Alexander Tsesis,
“The New
Privacy on the Internet,” 48
Wake
Forest Law Review
(forthcoming
2014); “Footholds of Constitutional
Interpretation,” 92
Texas Law
Review
1593 (2013); “Maxim
Constitutionalism,” 92
Texas Law
Review
1609 (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
Contemporary Law,” 112
Columbia
Law Review
1447 (2012); “Self-
Government and the Declaration
of Independence,” 97
Cornell Law
Review
693 (2012) (lead article);
“Congressional Authority to Interpret
the Thirteenth Amendment,” 71
Maryland Law Review
40 (2012); and
“Due Process in Civil Commitments,”
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 Science
Quarterly
511 (2012); and G. Edward
White, 1
Law in American History
,
Tulsa
Law Review
(forthcoming 2013).
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, and 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); and “Access and
Information Remedies in High-Tech
Antitrust,” 8
Journal of Competition
Law and Economics
575 (2012). Book
reviews: Stuart Banner,
The Baseball
Trust: A History of Baseball’s Antitrust
Exemption
, 36
World Competition Law
and Economics Review
(forthcoming
2013);
Private Enforcement of Antitrust
Law in the United States
, 36
World
Competition Law and Economics
Review
347 (2013); and
ABA Section
of Antitrust Law, Market Definition in
Antitrust: Theory and Case Studies,
36
World Competition Law and Economic
Review
186 (2013).
AnitaWeinberg,
“Neglected,
Abused, and Dependent Children—
Dispositions and Permanency,”
Illinois
Juvenile Law and Practice
(2012) (with
Bruce Boyer).
Neil Williams,
“Taking and Perfecting
Security Interests in Collateral
Subject to Specialized Rules: Deposit
Accounts, Commercial Tort Claims,
Intellectual Property,” 10
DePaul
Business and Commercial Law Journal
515 (2012).
David Yellen,
“The Impact of
Rankings and Rules on Legal
Education Reform,” 45
Connecticut
Law Review
1389 (2013); “Current
Crisis Reshapes Legal Education,”
Chicago Lawyer
(September 2012);
and “Advancing Transparency in
Law School Employment 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); and “Why the ABA Is
Resistant to Change,”
Above the Law
(March 7, 2013).
Michael Zimmer,
“Binders Full
of Women and Closing the Gap,”
8
Florida International University
Law Review
541 (2013); “Is the
Antidiscrimination Project Being
Ended?,” 1
Indiana Journal of Law
and Social Equality
1 (2013);
“Inequality, Individualized Risk, and
Insecurity,” 2013
Wisconsin Law Review
1; “North American Border Wars:
The Role of Canadian and American
Scholarship in US Labor Law Reform
Debates,” 30
Hofstra Labor and
Employment Journal
1 (2012) (with
Susan Bisom-Rapp); and “
Wal-Mart v.
Dukes
: Taking the Protection Out of
Protected Classes,” 16
Lewis and Clark
Law Review
409 (2012).
PRESENTATIONS,
AWARDS, AND
HONORS
Robert John Araujo, S.J.,
presented
his paper “Catholic Contributions
to and Critiques of Human Rights
within the United Nations” in Rome
before the annual conference of the
International Catholic Legislators’
Network. The paper will be published
in the proceedings of the conference.
While in Rome, he also spoke before
the Pontifical Council for the Family
on “Totalitarian Democracy and
the Charter of the Rights of the
Family.”This past spring, he delivered
“The Nature of Social Justice” at
Georgetown University’s Spring
McGivney Lecture, and “Rome: The
Essence of Justice—Virtue” at the
Pontifical North American College.
Emily Benfer
was named a Chicago
40 Under 40 Rising Star in July by the
National Law Journal
. She presented
“Access to Health: Public Interest
Response to Social Determinants of
Health,” at the Public Interest Law
Initiative held in Chicago, and
“Health Justice Project: A Model for
Law School Medical-Legal Partnership
Clinics” at the Southern Illinois
University Health Policy Institute
in Carbondale.
John Blum
served as program
moderator for the Executive
Telehealth Roundtable Summit held
in Washington, DC, in September. The
forum explored the implications of
the Affordable Care Act for Telehealth.
