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,
“League Structure and
Stadium Rent Seeking—the Antitrust
Role Reconsidered,” 65
Florida Law
Review
1 (2013) (with Haddock
and Jacobi); “Copyright Trolling,
An Empirical Study,” 100
Iowa Law
Review
1105-1146 (2015); “Promoting
Innovation,” 100
Iowa Law Review
(forthcoming 2015) (with Waller); and
“IP Litigation in US District Courts:
1994 to 2014,” 101
Iowa Law Review
(forthcoming 2015).
Nadia Sawicki,
“Clinicians’
Involvement in Capital Punishment—
Constitutional Implications,” 371
New England Journal of Medicine
103 (2014); “Compelling Images:
The Constitutionality of Emotionally
Persuasive Health Campaigns,”
Maryland Law Review
459 (2014); and
“A New Life for Wrongful Living,” 58
New York Law School Law Review
279
(2014). Book chapter: “Complaints to
Professional and Regulatory Bodies,”
Oxford Handbook of American Health
Law
(forthcoming 2014). Book
chapter: “Complaints to Professional
and Regulatory Bodies,”
Oxford
Handbook of American Health Law
(forthcoming 2015).
Lea Krivinskas Shepard,
“Seeking
Solutions to Financial History
Discrimination,” 46
Connecticut Law
Review
(2013).
Allen Shoenberger,
“Magna
Charta: The Charter of the Forest,
and the Origin of the Jury System,”
Nottingham Law Journal
(forthcoming
2015); “Property Obligations of
a Nation State for Government
Occupation of Private Property
as a Result of Terrorist Activities,”
International Law Annual
(2014);
“George Anastaplo, A Man for All
Seasons,” 45
Loyola University Chicago
Law Journal
926 (2014); and “The
United States Constitutional History
through the Barristers and Political
Theories of the Middle Temple Inn of
Court,”
The Journal Jurisprudence
117 (2013).
Barry Sullivan, Cooney &
Conway Chair in Advocacy,
“Access to Information: Citizenship,
Representative Democracy,
and Catholic Social Thought,” in
Democracy, Culture, Catholicism:
Voices from Four Continents
(
forthcoming 2015); “Interruptions in
Search of a Purpose: Oral Argument
in the Supreme Court, October Terms
1958-60 and 2010-12,”
Utah Law
Review
(with Canty) (forthcoming
2015); “In Memoriam: George
Anastaplo: All Things Are Ready, If
Our Minds Be So,” 45
Loyola University
Chicago Law Journal
916 (2014); “In
This, the Winter of Our Discontent:
Legal Practice, Legal Education, and
the Culture of Distrust,” 62
Buffalo Law
Review
659 (2014) (with Konefsky);
“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,
“Balancing
Free Speech,” 96
Boston University
Law Review
(forthcoming 2016);
“The Incorporated Declaration
of Independence,” 87
Southern
California Law Review
(forthcoming
2016); “Roots of Free Speech and
Contemporary Dilemmas,” 65
Emory
Law Journal
(forthcoming 2015);
“Free Speech Constitutionalism,”
2015
University of Illinois Law
Review
(forthcoming 2015) (lead
article and the subject of online
symposium in
University of Illinois
Law Review
); “The New Privacy on
the Internet,” 48
Wake Forest Law
Review
433 (2014); “Footholds of
Constitutional Interpretation,” 92
Texas Law Review
1593 (2013); “Maxim
Constitutionalism,” 92
Texas Law
Review
1609 (2013) (lead article);
and “Inflammatory Speech: Outrage
versus Intimidation,” 97
Minnesota
Law Review
1145 (2013) (lead article).
Book chapter: “Campus Antisemitic
Speech and the First Amendment,”
Global Antisemitism: A Crisis of
Modernity
(Brill Press, 2013). Book
reviews:
Paine and Jefferson in the Age
of Revolutions
by Simon Newman
and Peter Onuf, 34
Journal of the
Early Republic
669 (2014); and
Scalia:
A Court of One
by Bruce Murphy and
Uncertain Justice: The Roberts Court
and the Constitution
by Laurence Tribe
and Joshua Matz,
Chicago Tribune
,
June 27, 2014.
Spencer Waller,
“Promoting
Innovation,” 100
Iowa Law Review
(forthcoming 2015) (with Sag);
“Criminalizing Cartels: A Global
Trend?”,
Comparative Competition
Law
(forthcoming 2015) (with Shaffer
and Nesbitt); “Progressive Voices
in Antitrust,”
Libre Competencia y
la Sociedad Buena
(forthcoming
2015); “Suing OPEC,”
Antitrust Law
in Perspective
by Gavil, Kovacic, and
Baker (3rd ed. 2015); “Antitrust’s
Democracy Deficit,” 81
Fordham
Law Review
2543 (2013) (with First),
reprinted in
Libre Competencia y la
Sociedad Buena
(forthcoming 2015)
and
Revista da Faculdade de Direito da
Universidade São Judas Tadeu
(2014);
and “The Next Generation of Global
Competition Law,” 1
William E. Kovacic,
an Antitrust Tribute
95 (2013).
