The faculty produced substantial research and scholarship over the last year. Here is a select guide to their work, on subjects ranging from asbestos litigation to venture capital.

BARBARA ALLEN BABCOCK

Judge John Crown Professor of Law

BOOKS: Civil Procedure: Cases and Problems, 2d edition, with Toni M. Massaro, Aspen Publishers, 2001

LECTURES “Inventing the Public Defender: Trial Stories,” Arthur W Fiske Memorial Lecture, Case Western Reserve University School of Law (April 4, 2002)

 

JOSEPH BANKMAN

Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business

BOOKS: Federal Income Tax: Examples and Explanations, 3d edition, with Thomas D. Griffith and Katherine Pratt, Aspen Publishers, 2002 

ARTICLES/CHAPTERS REPORTS Supplement to casebook, Federal Income Taxation, with William A. Klein and Daniel N. Shaviro, Panel Publishing, 2002 • “INDOPCO: What Went Wrong in the Capitalization v. Deduction Debate?” in Tax Stories, Paul L. Caron, editor, Foundation Press (forthcoming 2002) • “Insider Trading in Stock Substitutes,” with Ian Ayres, 54 Stanford Law Review 235 (2001)· “The Venture Capital Investment Bust: Did Agency Costs Play a Role? Was It Something Lawyers Helped Structure?” with Marcus Cole, 77 Chicago-Kent Law Review 211 (2001) • “Modeling the Tax Shelter World,” 55 ‘Tax Law Review 455 (2002) (Commentary)

 

R. RICHARD BANKS

Associate Professor of Law

ARTICLES: “Race-Based Suspect Selection and Color Blind Equal Protection Doctrine and Discourse,” 48 UCLA Law Review 1075 (2001) • “Meritocratic Values and Racial Outcomes: Defending Class-Based College Admissions,” 79 North Carolina Law Review 1029 (2001)

 

JOHN H. BARTON

George E. Osborne Professor of Law

ARTICLES:  “Antitrust Treatment of Oligopolies with Mutually Blocking Patent Portfolios,” 69 Antitrust Law Journal 851 (2002) • “Research-tool Patents: Issues for Health in the Developing World,” 80 Bulletin of the World Health Organization 121 (2002) • “Environmental Regulation for Agriculture: Towards a Framework to Support Sustainable Intensive Agriculture,” with David Adelman, 21 Stanford Environmental Law Journal 3 (2002) • “The Economics ofTRIPS: International Trade in Information-Intensive Products,” 33 George Washington International Law Review 473 (2001) 

OF NOTE: Chairman, UK Commission on International Property Rights [see story p. 28]

 

BERNARD S. BLACK

Professor of Law

BOOKS· A Guide to the Russian Law on Joint Stock Companies, 2d edition with Reinier Kraakman, Anna Tarassova, and Vasilisa Strizh, Kluwer Law International, (forthcoming 2003) • The Law and Finance of Corporate Acquisitions, 3d edition, with Robert Daines and Ronald Gilson, Foundation Press (forthcoming 2003) 

ARTICLES/CHAPTERS/REPORTS: “Privatization: Institutional Prerequisites for Transition (A Case Study of Russia),” with Anna Tarassova, in The Ecology ofCorporate Governance: The East Asian Experience in Context, Vol. II, Thomas Heller and Lawrence Liu, editors (forthcoming 2003) • “Delaware’s Takeover Law: The Uncertain Search for Hidden Value,” with Reinier Kraakman, 96 Northwestern University Law Review 521 (2002) • “The Non-Correlation Between Board Independence and Long-Term Firm Performance,” with Sanjai Bhagat, 27 Journal ofCorporation Law 231 (2002) • “The Legal and Institutional Preconditions for Strong Securities Markets,” 48 UCLA Law Review 781 (2001) • “Corporate Governance in Korea at the Millennium: Enhancing International Competitiveness,” report to the Korean Ministry ofJustice (May 2000), 26 Journal ofCorporation Law 537 (2001) • “The Corporate Governance Behavior and Market Value of Russian Firms,” 2 Emerging Markets Review 89 (2001) • “Does Corporate Governance Matter? A Crude Test Using Russian Data,”149 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 2131 (2001) • “The Core Fiduciary Duties of Outside Directors,” Asia Business Law Review 3 (July 2001)

