Timothy K. ArmstrongAssistant Professor of Law
Tim’s article, Chevron Deference and Agency Self-Interest, 13 Cornell J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 203 (2004), was cited in Robert L. Glicksman & Richard E. Levy, Ordering State-Federal Relations through Federal Preemption Doctrine: A Collective Action Perspective on Ceiling Preemption by Federal Environmental Regulation: The Case of Global Climate Change, 102 Nw. U.L. Rev. 579 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Armstrong
Lin (Lynn) Bai
Assistant Professor of Law
Lynn’s article, There are Plaintiffs and... There are Plaintiffs: An Empirical Analysis of Securities Class Action Settlements (with James D. Cox & Randall S. Thomas), was cited in Amanda Rose, Reforming Securities Litigation Reform: Restructuring the Relationship between Public and Private Enforcement of Rule 10b-5, 108 Colum. L. Rev. 1301 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile
of Professor Bai
Lou Bilionis
Dean and Nippert Professor of Law
Lou participated in a panel discussion on The Presidency and the Federal Courts: Historical Reflections hosted by the Cincinnati Chapter of the Federalist Society at its program on The Presidency and the Courts. Other speakers included President George W. Bush, former Attorney General Edwin Meese III, and former Solicitor General Paul Clement.
Lou’s article, Conservative Reformation, Popularization, and the Lessons of Reading Criminal Justice as Constitutional Law, 52 UCLA L. Rev. 979 (2005), was cited in Stephen W. Gard, Bearing False Witness: Perjured Affidavits and the Fourth Amendment, 41 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 445 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Dean Bilionis
Barbara Black
Charles Hartsock Professor of Law and
Director, Corporate Law Center
Barbara co-chaired the 10th Annual Securities Law Seminar, an all-day program that is part of the Annual Meeting of the Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association (PIABA), in Colorado Springs. She presented Securities Law Round-Up and Legal Theories for Supporting Customers’ Claims of Damages.
Barbara’s research on the satisfaction rate for investors who use an arbitration process to settle claims against the securities industry was quoted in Michael Maiello, Don’t Cry for Justice, Forbes.com.
Two of Barbara’s articles were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Black
A. Christopher Bryant
Professor of Law
Chris’s article, Remanding to Congress: The Supreme Court's New "On the Record" Constitutional Review of Federal Statutes, 86 Cornell L. Rev. 328 (2001) (with Timothy J. Simeone), was cited in Gillian E. Metzger, Administrative Law as the New Federalism, 57 Duke L.J. 2023 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Bryant
Paul L. Caron
Associate Dean of Faculty and
Charles Hartsock Professor of Law
Paul was quoted in various media outlets in connection with tax issues surrounding Republican Vice-Presidential candidate Sarah Palin:
Paul also was quoted in these other media reports:
Paul published several issues of his Tax Law Abstracts e-journals:
Two of Paul’s articles were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Caron
Jacob Katz Cogan
Assistant Professor of Law
Jacob Cogan has signed a book contract with Martinus Nijhoff Publishers for Looking to the Future: Essays in Honor of W. Michael Reisman (with Mahnoush H. Arsanjani, Robert D. Sloane, & Siegfried Wiessner).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Cogan
Margaret Drew
Associate Professor of Clinical Law and Director, Domestic Violence and Civil Protection Order Clinic
Margaret attended the annual Friends of Women’s Studies reception hosted by Melody Sawyer Richardson. She was a guest speaker on Domestic Violence Dynamics at Roger Williams School of Law.
Margaret presented Domestic Violence and the Collaborative Process at the annual meeting of the International Association of Collaborative Professionals in New Orleans.
The Domestic Violence and Civil Protection Order Clinic signed as amicus to a brief filed with the Inter-American Human Rights Commission supporting the petitioner in Jessica Gonzales v. United States. Margaret participated in a roundtable discussion held by Ms. Lenahan (formerly Gonzales) and her attorneys on next steps in addressing domestic violence as a human rights issue.
Margaret participated in a panel presentation to the Hamilton County Domestic Violence Coordinating Council on Firearms and Domestic Violence. Her article, Lawyer Malpractice and Domestic Violence: Are We Revictimizing Our Clients?, 39 Fam. L.Q. 7 (2005), was cited in Linda D. Elrod, Child Custody Practice & Procedure (Clark Boardman Callaghan, 2008 Supp.).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Drew
Mark A. Godsey
Professor of Law and Faculty Director, Lois and Richard Rosenthal Institute for Justice, Ohio Innocence Project
Mark spoke at the Cardiff University School of Law, in Cardiff, Wales, at the UK Innocence Network's annual conference. He spoke on the innocence movement in the U.S., the similarities and differences between post-conviction innocence law in the U.S. and U.K., and also on some of his scholarship regarding the causes of wrongful conviction.
Mark was quoted in DNA Test Doesn't Help Rapist; Results Show He's Likely the Man Who Attacked Toledo Woman in '92, Columbus Dispatch, Oct. 18, 2008, at 01B.
