Loyola Law - Spring 2012 - page 32-33

FACULTY NEWS
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 31)
Barry Sullivan,
Cooney and
Conway Chair in Advocacy,
“‘Death Is Different’ No Longer:
Graham v. Florida
and the Future of
Eighth Amendment Challenges to
Noncapital Sentences,” 2010
Supreme
Court Review
327 (with Alison
Siegler); “Methods and Materials in
Constitutional 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
Aggrandizement 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).
Alexander Tsesis,
“Gender
Subordination and the Thirteenth
Amendment,” 112
Columbia Law
Review
(forthcoming 2012); “Into
the Light of Day: Relevance of
the Thirteenth Amendment to
Contemporary Law,” 112
Columbia
Law Review
(forthcoming October
2012); “Self-Government and the
Declaration of Independence,” 97
Cornell Law Review
(forthcoming
2012); “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); “Burning Crosses on
Campus: University Hate Speech
Codes,” 43
Connecticut Law Review
617 (2010); “Dignity and Speech:
The Regulation of Hate Speech in
a Democracy,” 42
Wake Forest Law
Review
497 (2009); “The Principles
of Governance: The American
Creed and Congressional Authority,”
41
Connecticut Law Review
681
(2009); “Interpreting the Thirteenth
Amendment,” 11
University of
Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional
Law
1337 (2009); “Principled
Governance: The American Creed
and Congressional Authority,” 41
Connecticut Law Review
679 (2009).
Chapters: “Campus Antisemitic
Speech and the First Amendment,”
in
Global Antisemitism: A Crisis of
Modernity
(Brill, forthcoming 2012);
“Reconstruction Abolitionism,”
in
Promises of Liberty: Thirteenth
Amendment Abolitionism and Its
Contemporary Vitality
(Columbia
University Press, 2010). Solicited book
reviews: Erik Bleich,
The Freedom to
Be Racist?: How the United States and
Europe Struggle to Preserve Freedom
and Combat Racism, Political Science
Quarterly
(forthcoming 2012); G.
EdwardWhite, 1
Law in American
History, Tulsa Law Review
(forthcoming
2012); 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 History
(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);
DavidWaldstreicher,
Slavery’s
Constitution: From Revolution to
Ratification, Register of the Kentucky
History Society
(2010).
SpencerWaller,
“Thurman Arnold,”
Oxford Encyclopedia of American
Business, Labor, and Economic
History
(forthcoming 2012); “Social
Networking and Competition
Policy,”
North Carolina Law Review
(forthcoming 2012); “Access and
Information Remedies in High-Tech
Antitrust,”
Journal of Competition
Law and Economics
(forthcoming
2012); “Corporate Governance and
Competition Policy” 18
George
Mason Law Review
833 (2011);
“Brands, Competition, and the Law,”
2010
Brigham Young University Law
Review
1425 (with Deven Desai);
“Harmonizing Essential Facilities,”
76
Antitrust Law Journal
741 (2010)
(with William Tasch); “The Law and
Economics Virus,” 31
Cardozo Law
Review
367 (2009); “The Past, Present,
and Future of Monopolization
Remedies,” 76
Antitrust Law Journal
11 (2009); “In Search of Economic
Justice: Considering Competition
and Consumer Protection Law,”
reprinted in
Consumer Protection:
Disputes and Resolution
(K. Padmaja,
ed., Icfai University Press, India, 2009);
“Antitrust Transitions,” 32
World
Competition Law & Economics
Review
189 (2009) (with Jennifer
Woods); “Justice Stevens and the
Rule of Reason,” 62
SMU Law Review
693 (2009).
AnitaWeinberg,
“A Case Study of
a Partnership in Chicago to Prevent
Childhood Lead Poisoning,” in
A
Child’s Right to a Healthy Environment
(Gabarino and Sigmann, eds.,
Springer Publishing Company, 2010).
Neil Williams,
“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
(2011).
Michael Zimmer,
“Unions & the
Great Recession: Is Transnationalism
the Answer?” 15
Employee Rights and
Employment Policy Journal
123 (2011);
“Ricci’s ‘Color-Blind’ Standard
in a Race Conscious Society: A Case
of Unintended Consequences?”
2010
Brigham Young University Law
Review
1257; “The Restatement
of Employment Law Is the Wrong
Project,” 13
Employment Rights and
Employment Policy Journal
205 (2009);
“A Pro-Employee Supreme Court?
The Retaliation Decisions,” 60
South
Carolina Law Review
917 (2009);
“Two Halves of a Whole: Teaching
International and Comparative
Employment Law,” 25
International
Journal of Comparative Labour Law
and Industrial Relations
23 (2009);
“A Chain of Inferences Proving
Discrimination,” 79
University of
Colorado Law Review
1243 (2008).