 

GERHARD CASPER

Stanford University President Emeritus and Professor of Law

BOOKS: Futuro da Universidade, with Wolfgang Iser, Rio de Janeiro: Editora da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, 2002 

ARTICLES: “Die Karlsruher Republik,” Zeitschrift fÜr Rechtspolitik, 214 (May 2002), translation as “The Karlsruhe Republic,” appeared in 2 German Law Journal (December 1, 2001) • “Die Idee einer Universität,” Jahrbuch 2000/2001, Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (2002) 

KEYNOTE ADDRESSES: “Four Essential Qualities of the Successful Research University,” Chinese-Foreign University Presidents Forum, Beijing, China Ouly 24, 2002) • “Die Karlsruher Republik,” State Ceremony Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal Constitutional Court), Karlsruhe, Germany (September 28,2001)

 

WILLIAM COHEN

C. Wendell and Edith M. Carlsmith Professor of Law, Emeritus

BOOKS: Constitutional Law: Civil Liberty and Individual Rights, 5th edition, with David J. Danelski, Foundation Press, 2002 • Constitutional Protection of Expression and Conscience: The First Amendment, Foundation Press, 2002

G. MARCUS COLE

Associate Professor of Law

ARTICLES: “Delaware Is Not a State: Are We Witnessing Jurisdictional Competition in Bankruptcy?” 55 vanderbilt Law Review (forthcoming November 2002) • “Limiting Liability Through Bankruptcy,” 70 University ofCincinnati Law Review (forthcoming Summer 2002) • “A Modest Proposal for Bankruptcy Reform,” 5 The Green Bag 269 (2002) • “Discourse in the Garden of Good and Evil,” 37 Journal ofBlacks in Higher Education (Fall 2002) • “The Venture Capital Investment Bust: Did Agency Costs Play a Role? Was It Something Lawyers Helped Structure?” with Joseph Bankman, 77 Chicago-Kent Law Review 211 (2001)

 

RICHARD CRASWELL

William F. Baxter-Visa International Professor of Law

ARTICLES: “In That Case, What Is the Question? Economics and the Demands of Contract Theory,” 112 Yale Law Journal (forthcoming December 2002) • “Kaplow and Shavell on the Content of Fairness,” Journal ofLegal Studies (forthcoming 2002) • “How We Got This Way: Further Thoughts on Fuller and Perdue,” Issues in Legal Scholarship (2001)

 

MARIANO-FLORENTINO CUELLAR

Assistant Professor of Law

BOOK CHAPTERS: “Past as Prologue: International Aviation Security Treaties as Precedents for International Cooperation Against Cyber Terrorism and Cyber Crimes,” in The Transnational Dimension of CyberCrime and Terrorism 91, Abraham D. Sofaer and Seymour E. Goodman, editors, Hoover Institution Press, 2001

 

MICHELE LANDIS DAUBER

Assistant Professor of Law

BOOKS: Helping Ourselves: Disaster Relief And the Origins of the American Welfare State, University of Chicago Press (forthcoming)

 

JOHN J. DONOHUE III

William H. Neukom Professor of Law and Academic Associate Dean for Research

BOOKS: Foundations of Employment Discrimination Law, 2d edition, Foundation Press (forthcoming) 

ARTICLES: “The Search for Truth: In Appreciation ofJames]. Heckman,” 27 Law and Social Inquiry 23 (2002) • “The Schooling of Southern Blacks: The Roles of Social Activism and Private Philanthropy, 1910-1960” with James IIeckman and Petra Todd, Quarterly Journal of Economics 225 (February 2002) • “The Impact of Race on Policing and Arrests,” with Steven Levitt, XLIVJournal ofLaw and Economics 367 (October 2001)

 

GEORGE FISHER

Professor of Law

BOOKS: Evidence, Foundation Press, 2002 • Plea Bargaining’s Triumph: A History of Plea Bargaining in America, Stanford University Press (forthcoming February 2003)