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Godsey
Lois and Richard Rosenthal Institute for Justice/Ohio Innocence Project
Emily Houh
Gustavus Henry Wald Professor of Law and Contracts
The Freedom Center Journal, which is advised by Emily, Kristin Kalsem and Verna Williams, held a discussion of Pamela Bridgewater's article, Connectedness and Closeted Questions: The Use of History in Developing Feminist Legal Theory, dealing with reproductive rights and the intersection of race, class, and gender.
Emily published Cracking the Egg: Which Came First--stigma or Affirmative Action?, 96 Cal. L. Rev. 1299 (2008) (with Angela Onwuachi-Willig & Mary Campbell). The article was discussed in an article in the Iowa Press-Citizen. (Her co-authors Angela Onwuachi-Willig and Mary Campbell are on the University of Iowa faculty).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Houh
Ann Hubbard
Professor of Law
Ann’s article, Improving the Fitness Inquiry of the North Carolina Bar Application, 81 N.C.L.Rev. 2179 (2003), was cited in Page Thead Pulliam, Lawyer Depression: Taking a Closer Look at First-Time Ethics Offenders, 32 J. Legal Prof. 289 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Hubbard
Kristin Kalsem
Professor of Law
The Freedom Center Journal, which is advised by Kristin, Verna Williams and Emily Houh, held a discussion of Pamela Bridgewater's article, Connectedness and Closeted Questions: The Use of History in Developing Feminist Legal Theory, dealing with reproductive rights and intersection of race, class, and gender.
Kristin's article, Looking for the Law in All the 'Wrong' Places: Outlaw Texas and Early Women's Advocacy", 13 S. Cal. Rev. Law & Women's Stud. 273 (2004), was cited in Renee Newman Knake, Beyond Atticus Finch; Lessons on Ethics and Morality from Lawyers and Judges in Postcolonial Literature, 32 J. Legal Prof. 37 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Kalsem
Bert B. Lockwood
Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Director, Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights
The Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights awarded the William J. Butler Human Rights Medal to three lawyers who defended the detainees being held at Guantánamo Bay on suspicion of involvement with terrorism. See Guantanamo Detainee Defenders to Receive Top Urban Morgan Honor.
Bert’s article, The United Nations Charter and United States Civil Rights Litigation, 1946-1955, 69 Iowa L. Rev. 901 (1984), was cited in Judith Resnik, Joshua Civin, & Joseph Frueh, Ratifying Kyoto at the Local Level: Sovereigntism, Federalism, and Translocal Organizations of Government Actors (TOGAS), 50 Ariz. L. Rev. 709 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Lockwood
Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights
S. Elizabeth Malloy
Andrew Katsanis Professor of Law
Betsy’s article, Recalibrating the Cost of Harm Advocacy Speech: Getting beyond Brandenburg, 42 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1165 (2000) (with Ronald J. Krotoszynski), was cited in Steven Penaro, Reconciling Morse with Brandenburg, 77 Fordham L. Rev. 251 (2008).
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Malloy
James B. Helmer, Jr. Professor of Law
Mayor Mallory appointed Brad to the Green Cincinnati Steering Committee. Several of Brad’s articles were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Mank
Douglas Mossman
Administrative Director, Glenn M. Weaver Institute of Law and Psychiatry
Douglas published, Going Outside Your Area of Expertise: How Far Is Too Far?, Current Psychiatry 2008;7(10):53-56 (with Christina G. Weston, MD). He presented Psychological Tests in CST Assessments: Useful or Superfluous? (with G. Sokolov & P. Zapf), and Adjudicative Competence: A Primer on Difficult Cases (with A. T. Nemoianu, C. A. Martone, R. Wettstein, & L. M. Chism) at the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law in Seattle.
Several of Douglas’s articles were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Mossman
Michael E. Solimine
Donald P. Klekamp Professor of Law
Michael was a signatory to an amicus curiae brief filed by federal procedure scholars in a case to be decided in the 2008 Term by the U.S. Supreme Court, Philip Morris USA Inc. v. Williams, No. 07-1216. Several of his articles were cited.
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Solimine
Adam Steinman
Associate Professor of Law
Adam’s forthcoming essay, An Ounce of Prevention: Solving Some Unforeseen Problems with the Proposed Amendments to Rule 56 and the Federal Summary Judgment Process, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. Colloquy 230 (Nov. 2008), was featured on three popular legal blogs:
Several of Adam’s articles were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Steinman
Joseph P. Tomain
Dean Emeritus and the Wilbert and Helen Ziegler Professor of Law
Several of Joe’s publications were cited:
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Tomain
Verna Williams
Professor of Law
The Freedom Center Journal, which is advised by Verna, Kristin Kalsem, and Emily Houh, held a discussion of Pamela Bridgewater's article, Connectedness and Closeted Questions: The Use of History in Developing Feminist Legal Theory, dealing with reproductive rights and the intersection of race, class, and gender.
Additional Links:
Profile of Professor Wuerth
Faculty News is edited by Paul
L. Caron, Associate Dean of Faculty and Charles Hartsock Professor of Law.
Back issues can be accessed from the Faculty News Archive.