John Bronsteen
presented “Well-
Being Analysis vs. Cost-Benefit
Analysis” at the “New Directions in
Welfare: Economics for a Better World”
conference at OECD Headquarters
in Paris and at the symposium
“Happiness and Administrative
Law: Cost-Benefit Analysis vs.
Well-Being Analysis” at Duke Law
School. He also served on the panel
“Theoretical Advances in the Study
of Policy Processes” at the Midwest
Political Science Association Annual
Conference in Chicago.
Bruce Boyer
received a Public
Interest Award from Northwestern
University School of Law in
recognition of his outstanding
work on behalf of children over the
course of his career.
Samuel Brunson
recently presented
“Offshore at Home: The Revenue
Rule and the US as Tax Haven” at the
Law and Society Association Annual
Meeting in Boston, the Eighth Annual
Junior Tax Scholars Workshop in
Miami, and the University of Kentucky
College of Law Developing Ideas
Workshop in Lexington. He also
presented Richard Lavoie’s “The Times
They Are A-Changin’: Do the Occupy
Wall Street Protests Indicate a Wealth
Tax Is Now Possible in America?” at
the Valparaiso University Regional
Faculty Workshop held in Chicago
in February.
John Dehn
participated at a
roundtable discussion, “Cyberwar
and the Rule of Law,” held at the
Center for Ethics and the Rule of
Law, University of Pennsylvania
Law School, Philadelphia. He also
served on the panel “Extrajudicial
and Targeted Killings” at the Harvard
International Law Journal Symposium,
“State Ethics: Controlling the Behavior
of States and Their Partners,” Harvard
Law School; and participated in the
“Debate on Extrajudicial Killing” held
at Fordham Law School in New York.
James Gathii
co-organized and
spoke at the workshop “Sub-
regional Courts in Africa: Comparing
Mandates, Priorities and Objectives”
held this summer at the University
of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg,
South Africa. He presented his paper
“The Future of Legal Education in
Kenya” at the colloquiuma “Kenya’s
Legal Education System—Are We on
the Right Track?” and “Kenya and the
International Legal System—The Past,
Present, and Future” held at Riara Law
School in Nairobi in August. He also
served as commentator at the lecture
by Ali A. Mazrui, Albert Schweitzer
Professor in the Humanities, SUNY
Binghamton, “Half a Century of the
Post-Colonial Judiciary and State-
Formation: The African Experience.”
The lecture was organized by the
Judiciary Training Institute of Kenya
and the University of Nairobi.
Diane Geraghty
was a presenter
at the Inaugural Myanmar National
Workshop on Clinical Legal Education
in Yangon, sponsored by the
United Nations Development
Programme. She also participated
as a faculty member in a clinical
legal education training in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia. She recently
copresented with Anita Weinberg
on the topic “A Child’s Right to
Health—Childhood Lead Poisoning,
and the Role of the International
Child Rights Community” at a
conference held at Yale University
and cosponsored by Distressed
Children & Infants International.
Zelda Harris
recently participated
as an invited faculty lecturer and
judge at the Intensive Trial Advocacy
Program hosted by Benjamin N.
Cardozo School of Law; “Evidentiary
Issues in Cases Involving Domestic
Violence,” hosted by the American
Judges Association online training
module, Williamsburg, Virginia;
the “Enhancing Judicial Skills on
Domestic Violence” conference
hosted by the National Council of
Juvenile and Family Court Judges, San
Francisco; “Trial Advocacy Training for
the ChildWelfare Attorney,” hosted
by the Office of the Public Defender,
Camden, New Jersey; and “Improving
Responses in Domestic Violence
Cases,” hosted by the National Council
of Juvenile and Family Court Judges,
Rockford, Illinois.