David Yellen, Dean,
“The Impact
of Rankings and Rules on Legal
Education Reform,” 45
Connecticut
Law Review
1389 (2013). 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,
“Intentional
Discrimination That Produces
Economic Inequality: Taking
Piketty and Hsu One Step Further,” 64
Emory Law Journal
2085 (2015);
“
Title
VII’s Last Hurrah: Can Discrimination
Be Plausibly Pled?”, 2014
The
University of Chicago Legal Forum
19;
“Hiding the Statute in Plain View:
University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center v. Nassar
,” 14
Nevada
Law Review
705 (2014); “(Re)Booting
the Dismal Science,”
Jotwell
(July
8, 2014); “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); and “Inequality, Individualized
Risk, and Insecurity,” 2013
Wisconsin
Law Review
1.
PRESENTATIONS,
AWARDS, AND
HONORS
Emily Benfer
and
Allyson Gold
were
named 2015 Bellow Scholars by the
Association of American Law Schools
(AALS). The award was presented
during the AALS annual meeting
in Washington, DC, in January. The
award recognizes law school clinical
faculty members who are involved
in anti-poverty work or increasing
access to justice. Benfer is director of
FACULTY EXCELLENCE
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29)
Loyola’s Health Justice Project and
Gold is the Rodin Visiting Clinical
Professor of Law and supervising
attorney for the medical-legal clinic.
John Breen
and coauthor Lee Strang,
University of Toledo College of Law,
recently presented “The Substance
of Things Hoped For: A Prescription
for Catholic Legal Education” at the
Noobaar Conference “Wisdom, Law,
and Lawyers” held at Pepperdine
University School of Law in Malibu,
California. He also presented “Catholic
Legal Theory: Past and Present” this
spring at the Scarpa Conference, “The
Mirror of Justice Project: Catholic
Legal Theory,” held at Villanova
University School of Law.
John Bronsteen
presented
“Happiness and the Law” at the
University of Chicago’s Seminary
Coop in February and at Yale Law
School in April. He presented “Well-
Being and Public Policy” this spring
at the Midwest Political Science
Association Annual Meeting. His
article “Well-Being Analysis vs. Cost-
Benefit Analysis” (with Buccafusco
and Masur) was named one of the
top five environmental law articles of
the year and reprinted in shorter form
in the
Environmental Law and Policy
Annual Review.
John Dehn
presented “The Conflict
of Laws in Armed Conflict and
Wars” at Loyola’s Constitutional Law
Colloquium in November, at the
American Society of International
Law International Law in Domestic
Courts Workshop, Santa Clara
University School of Law, Santa
Clara, California, in December, and
at the Mid-American Jesuit Faculty
Workshop held at Loyola this spring.
James Faught (JD ’76)
served as
the keynote speaker for the annual
honors convocation, “Collegium
Honorum,” at St. Francis de Sales
High School in Toledo, Ohio, where
he graduated in 1967.
Teresa Frisbie
recently presented
“Decision Making in Mediation:
A Closer Look at Some Cognitive
Biases and Discussion of Ways
Lawyers Can Use Decision Science
to Help Parties Avoid Bad Decisions”
at the Circuit Court of Cook County,
Illinois Law Division Mediation
Series; and “Open Their Minds,
Cool Their Brains: Quick Mediation
Techniques That Turn Down ‘Fight or
Flight’ Hormones” at the Association
of Conflict Resolution meeting held
at Loyola University Chicago School
of Law.
James Gathii
presented “Judicial
Activism in Africa’s Trade Judiciaries”
at Harvard Law School’s Institute of
Global Law and Policy Workshop in
Doha, Qatar, in January.
Josie Gough (BA ’74, MEd ’78,
JD ’84)
was selected by the 2015
National Summit of Black Women
Lawyers to receive the Exemplary
Service Award in recognition of
her stellar contributions to the
legal profession. The award was
presented at the 2015 National
Summit Gala in April in Chicago.
Cynthia Ho
participated in the 2015
Works in Progress in Intellectual
Property at the US Patent and
Trademark Office and presented a
paper as an invited faculty speaker
at the Georgia State School of Law
this spring. In addition, she served as
a commentator at bioIP, a new junior
scholar faculty workshop held at
Boston University in May.
Miranda Johnson
jointly led a
conversation series with Pam
Fenning, Loyola University Chicago
School of Education/School
of Psychology, at the National
Association of School Psychologists
(NASP) convention in Orlando,
Florida. The focus of the series was
on collaborative efforts to develop
a model code of conduct to create
more proactive and equitable
discipline codes to be adopted
by districts. They also discussed
creating more proactive codes
intended to prevent unnecessary
school exclusion through
suspension and expulsion.
Lea Krivinskas Shepard organized a program last fall on the impact of forced arbitration.
30
LOYOLA LAW
SPRING 2015
31