Miami Law
School where she was invited
to participate in a legal theory
workshop. She presented her work
on kinship caregiving families at both
Loyola’s School of Law and School of
Social Work.
Teresa Frisbie
recently presented
“Practical Applications of
Neuroscience in Mediation and
Negotiation” at an American Bar
Association meeting, and also
made presentations on this topic
for the Circuit Court of Cook County
MCLE series in December and the
Association for Conflict Resolution in
April. She participates on a working
committee for the Circuit Court of
Cook County that is preparing a new
mediation program and recently
provided training for the Association
of Attorney Mediators. This spring
she presented on panels on “Teaching
Mediation Advocacy Skills Inside
and Outside the Classroom” at the
ABA Section of Dispute Resolution
Legal Educator’s Colloquium, and
“Arbitration Under the Federal
Arbitration Act” as part of an ISBA
webinar. Frisbie was recently
named to the National Academy of
Distinguished Neutrals.
James Gathii
was inducted as
Loyola’s Wing-Tat Lee Chair in
International Law at a special
ceremony at the law school on
March 14. Following the induction
ceremony, Gathii delivered the 2013
Wing-Tat Lee Lecture in International
Law“Judicial Activism in Africa’s
International Trade Courts.” He
presented “Strength in IP Protection
and FDI Flows in LDCs” at the
University of Georgia Law School
International Law Colloquium
in February, and at the Cornell
International Law and International
Relations Colloquium this past
fall. He also presented “Mission
Creep or a Search for Relevance:
The East African Court of Justice’s
Human Rights Strategy” to the
International Organizations/
International LawWorking Group,
Buffet Center, Northwestern
University, in November.
Zelda Harris
recently participated
as a faculty member at the Cardozo
Intensive Trial Advocacy Program at
Benjamin Cardozo School of Law.
This spring she also participated in an
online training module sponsored by
the National Center for State Courts
at the American Judges Association
and Futures Without Violence;
served as a team leader for both the
NITA Midwest Regional program at
Loyola University Chicago School
of Law, and at the Trial Techniques
Program at Emory School of Law;
and participated as an invited faculty
member for the National Council
of Juvenile and Family Court Judges
Conference titled “Enhancing
Judicial Skills in Domestic Violence”
in San Francisco.
Cynthia Ho
was an invited
commentator at a Workshop on
Intellectual Property Issues in the
Pharmaceutical Industry held at
the University of Indiana McKinney
School of Law in December 2012.
During the spring 2013 semester,
she gave several presentations.
In January 2013, she presented a
working paper entitled “The Romance
of Pharmaceutical Innovation,” at the
Conference of Asian Pacific American
Law Faculty held at UC Hastings
Law School. In April, she presented
“Cognitive Biases Surrounding
Pharmaceutical Innovation and
Patent Policy” at PatCon and
served as a moderator for the Law
Journal Symposium on Patents and
Innovation. She also presented a
work in progress at the University of
San Diego International Intellectual
Property Scholars Roundtable.
Margaret Moses
was appointed
sole arbitrator in two international
arbitrations under the auspices of
ICDR. She was recently selected as
coarbitrator for a panel to draft an
award in one of the Vis Moot
Problems. The award will constitute
a book chapter in a book to be
published in March 2013 to honor
Eric Bergsten, who is retiring after
running the Vis Moot for 20 years.
Moses serves as a board member of
the Vis Moot East Foundation. Last
fall she spoke on Ethics in Internal
Arbitration to a committee of the
Chicago Bar Association.
John Nowak
is a member of the Rules
Committee for the United States
District Court for the Northern District
of Illinois.
Stacey Platt
recently presented
“Zealous Advocacy and Best Interests:
Ethical Dilemmas in Family Law” at the
Association of Family and Conciliation
Courts National Conference in
Chicago. She also participated as a
lecturer this spring at the National
Institute for Trial Advocacy, Litigation
Training for Advocates Representing
Survivors of Domestic Violence in
Boulder, Colorado.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 30)
SPRING 2013
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LOYOLA LAW
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