 

RICHARD THOMPSON FORD

Professor of Law

BOOKS: Local Government Law, 3d edition, with Gerald Frug’ and David Barron,West Group, 2001

 

BARBARA H. FRIED

Professor of Law and Deane E Johnson Faculty Scholar

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Proportionate Taxation as a Fair Division of the Social Surplus: The Strange Career of an Idea,” Economics and Philosophy (forthcoming 2002) • “IfYou Don’t Like It, Leave It: The Construction of Exit Options in Social Contractarian Arguments,” Philosophy & Public Affairs (forthcoming 2002) • “Robert Hale,” Routledge Encyclopedia ofPhilosophy (2001) • “Why Proportionate Taxation?” in Tax Justice Reconsidered: The Moral and Ethical Bases of Taxation, Joseph J. Thorndike and Dennis]. Ventry, Jr., editors, Urban Institute Press (forthcoming 2002)

 

LAWRENCE M. FRIEDMAN

Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law

BOOKS: American Law in the Twentieth Century, Yale University Press, 2002 [see excerpt, p. 36] • Law in America: A Short History, Random House, 2002

 

RONALD J. GILSON

Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Engineering Venture Capital Markets: Lessons from the American Experience,” Stanford Law Review (forthcoming), reprinted in Global Markets, Local Institutions, C. Milhaupt, editor (forthcoming) • “Catalyzing Corporate Governance: The Evolution of the American System in the 1980s,” in The Ecology of Corporate Governance: The East Asian Experience in Context, Vol. II, Thomas Heller and Lawrence Liu, editors (forthcoming 2003) • “Understanding Venture Capital Structure: A Tax Explanation for Convertible Preferred Stock,” with D. Schizer, Harvard Law Review (forthcoming) • “Lipton & Rowe’s Apologia for Delaware: A Short Reply,” 27 Delaware Journal ofCorporate Law (forthcoming) • “Globalization of Corporate Governance: Convergence of Form or Function,” 49 American Journal ofComparative Law 329 (2001) • “Sales and Elections as Methods for Transferring Corporate Control,” .Journal ofLaw and Theory (2001) • “Unocal Fifteen Years Later,” 26 Delaware .Journal of Corporate Law 491 (2001)

 

PAUL GOLDSTEIN

Stella W and Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law

BOOKS: Copyright, Patent, Trademark and Related State Doctrines: Cases and Materials on Intellectual Property Law, 5th edition, Foundation Press, 2002 • Copyright, 2002 Supplement, Aspen Law & Business (2001) • Arabic translation of Copyright’s Highway (Hill & Wang, 1994) 

BOOK CHAPTERS: “U.S. Copyright Law” in the multi-volume German copyright treatise, Quellen des Urheberrechts [Sources ofCopyright}, Metzner • “The Norms of Author’s Right,” in Copyright: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow in GRUR International, Verlag C.H. Beck (2002) 

IN COURT: Coauthored amicus brief for US. Supreme Court Case (co-counsel for composers and music publishers), Eldred v. Ashcroft [see story, p. 22]

 

WILLIAM B. GOULD IV

Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus

BOOKS: A Primer on American Labor Law, 4th edition, MIT Press (forthcoming 2003) • Diary of a Contraband: The Civil War Passage of a Black Sailor, Stanford University Press (Fall 2002) • Editing with Robert Flanagan, compendium of papers presented at the Conference on International Labor Standards (organized by Gould and Flanagan), Stanford University Press (forthcoming 2003) 

ARTICLES: “Labor Law in a Global Economy: The Uneasy Case for International Labor Standards,” Nebraska Law Review (forthcoming)

 

HENRY T. GREELY

C. Wendell and Edith M. Carkmith Professor of Law

BOOKS: Cloning Californians?, principal author, issued by California Advisory Committee on Human Cloning, 2002 

