Samuel Brunson (center) chatted with attendees at a recent Tax Law Reception for alumni.
Loyola law faculty members are active authors, speakers, consultants, and mentors. Through their writing and public speaking,
School of Law faculty members advance the state of human knowledge. Here are some of their recent contributions.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 30)
FACULTY NEWS
BOOKS
George Anastaplo,
The Christian
Heritage: Problems & Prospects
(Lexington Books, 2010);
Reflections
on Life, Death, and the Constitution
(University Press of Kentucky, 2009).
Robert John Araujo, S.J., John
Courtney Murray, S.J., University
Professor,
Papal Diplomacy and the
Quest for Peace
(St. Joseph’s University
Press, 2010) (with John Lucal, S.J.).
Thomas Haney,
The First 100
Years: The Centennial History of
Loyola University Chicago School of
Law
(2009).
Cynthia Ho, Clifford E. Vickrey
Research Professor,
Access to
Medicine in the Global Economy:
International Agreements on Patents
and Related Rights
(Oxford University
Press, 2011).
Michael Kaufman, Associate
Dean of Academic Affairs,
Expert
Witnesses: Securities Cases
(West,
2011);
Illinois Civil Trial Procedure
(West, 2011);
Securities Litigation:
Damages
(multi-volume treatise)
(West, 2011);
Depositions: Law,
Strategy, and Technique
(West, 2011);
Education Law, Policy, and Practice
(2d edition, Aspen, 2009);
Teacher’s
Manual to Education Law, Policy, and
Practice
(2d edition, Aspen, 2009);
Illinois Civil Procedure
(2d edition,
Thomson/West, 2009).
Jeffrey Kwall, Kathleen and
Bernard Beazley Research
Professor,
The Federal Income
Taxation of Corporations, Partnerships,
Limited Liability Companies, and Their
Owners
(4th edition, Foundation
Press, 2012);
Fundamentals of Modern
Property Law
(6th edition, Foundation
Press, 2011) (coauthored).
Richard Michael,
Civil Procedure
Before Trial
(2d edition, West, 2011).
Charles Murdock,
Loyola
Faculty Scholar,
Illinois Business
Organizations,
two volumes (2d
edition, West, 2010).
John Nowak, Raymond and Mary
Simon Chair in Constitutional
Law,
Principles of Constitutional
Law
(4th edition, Concise Hornbook
Series, West, 2010) (with Ronald
Rotunda);
Constitutional Law
(8th
edition, West Hornbook Series,
2009) (with Ronald Rotunda). At the
start of each year (e.g., 2009, 2010,
and 2011), Professors Nowak and
Rotunda author supplements to each
of the six volumes of their
Treatise
on Constitutional Law: Substance and
Procedure
(Thomson/West, 2007-08).
This treatise and supplements are
published both as books and as the
constitutional law treatise in Westlaw.
Federal and state courts have cited
Nowak’s work 274 times in the past
10 years.
Juan Perea,
Latinos and the Law
(Thomson/West, 2008) (with Delgado
and Stefancic).
Steven Ramirez,
Reimagining
Capitalism: Law, Economics, and
the Subprime Fiasco
(NYU Press,
forthcoming 2012).
Alan Raphael,
Criminal Procedure:
From Bail to Jail
(2010).
Anne-Marie Rhodes,
Art Law &
Transactions
(Carolina Academic
Press, 2011).
Allen Shoenberger,
New Illinois
Rules of Evidence
(Illinois State Bar
Association, 2011).
Alexander Tsesis,
For Liberty and
Equality: The Life and Times of the
Declaration of Independence
(Oxford
University Press, forthcoming 2012);
Promises of Liberty: The History and
Contemporary Relevance of the
Thirteenth Amendment
(editor and
chapter author) (Columbia University
Press, 2010);
We Shall Overcome: A
History of Civil Rights and the Law
(Yale
University Press, 2008) (paperback,
Yale University Press, 2009).
SpencerWaller,
Antitrust and
American Business Abroad
(Thomson/
West, 2009, 2010, 2011).
Michael Zimmer,
Employment
Discrimination: Selected Cases and
Statutes 2011
(update of 7th edition,
Aspen, 2011) (with Sullivan and
White);
Employment Discrimination:
Selected Cases and Statutes
(7th
edition, Aspen, 2008) (with Sullivan
andWhite);
The Global Workplace:
International and Comparative
Employment Law
(Cambridge
University Press, 2007) (with Blanpain,
Bisom-Rapp, Corbett, and Joseph).
ARTICLES AND
BOOK REVIEWS
George Anastaplo,
“Abraham
Lincoln, Lawyers, and the Civil
War: Bicentennial Explorations,”
35
Oklahoma City University Law
Review
1 (2010).