PRESENTATIONS,
AWARDS, AND HONORS
Robert John Araujo, S.J.,
was the
Judge Guido Calabresi Fellow in Law
& Religion at Yale Law School this
academic year. He recently delivered
the lecture “The Nature of Social
Justice” at the Saint Thomas More
Center and two seminars: “Human
Rights at the United Nations,” at Yale
Law School, and “Papal Diplomacy:
What Is It and Do We Need It?”
at Yale College. He presented
“The Jurisprudential Foundations
of Human Rights” to Loyola’s
Comparative Law Program in London.
He also gave a Hank Center Lecture at
Loyola University Chicago on “Francis
de Vitoria and the Principles of the
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.” He gave another Hank Center
Lecture at the University of Vilnius
in Lithuania on “Democracy, Culture,
and Catholicism—The Human Rights
Perspective.” He gave a luncheon
presentation at Ave Maria University
in Naples, Florida, on the topic of
“The Legal Philosophy of Francis de
Vitoria.” He also delivered a paper at
the University of Malta Faculty of Law,
International Academy for Study of
the Jurisprudence of the Family, on
the
Johns
case of the United Kingdom
dealing with the religious liberties
of parents and guardians. The paper
will be published in the academy’s
international law journal.
Emily Benfer
was elected to serve on
the board of governors of the Society
of American Law Teachers. She gave
a presentation last summer at the
American Society of Law’s Medicine
and Ethics Health Law Professors
Conference titled “Clinics and Social
Justice.”The talk will be published in
Loyola University Chicago’s
Annals of
Health Law.
She is the 2011 recipient
of the Indiana University School
of Law Alumni Association Early
Achievement Award, the highest
honor bestowed upon an Indiana
University School of Law graduate
who has been in practice for less than
10 years, and has made a significant
contribution of service to the legal
profession and the community. The
award was presented last May.
John Blum
is the 2011 recipient
of the Jay Healey Distinguished
Health Law Teacher Award for his
dedication to the health law field
and for challenging his students and
peers. The American Society of Law,
Medicine, & Ethics (ASLME) presented
Blum with the prestigious award at
the ASLME’s 34th Annual Health Law
Professors Conference held at Loyola
last June. Blum presented his paper
“New Governance and Health Reform”
at Hamline Law School’s program
“Rethinking Regulation.”
John Breen
was an invited speaker
at the symposium“Liberalism,
Constitutionalism, and Christianity,”
hosted by Campbell University School
of Law in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Bruce Boyer
presented “The State
of the ChildWelfare System and
Advocacy for Our Children” at the
Cook County Court Appointed Special
Advocate 25th Anniversary Program
in Chicago in May 2011. Boyer also
filed amicus briefs in
Camreta v.
Greene
in the U.S. Supreme Court on
fifth amendment rights of suspected
victims of child abuse during school-
based interrogations (with Miranda
Johnson), and in Illinois Supreme
Court in
In re Austin M.
on the role of
counsel and ethical and professional
responsibilities of lawyers for children
in juvenile delinquency cases.
Jennifer Brendel
presented
“Incorporating Peer Learning in an
Academic Support Program”
at a Midwest Academic Support
Conference at John Marshall
Law School.
John Bronsteen
presented his
paper “Welfare As Happiness” at a
conference on Happiness, Law &
Policy at St. Louis University School
of Law, as well as at the American
Law and Economics Association
Annual Meeting in Princeton, New
Jersey. He presented his paper
“Well-Being Analysis vs. Cost-Benefit
Analysis” at the Society for Benefit-
Cost Analysis Annual Conference in
Washington, DC, and at the Midwest
Political Science Association Annual
Conference in Chicago. He spoke
on the panel “Criminal Law and the
Behavioral Sciences” at the Law
& Society Annual Meeting in San
Francisco. He presented parts of his
book manuscript “Happiness and
the Law” at a Google-sponsored
conference on innovation at the
University of Illinois at Chicago,
as well as at the Illinois Attorney
General’s Office Program for
Continuing Legal Education. He
presented his paper “Happiness and
Punishment” at Cardozo Law School
in New York. He also served as a panel
moderator at the conferences “Hate
Speech, Incitement, and Genocide,”
“How Democratic Is the Constitution?”
and “The Scandals of Political
Corruption and the Law’s Response,”
all at Loyola University Chicago
School of Law.
Jamie Carey
was honored by
Loyola University Chicago School of
Law with the Francis J. Rooney/ St.
Thomas More Award in recognition
of his continuous and outstanding
loyalty and dedicated service to
the School of Law. The award was
presented to Carey at the School
of Law’s annual Alumni Awards
Luncheon held in October.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 34)
Emily Benfer has joined the board of governors of the Society of American Law Teachers.
Anita Weinberg (foreground, with Mary
Burns) continues publishing her research on
childhood lead poisoning.
SPRING 2012
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LOYOLA LAW
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