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Genome Research and Minorities,” in Pharmacogenomics in Practice: Social, Ethical, and Clinical Dimensions, Rothstein, editor (forthcoming 2002) • “Cloning and Government Regulation,” Hastings Law Journal (forthcoming 2002) • “Neuroethics?” Health Law News (forthcoming, Sununer 2002) • “Ethical Issues in the ‘New Genetics’,” in 7 The International Encyclopedia ofSocial and Behavioral Sciences 4762, Elsevier, 2001 • “Ethical Issues in Human Population Genetics,” 35 The Annual Review ofGenetics 785 (2001) • “Pharmacogenomics: Promise, Prospects, and Potential Problems,” 9 Medical Ethics, 1 (Winter 2002)

 

THOMAS C. GREY

Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law

LECTURES: “Judicial Review and Legal Functionalism,” Wake Forest Law School, conference celebrating the 200th anniversary ofMarbury v. Madison (forthcoming October 2002) • “The New Formalism,” Lockhart Lecture at the University ofMinnesota Law School, October 2001 [forthcoming in Minnesota Law Review]

 

JOSEPH A. GRUNDFEST

W A. Franke Professor of Law and Business

ARTICLES :”When Does -A~. Insider Selling Support a ‘Strong Inference’ of Fraud?” with Paul A. Griffin, Asian Journal ofFinance and Accounting (forthcoming 2002) • “Statutes with Multiple Personality Disorders: The Value ofAmbiguity in Statutory Design and Interpretation,” with A.c. Pritchard, 54 Stanford Law Review 627 (2002) • “More Questions Than Answers and a Friendly Wager: Observations on the Third Circuit Task Force Report on the Selection of Class Counsel,” 74 Temple Law Review 821 (Winter 2001) • “The Future of United States Securities Regulations: An Essay on Regulations in an Age of Uncertainty,” 75 St. John~f Law Review 83 (Winter 2001) [see interview, p. 12]

 

THOMAS C. HELLER

Lewis Talbot and Nadine Hearn Shelton Professor of International Legal Studies

BOOKS: The Ecology of Corporate Governance: The East Asian Experience in Context, Vol. II, editor, with Lawrence Liu (forthcoming 2003) 

BOOK CHAPTER:. “Lawyers and Political Scientists: How Much Common Ground?” in The Law of Common Goods, Engel and Heritier, editors, Max Planck Center, Bonn (Fall 2002) • “Sovereignty: The Practitioners’ Perspective,” with Abraham Sofaer, in Problematic Sovereignty, Steven Krasner, editor, Columbia University Press (2001) • “Change and Convergence: Is American Immigration Still Exceptional?” in Citizenship in a Global World, Atsushi Kondo, editor, Palgrave (2001)

 

DEBORAH R. HENSLER

Judge John W Ford Professor of Dispute Resolution

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS/REPORTS:  “As Time Goes By: Asbestos Litigation After Amchem and Ortiz,” 80 Texas Law Review 1899 (2002) • “Patients in Conflict with Managed Care: A Profile of Appeals in Two HMOs,” with Carole Gresenz, David Studdert, and Nancy Campbell, 21 Health Affair 189 (2002) • “Suppose It’s Not True: Challenging Mediation Ideology,” University ofMississippi Journal ofDispute Resolution 81 (2002) • “The New Social Policy Torts: Litigation as a Legislative Strategy-Preliminary Thoughts on a New Research Project,” 51 De Paul Law Review (2001) • “The Role of Multi-Districting in Mass Tort Litigation: An Empirical Investigation,” 31 Seton Hall Law Review 883 (2001) • “Revisiting the Monster: New Myths and Realities of Class Action and Other Large-Scale Litigation,” 11 Duke Journal ofComparative and International Law 179 (2001) • “Beyond ‘ItJust Ain’t Worth It’: Alternative Strategies for Damage Class Action Reform,” with Thomas Rowe, 64 Law & Contemporary Problems 137 (2001) • “In Search of ‘Good Mediation’: Rhetoric, Practice and Empiricism,” in Handbook ofJustice Research in Law, Joseph Sanders and V Lee Hamilton, editors, Kluwer Academic/Plenum (2001) • Asbestos Litigation in the U.S.: A New Look at an Old Issue, with Stephen Carroll, Michelle White, and Jennifer Gross, RAND (2001)

