Spring 2014 - Loyola University Chicago School of Law - page 22-23

FACULTY EXCELLENCE
Bulletin;
and “Ten Tips for a Successful
Mediation,”
Women’s Bar Association of
Illinois Journal
(August 2012).
James Gathii,
“The Status of African
Regional Trade Agreements,” 4
European Yearbook of International
Economic Law
287 (2013); “Africa,”
The Oxford Handbook of the History of
International Law
(B. Fassbender, A.
Peters, S. Peter, and D. Hogger, Eds.,
Oxford University Press, 2012); “The
Cotonou Agreement and Economic
Partnership Agreements,”
The Right to
Development in Theory and Practice:
Studies for the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary
of the Declaration
(S. Marks, Ed., 2012);
“Curtailing Ecosystem Exportation:
Ecosystem Services As a Basis to
Reconsider the Merits of Export-
Driven Agriculture in Economies
Highly Dependent on Agricultural
Exports,” 30
Virginia Environmental
Law Journal
1 (2012) (with Hirokawa);
and “Irregular Forces and Self-Defense
Under the UN Charter,”
What Is War?
An Investigation in the Wake of 9/11
(M.
O’Connell, Ed., Martinus Nijhoff, 2012).
Diane Geraghty,
“Undocumented
Children and Families in America:
An Interdisciplinary Exploration
of Challenges and Emerging
Opportunities
,”
Preface, 33
Children’s Legal Rights Journal
1
(Summer 2013); and 33
Children’s
Legal Rights Journal
377 (Fall 2013)
(book review of
Juvenile Justice:
Advancing Research, Policy, and
Practice
by Sherman and Jacobs).
Cynthia Ho,
“Drugged Out:
How Cognitive Bias Hurts Drug
Innovation,” 51
San Diego Law Review
2
(forthcoming 2014); “The Role
of Conflicting Patent Perspectives
for Compulsory Licenses,”
Global
Perspectives of Patent Law
(M. Bagley
and R. Okediji, Eds., Oxford University
Press, 2014); “Beyond Patents: Global
Challenges to Affordable Medicines,”
The Globalization of Health Care
(G. Cohen, Ed., Oxford University
Press, 2013); and “A Mystery Statute
Approach: How to Teach and Test the
Legal Skill of Statutory Interpretation,”
Law Teacher
(Fall 2013).
Michael Kaufman,
“Foreword:
Behavioral Economics and Investor
Protection,” 44
Loyola University
Chicago Law Journal
1323 (2013);
“Behavioral Economics and Investor
Protection: Keynote Address by Daniel
Kahneman” (edited and transcribed),
44
Loyola University Chicago Law
Journal
1333 (2013); “Messy Mental
Markers: Inferring Scienter from
Core Operations in Securities Fraud
Litigation,” 73
Ohio State Law Journal
507 (2012) (with Wunderlich); “Fraud
Created the Market,” 63
Alabama Law
Review
275 (2012) (with Wunderlich);
“The Judicial Access Barriers to
Remedies for Securities Fraud,” 74
Law
and Contemporary Problems
55 (2012)
(with Wunderlich); “Summary Pre-
Judgment,”
Loyola University Chicago
Law Journal
593 (2012); and “Toward
a Just Measure of Repose: The Statute
of Limitations for Securities Fraud,”
52
William and Mary Law Review
1547 (2011-12) (with Wunderlich).
Blogs: “Comparative Early Childhood
Education Law and Policy,”www.
kaufmansquared.blogspot.com; and
“A Model Litigation Finance Contract,”
www.litigationfinancecontract.com.
Margaret Moses,
“Arbitration/
Litigation Interface: The European
Debate,”
Northwestern Journal
of International Law & Business
(forthcoming 2014); “Will Antisuit
Injunctions Rise Again in Europe?”,
Kluwer Arbitration Blog
(November
20, 2013);
“Ethics in International
Arbitration: Traps for the Unwary,” 10
Loyola University Chicago International
Law Review
73 (2012); “Reasoned
Decisions in Arbitrator Challenges,” III
Yearbook on International Arbitration
199 (2013); and “Is Good Faith in the
IBA Evidence Rules Good?”,
Kluwer
Arbitration Blog
(November 15, 2012).
Charles Murdock,
“Thinking, Fast
and Slow—A Lawyer’s Perspective,” 44
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal
1377 (2013) (with Sullivan); “Credit
Default Swaps: Dubious Instruments,”
Harvard Business Law Review Online
(2013); “Redoing the Statutory
Scheme by Rule-Making,” 40
Securities
Regulation Law Journal
251 (2012);
and “The Big Banks: Background,
Deregulation, Financial Innovation,
and ‘Too Big to Fail,’” 20
Denver
University Law Review
505
(2013).