Robert John Araujo,
S.J.,
“Same-Sex
Marriage from Privacy to Equality: The
Failure of the ‘Equality’ Justifications
for Same-Sex Marriage,”
The
Jurisprudence of Marriage and Other
Intimate Relationships
195 (2010).
Dean Emerita Nina S. Appel,
“Don’t Lose Ground,”
Chicago Lawyer
(March 2010).
Emily Benfer,
“The ADA
Amendments Act: An Overview of
Recent Changes to the Americans
with Disabilities Act,”
American
Constitution Society’s Advance: The
Journal of the ACS Issue Groups
(Vol. 4, No. 2, 2010).
John Blum,
John J. Waldron
Research Professor,
“Variables of
Health Reform and Their Impacts
on the Elderly,” 12
Marquette Elder’s
Advisor
85 (No. 1, Fall 2010); “The
Quagmire of Hospital Governance,” 31
Journal of Legal Medicine
35-57 (2010).
Bruce Boyer,
“Advocating for
Children in Care in a Climate of
Economic Recession: The
Relationship between Poverty and
Child Maltreatment,” 6
Northwestern
Journal of Law and Social Policy
301 (2011); Supplement to
Illinois
Juvenile Law and Practice,
chapter
on “Neglected, Abused, and
Dependent Children—Dispositions
and Permanency, Illinois Institute for
Continuing Legal Education” (2010)
(with Anita Weinberg).
John Breen,
“The Road Not Taken:
Catholic Legal Education at the
Middle of the Twentieth Century,” 51
American Journal of Legal History
554
(2011) (with Lee Strang); “Religion
and the Purification of Reason: Why
the Liberal State Requires More Than
Simple Tolerance,”
Campbell Law
Review
(2011); “Love, Truth, and the
Economy: A Reflection on Benedict
XVI’s Caritas in Veritate,” 33
Harvard
Journal of Law & Public Policy
987
(2010); “Neutrality in Liberal Legal
Theory and Catholic Social Thought,”
32
Harvard Law Journal and Public
Policy
513 (2009); “Priest, Prophet,
and King: Abortion, the Vocation of
Catholic Politicians, and the Culture
of Life,” 6
Journal of Catholic Social
Thought
353 (2009).
John Bronsteen, Associate
Dean for Faculty Research and
Development,
“Well-Being Analysis
vs. Cost-Benefit Analysis,” 62
Duke
Law Journal
(forthcoming 2012); 52
American Journal of Legal History
(peer reviewed) (forthcoming 2012)
(solicited book review of
Wholesale
Justice
by Martin Redish); “Welfare
as Happiness,” 98
Georgetown Law
Journal
1583 (2010); “Retribution and
the Experience of Punishment,” 98
California Law Review
1463 (2010)
(with Christopher Buccafusco and
Jonathan Masur); “Happiness and
Punishment,” 76
University of Chicago
Law Review
1037 (2009) (with
Christopher Buccafusco and Jonathan
Masur); “Some Thoughts About the
Economics of Settlement,”78
Fordham
Law Review
1129 (2009) (symposium);
“Describing the Effect of Adaptation
on Settlement,” 109
Columbia Law
Review Sidebar
21 (2009) (with
Christopher Buccafusco and Jonathan
Masur); “Retribution’s Role,” 84
Indiana
Law Journal
1129 (2009).
Samuel Brunson,
“Repatriating
Tax-Exempt Investments: Tax Havens,
Blocker Corporations, and Unrelated
Debt-Financed Income,”
Northwestern
Law Review
(forthcoming 2012);
“Grown-up Income Shifting:
Yesterday’s Kiddie Tax Is Not Enough,”
59
Kansas Law Review
457 (2011);
“Reigning in Charities: Using an
Intermediate Penalty to Enforce
the Campaigning Prohibition,” 8
Pittsburgh Tax Review
125 (peer
reviewed) (2011).
Sacha Coupet,
“Ain’t I a Parent?: The
Exclusion of Kinship Caregivers from
the Debate Over Expansions
of Parenthood,” 34
New York
University Review of Law & Social
Change
595 (2010).
Diane Geraghty, A. Kathleen
Beazley Chair in ChildLaw,
“Child
Friendly Legal Aid in Africa” (with
Thomas Geraghty) (concept paper
adopted by UNICEF, United Nations
Development Programme, and United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime as
the official paper on the topic) (2011);
“What Began As a Cause Has Become
a Profession: Reflections on the Role
of Loyola’s Civitas ChildLaw Center in
the Development of Children’s Law As
a Legal Specialty,” 29
Children’s Legal
Rights Journal
1 (2009).
Thomas Haney,
“The First 100 Years:
The Centennial History of Loyola
University Chicago School of Law,” 41
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal
651 (2010).
Professors Alan Raphael (left), Mike Zimmer, John Blum (at podium), and John Nowak
organized and spoke in a panel discussion this semester to explore constitutional issues
relevant to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
SPRING 2012
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LOYOLA LAW