 

PAMELA S. KARLAN

Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law

BOOKS: 2002 supplement to Civil Rights Actions: Enforcing the Constitution, with John C. Jeffries, Jr., Peter W Low, and George A. Rutherglen, Foundation Press, 2002 • 2001 and 2002 supplements to Constitutional Law, 4th edition, with Geoffrey R. Stone, Louis M. Seidman, Cass R. Sunstein, and Mark V Tushnet, Foundation Press (2002) • The Law of Democracy, revised 2d edition, with Samuel Issacharoff and Richard H. Pildes, Foundation Press (2002) 

ARTICLES: “Disarming the Private Attorney General,” University ofIllinois Law Review, Baum Lecture (forthcoming 2002) • “Erasing the Spring: Strict Scrutiny and Affirmative Action After the Redistricting Cases,” 43 William & Mary Law Review 1569, Cutler Lecture (2002) • “Equal Protection, Due Process, and the Stereoscopic Fourteenth Amendment,” McGeorge Law Review (forthcoming 2002) • “Exit Strategies in Constitutional Law: Lessons for Getting the Least Dangerous Branch Out of the Political Thicket,” 82 Boston University Law Review 669, Moffett Lecture (2002) • “Nothing Personal: The Evolution of the Newest Equal Protection from Shaw v. Reno to Bush v. Gore,” 79 North Carolina Law Review 1346 (2001) • “Unduly Partial: The Supreme Court and the Fourteenth Amendment in Bush v. Gore,” 29 Florida State University Law Review 589 (2001) • “When Freedom Isn’t Free: The Costs ofJudicial Independence in Bush v. Gore,” Ohio State Law Journal (forthcoming 2002) 

IN COURT: Warner v. West, before the Virginia Supreme Court (counsel for Governor Mark Warner) • Branch v. Smith (counsel for voters in Mississippi)

 

MARK G. KELMAN

William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS’ “Problematic Perhaps, But Not Irrational,” 54 Stanford Law Review 101 (2002) • “Ideology and Entitlement,” with Gillian Lester, in Left Lep;alism/Left Critique, Wendy Brown and Janet Halley, editors, Duke University Press (forthcoming) • “Behaviorist Gains and Behaviorist Perils,” Northwestern University Law Review (forthcoming)

 

MICHAEL KLAUSNER

Professor of Law and Bernard D. Bergreen Faculty Scholar

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Institutional Shareholders’ Split Personality on Corporate Governance: Active in Proxies, Passive in IPOs,” 28 Directorship January 2002) • “What Economists Have Taught Us About Venture Capital,” with Kate Litvak in Bridging the Entrepreneurial Finance Gap: Linking Governance with Regulatory Policy, Michael]. Whincop, editor, Ashgate (2001) • “Do IPO Charters Maximize Firm Value? An Empirical Study of Antitakeover Protection in IPOs,” with Robert Daines, 17 Journal ofLaw, Economics & Organization 83 (2001)

 

WILLIAM KOSKI

Associate Professor of Law (Teaching)

PUBLICATIONS. “Educational Opportunity and Accountability in an Era of Standards-Based School Reform,” 12 Stanford Law & Policy Review 301 (2001) 

IN COURT: Emma C. v. Eastin, C96-4179, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16099 (co-counsel for parents of children with special needs who are suing the state of California and Ravenswood School District)

 

LAWRENCE LESSIG

 Professor of Law 

BOOKS: The Future ofIdeas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World, Random House, 2001 

ARTICLES: “Privacy and Attention Span,” 89 Georgetown Law .Journal 2063 (2001) • “Copyright’s First Amendment,” 48 UCLA Law Review 1057 (2001) • “Architecting Innovation,” 49 Drake Law Review 397 (2001) • “The Internet Under Siege,” Foreign Policy (November 1, 2001) 