Juan Perea,
“Racial Templates,”
112
Michigan Law Review
1133
(forthcoming 2014); “Doctrines of
Delusion: Bakke, Fisher, and the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 24)
Case for a New Affirmative Action,”
Southern Methodist University
Law Review
(forthcoming 2014);
and “On Race and Constitutional
Law: Recognizing the Proslavery
Constitution,” 110
Michigan Law
Review
1123 (2012) (book review of
A
Slaveholder’s Union
by Van Cleve).
Steven Ramirez,
“In Defense of
the GSES,” 35
Hamline Law Review
461 (2012).
Alan Raphael,
“What Must the
Government Prove to Convict
Under Accomplice Liability for the
Use of a Weapon During a Drug
Transaction?”, 2013-14
Preview of
United States Supreme Court Cases
74 (with Czarnecki); “To Convict for
Distribution of Heroin Causing Death,
Must the Government Show that
Heroin Proximately Caused, andWas
the Sole Cause of Death?”, 2013-14
Preview of United States Supreme
Court Cases
71 (with Muralidhara);
and “When Are Miranda Warnings
Required for Questioning of a
Prisoner?”, 2011-12
Preview of United
States Supreme Court Cases
11.
Anne-Marie Rhodes,
“Notarized
Wills,” 27
Quinnipiac Probate Law
Journal
(forthcoming 2014); and
“Valuing Art in an Estate: New
Concerns,” 31
Cardozo Arts and
Entertainment Law Journal
45 (2012).
Hank Rose,
“The Constitutionality of
Government Fees as Applied to the
Poor,” 33
Northern Illinois University
Law Review
293 (2013); and “The
Public Trust Doctrine: Does It Provide
the Public with Access to the Beaches
of Lake Michigan in Illinois?”, 18
Public
Interest Law Reporter
89 (2013).
Matthew Sag,
“Orphan Works As
Grist for the Data Mill,” 27
Berkeley
Technology Law Journal
1503 (2013);
“League Structure and Stadium
Rent Seeking—the Antitrust Role
Reconsidered,” 65
Florida Law Review
1 (2013) (with Haddock and Jacobi);
“An Information-Gathering Approach
to Copyright Policy,” 34
Cardozo Law
Review
173 (2012) (with DiCola);
“Digital Archives: Don’t Let Copyright
Block Data Mining,” 490
Nature
29-30
(October 4, 2012) (with Jockers and
Schultz); and “Predicting Fair Use,” 73
Ohio State Law Journal
47 (2012).
Nadia Sawicki,
“Compelling Images:
The Constitutionality of Emotionally
Persuasive Health Campaigns,”
Maryland Law Review
(forthcoming
2014); “A New Life for Wrongful
Living,” 58
New York Law School Law
Review 279
(2014); “Patient Protection
and Decision Aid Quality: Regulatory
and Tort Law Approaches,” 54
Arizona
Law Review
621 (2012); “The Hollow
Promise of Freedom of Conscience,”
33
Cardozo Law Review
1389 (2012);
and “Informed Consent Beyond the
Physician-Patient Encounter: Tort
Law Implications of Extra-Clinical
Decision Support Tools,” 20
Annals of
Health Law
1 (2012). Book chapter:
“Complaints to Professional and
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 21)
IN MEMORIAM
Nadia Sawicki, an expert in bioethics, had several articles and a book chapter published recently.
Professor George Anastaplo, vibrant and
beloved Loyola law community member
P
rofessor George Anastaplo, a member of Loyola’s law faculty since 1981, passed away
February 14, of metastatic prostate cancer. He was 88.
The author of numerous books, articles, and op-eds, and hundreds of essays, Professor
Anastaplo was perhaps most famous for conducting his own bar admission litigation after he was
denied admission to the Illinois Bar. The denial of his admission became a Supreme Court case,
In re
Anastaplo
,
in which he insisted that the First Amendment of the United States Constitution protects the
privacy of political affiliations; in particular, he refused to answer questions about membership in the
Communist Party. Professor Anastaplo’s stand was based on constitutional principles and consequent
rejection of McCarthyism. The Supreme Court’s majority upheld the lower courts’ ruling in favor of the
Illinois Bar, although Justice Hugo Black dissented.
“For more than 30 years, George was a vital part of the fabric of the Loyola law community, serving
as a revered teacher and a world-renowned scholar,” says Dean David Yellen. “He was a delightful
colleague and a real model for staying intellectually active later in life. Even when he was facing the late
stages of his illness, he was working on various writing projects, which was amazing.”
Professor Anastaplo served in the US Army Air Corps during World War II as a navigator of B-17s
and B-29s. He earned his BA, JD, and PhD degrees from the University of Chicago. His distinguished
academic career included serving as a lecturer in the University of Chicago’s Basic Program of Liberal
Education for Adults and as professor of political science and philosophy at Dominican University.
He is survived by his wife, Sara Prince Anastaplo; four children; and eight grandchildren.
SPRING 2014
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LOYOLA LAW
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