Regulatory Bodies,”
Oxford
Handbook of American Health
Law
(forthcoming 2014).
Lea Krivinskas Shepard,
“Seeking
Solutions to Financial History
Discrimination,” 46
Connecticut Law
Review
(2013); and “Toward a Stronger
Financial History Antidiscrimination
Norm,” 53
Boston College Law Review
1695 (2012).
Allen Shoenberger,
“Property
Obligations of a Nation State for
Government Occupation of Private
Property as a Result of Terrorist
Activities,”
International Law Annual
(forthcoming 2014); “The United
States Constitutional History through
the Barristers and Political Theories
of the Middle Temple Inn of Court,”
The Journal Jurisprudence
117 (2013);
“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); and
“Loyola Maintains a Connection to the
Middle Temple Inn of Court,”
Chicago
Daily Law Bulletin
(February 13, 2012).
Barry Sullivan, Cooney &
Conway Chair in Advocacy,
“Book
Reflections: A Book That Shaped
Your World: Charles Dickens,
A
Christmas Carol
,” 50
Alberta Law
Review
934 (2013); “FOIA and the
First Amendment: Representative
Democracy and the People’s Elusive
‘Right to Know,’” 72
Maryland Law
Review
1(2012), reprinted in
First
Amendment Handbook
(2013-14 ed.);
“Thinking, Fast and Slow—A Lawyer’s
Perspective,” 44
Loyola University
Chicago Law Journal
1377 (2013) (with
Murdock); and “Law and Discretion in
the Supreme Court: A Response
to Professor Lubet,” 47
Valparaiso
Law Review
907
(2013).
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. EdwardWhite, 1
Law in
American History
, 48
Tulsa Law Review
187
(2012). Book chapter: “Campus
Antisemitic Speech and the First
Amendment,” in
Global Antisemitism:
A Crisis of Modernity
(Brill Press, 2013).
Spencer Waller,
“Antitrust’s
Democracy Deficit,” 81
Fordham
Law Review
2543 (2013) (with 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 Cross,
Richards, and 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
620 (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 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 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
Emily Benfer
was honored this spring
with the Albert Schweitzer Leadership
Award for her work as founder and
director of the Health Justice Project
at Loyola University Chicago School
of Law, and for the important strides
she and her students have made in
improving the health of low-income
individuals and families in Chicago.
Benfer recently presented “The
Frontlines of Community Health: The
Effect of the Affordable Care Act on
Underserved Communities” at the
Public Interest Law Reporter
Increased
Access to Healthcare Symposium
in Chicago and “Health Justice: An
Equity Approach to the Elimination
of Health Disparities Among Low-
Income and Minority Populations” at
the Poverty Law: Cases, Teaching, and
Scholarship Conference at American
University Washington College of Law
in Washington, DC.
Shelley Dunck
and
Mary Hanisch
presented “Components of a
Successful Practice-Based, Intensive,
Supervised Live-Lawyering
Experience” at the AALS Conference
on Clinical Education in April.
Teresa Frisbie
served on the panel
“Teaching Mediation Advocacy Skills
Inside and Outside the Classroom” at
the ABA Section of Dispute Resolution
Legal Educator’s Colloquium,
where she discussed Loyola’s EEOC
Mediation Advocacy Project. She
also served on the Illinois State Bar
Association webinar panel“Arbitration
Under the Federal Arbitration Act.”
She presented “Practical Applications
of Neuroscience in Mediation and
Negotiation” at the Association of
Conflict Resolution, Chicago Chapter;
“Negotiation Skills” at the Circuit
Court of Cook County, Parentage
and Child Support Court; and “Open
Their Minds, Cool Their Brains: Quick
Mediation Techniques That Turn
Down ‘Fight or Flight’ Hormones” at
the Association of Conflict Resolution,
Chicago Chapter.
James Gathii
recently presented his
paper “Why Have Business Actors
Not Used African Sub-regional Trade
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 26)
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 23)
Dean David Yellen (right) served as a panel moderator at the conference "Sentence Structure: The Elements of Punishment."
Associate Deans James Faught (left) and Michael Kaufman were masters of ceremonies at the Public Interest Law Society Auction.
FACULTY EXCELLENCE
SPRING 2014
25
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LOYOLA LAW