LECTURES: “Code as Law in Cyberspace,” The Fate of Law and Ethics in Information Society, National Program for Information technology and Law, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (June 2002) • “The Creative Commons,” Dunwody Distinguished Lecture, University of Florida Levin College of Law (April 2002) • Philip A. Hart Memorial Lecture, Georgetown University Law Center (April 2002) • “Innovating Copyright,” Tenzer Distinguished Lecture in Intellectual Property at Cardozo University (February 2002) 

IN COURT. Eldred v. Ashcroft (lead counsel for Eric Eldred) [see story, p. 22]

 

MIGUEL A. MENDEZ

Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law

BOOKS. Evidence:The California Code and the Federal Rules, 3d edition, West Group (forthcoming 2003) ARTICLES: “Solving California’s Intoxication Riddle,” 13:2 Stanford Law & Policy Review 211 (2002) • “Toward a Statistical Profile of Latina/os in the Legal Profession,” 13 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal 59 (Fall 2002)

 

JOHN HENRY MERRYMAN

Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law, Emeritus

BOOKS: Law, Ethics and the VisualArts, 4th edition, with Albert E. Elsen (forthcoming) ARTICLES· “Cultural Property, International Trade, and Human Rights,” Occasional Papers in Intellectual Property from Benjamin N. Cardozo School ofLaw, Number 9 (2002)

 

A. MITCHELL POLINSKY

Josephine Scott Crocker Professor of Law and Economics

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Corruption and Optimal Law Enforcement,” with Steven Shavell, 81 Journal ofPublic Economics 1 July 2001) • “Law: Economics ofIts Public Enforcement,” with Steven Shavell, in 12 International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences 8510, Elsevier (2001) • “Aligning the Interests ofLawyers and Clients,” with Daniel L. Rubinfeld, American Law and Economics Review (forthcoming) • “A Note on Settlements Under the Contingent Fee Method ofCompensating Lawyers,” with Daniel L. Rubinfeld, International Review ofLaw and Economics (forthcoming)

 

ROBERT L. RABIN

A. Calder Mackay Professor of Law

BOOKS: Regulating Tobacco, with Stephen Sugarman, Oxford University Press, 2001 

ARTICLES: “The Tobacco Litigation: A tentative Assessment,” 51 DePaul Law Review 331 (2001) • “Indeterminate Future Harm in the Context of September 11,” 88 Virginia Law Review (2002) • “Achieving Fairness in Compensating Victims of September 11,” Cleveland State Law Review (2002) • “The Torts History Scholarship of Gary Schwartz: A Commentary,” 50 UCLA Law Review (2002) • “The Fault of Falling Short: A Comment,” 3 Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2002) 

LECTURES: “Achieving Fairness in Compensating Victims of September 11,” Principal Lecture (also gave two others on aspects of tobacco regulation), as Visiting Scholar, Cleveland Marshall College of Law (March 2002)

 

MARGARET JANE RADIN

Wm. Benjamin Scott and Luna M. Scott Professor of Law

BOOKS: Internet Commerce: Doing Business in the Digital Era, with John Rothchild and Gregory Silverman, Foundation Press (forthcoming 2002) 

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Can the Rule ofLaw Survive Bush v. Gore?” in Bush v. Gore: The Question of Legitimacy, Bruce Ackerman, editor, Yale University Press (2002) • “Online Standardization and the Integration ofText and Machine,” 70 Fordham LawJournal 1125 (2002) • “Collllllodification in the Computerized World,” in a volume edited by Neil Netanel and Niva Elkin-Koren, Kluwer International (2001) • “Response: Persistent Perplexities,” 11 Kennedy Institute ofEthics Journal 305 (2001)

 

DEBORAH L. RHODE

Ernest W McFarland Professor of Law

BOOKS: Professional Responsibility and Regulation, with Geoffrey Hazard, Jr., Foundation Press, 2002 • The Difference Difference Makes: Women and Leadership, editor, Stanford University Press (forthcoming 2003) • Access to Justice, Oxford University Press (forthcoming) • Gender and Law: Theory, Doctrine and Commentary, with Katharine T. Bartlett and Angela P. Harris, Aspen, 2002 • Legal Ethics, 3d edition, with David Luban, Foundation Press, 2001 