Cynthia Ho
recently delivered the
following lectures: “Pharmaceutical
Innovation and Patent Policy
Schemas” at the Intellectual
Property Scholars Conference,
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law;
“Individualized Education: Using
Online Tools and Videos to Reach
all Students” at the Conference for
Law School Computing, Chicago-
Kent College of Law; “Implementing
the Carnegie Apprenticeships of
Knowledge and Practice: A ‘Mystery
Statute’ Approach to Substantive
Knowledge and Lawyering Skills” at
the Hybrid Law Teaching Conference,
Institute for Law Teaching and
Learning, Washburn University
School of Law; “Current Framework
of International Treaties and the
Availability of Generic Drugs” at the
Vector Pharma International Seminar
hosted by the National Association
of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers,
Mexico City; “Cognitive Biases
in Treaty Interpretation and
Negotiation” at the Emerging
Issues in International IP Panel, Law
and Society Association Annual
Conference; “The Perfect Storm:
Cognitive Biases of Global Access
to Medicine” at the International IP
Scholars Conference, University of San
Diego; and “Challenging the Romantic
View of Pharmaceutical Innovation:
The Impact of Cognitive Biases”
at PatCon3, held at Chicago-Kent
College of Law.
Michael Kaufman
delivered bar
examination lectures this summer to
more than 30,000 law students on
the following topics: securities,
corporations, partnership, agency,
federal procedure, and state
procedure and unincorporated
associations. He also created “Law
School Legends” audiotapes on
agency and partnership, as well as
education law. He presented “Reliance
and Causation in Securities Fraud
Litigation” at the Institute for Law
and Economic Policy at Vanderbilt
University’s Law Journal Symposium;
“Early Childhood Education for the
Future” at Loyola’s Early Childhood
Education Conference; “Behavioral
Economics and Investor Protection”
at Loyola University Chicago School
of Law; “Judicial Access Barriers
to Remedies for Securities Fraud
Victims” at the Institute for Law and
Economic Policy conference at Duke
University School of Law; “Summary
Pre-Judgment” at Seattle University
School of Law Symposium; “Piercing
the Corporate Veil and Alternative
Business Organizations” at an MCLE
presentation for the Illinois Attorney
General’s Office; and “Existing and
Emerging Efforts to Remedy K-12
Educational Disparities” at University
of Michigan Law School.
Charles Murdock
presented
“Spotting and Solving Issues with the
‘Closely-held’ Entities” at the Chicago
Bar Association’s “How to Form an
Illinois Business Entity” seminar held
in Chicago in September.
Margaret Moses
served on the
selection committee for the Institute
for Transnational Arbitration to
review and select academic papers
presented at its Winter Forum in
Miami. She gave a presentation
on international arbitration at the
“Legal Issues for Museum Attorneys”
conference held in Chicago in April.
She delivered the keynote address,
“Ethics in International Arbitration:
Traps for the Unwary,” at the Loyola
University Chicago International
Law Review Symposium. The
article was published in the Loyola
University Chicago Law Journal’s
Fall/Winter 2012 issue. Moses also
gave a presentation at the Willem
C. Vis International Commercial
Arbitration Moot in Vienna on
teaching materials prepared by the
Institute for Transnational Arbitration.
This past summer, she served as a
guest lecturer at the University of
International Relations in Beijing,
and taught a course on international
commercial arbitration in Loyola’s
Study Law Abroad program in Beijing.
Moses drafted an arbitration award
for a book based on problems that
were the focus of the Vis competition.
Eighteen arbitrators from around
the world were selected to draft the
awards in panels of three. The book,
Danubia Files
, which was published
in 2013, received a favorable review
in
Asian Dispute Review
, noting that
the featured awards are written by
“18 arbitral luminaries.”Moses serves
as a board member of the Vis East
Foundation, which is the organization
responsible for the Vis competition in
Hong Kong.
Nanette Norton
was a copresenter
at the West LegalEdcenter.com
webinars “Treaties: How to Use for
International Trademark Filings” and
“Getting through a Trademark Office–
Anywhere in the World.”
Anne-Marie Rhodes
presented
“NotarizedWills” at the inaugural
Trusts and Estates Critical Legal
Scholars symposium and “Wills, Trusts,
and Estates Meets Gender, Race, and
Class” at Oklahoma City University
School of Law. She delivered “How
Art Transforms Law: FromWhistler to
Rauschenberg” at the 2013 Helen Farr
Sloan Legacy Society Lecture held at
the Delaware Art Museum.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 28)
FACULTY EXCELLENCE
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 25)
FALL 2013
27
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LOYOLA LAW