ARTICLES/ REPORTS: “Legal Scholarship,” 115 Harvard Law Review 1327 (2002) • “The Profession and the Public Interest,” Stanford Law Review (2002) • “Balanced Lives,” 102 Columbia Law Review (2002) • “Law, Lawyers, and the Pursuit ofJustice,” 70 Fordham Law Review 1543 (2002) • Balanced Lives: Changing the Culture of Legal Practice, Report Prepared for ABA Commission on Women in the Profession (2002) • Sex-Based Harassment: Workplace Policies For the Legal Profession, report prepared for ABA Commission on Women in the Profession (2002) 

OF NOTE: Chair, American Bar Association Commission on Women and the Profession

 

KENNETH E. SCOTT 

Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business, Emeritus

ARTICLES: “Does Bank Regulation Retard or Contribute to Systemic Risk?” The Independent Review, (forthcoming Winter 2002) 

OF NOTE: Fellow in residence, American Academy in Berlin, September-December 2001

 

WILLIAM H. SIMON

William Wand Gertrude H. Saunders Professor of Law

BOOKS: The Community Economic Development Movement: Law, Business, and the New Social Policy, Duke University Press, 2001

 ARTICLES: “Fear and Loathing of Politics in the Legal Academy,” 51 Journal ofLegal Education 175 (2001) • “The Belated Decline of Literalism in Professional Responsibility Doctrine,” 70 Fordham Law Review 1881 (2002)· “The Professional Responsibilities of the Public Official’s Lawyer: A Case Study from the Clinton Administration,” 77 Notre Dame Law Review 999 (2002) 

LECTURES: “Who Needs the Bar: Professionalism Without Monopoly,” Mason Ladd lecture, Florida State University Law School (March 2002) 

 

KATHLEEN M. SULLIVAN

Dean and Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Stanley Morrison Professor of Law

BOOKS: Constitutional Law, 14th edition, with Gerald Gunther, Foundation Press, 2001 

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Constitutionalizing Women’s Equality,” 90 California Law Review 735 (2002) • “Foreword: Interdisciplinarity,” 100 Michigan Law Review 1217 (2002) [see p. 2] • “Sex, Money, and Groups: Free Speech and Association Decisions in the October 1999 Term,” 28 Pepperdine Law Review 723 (2001) • “Justice Scalia and the Religion Clauses,” 22 University ofHawaii Law Review 449 (2001) • “Freedom of Expression in the United States: Past and Present,” in The Boundaries ofFreedom of Expression and Order in American Democracy, Thomas R. Hensley, editor, Kent State University Press (2001) 

LECTURES: “War, Peace and Civil Liberties,” The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, Center for Ethics and the Profession, Harvard University (Nov. 7-8, 2001) 

IN COURT: Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America v. Concannon, 249 FJd. 66 (1st Cir. 2001), cert. granted, 70 U.S.L.W. 3798 (2002) (counsel for PhRMA) • McConnell v. FEC, No. 02-582 (pending, D.D.C.) (cocounsel for Senator Mitch McConnell) • Eldred v. Ashcroft, (2002) (co-counsel for Eric Eldred) [see p. 22] • Honolulu Weekly, Inc. v. Harris, 298 FJd 1037 (9th Cir. 2002) (counsel for City and County of Honolulu) • Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Corley, 273 FJd 429 (2d Cir. 2001) (co-counsel for Eric Corley)

 

BARTON H. THOMPSON, JR

Robert E. Paradise Professor of Natural Resources Law and Vice Dean

ARTICLES “Providing Biodiversity through Diversity,” 38 Idaho Law Review 355 (2002) • “Conservation Options: Toward a Greater Private Role,” 21 Virginia Environmental LawJournal 245 (2002)

 

ROBERT WEISBERG

Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law

BOOKS: 2002 Summer Supplement to Kaplan, Weisberg & Binder, Criminal Law: Cases and Materials, Aspen 2002

ARTICLES: “Values, Violence, and the Second Amendment: American Character, Constitutionalism, and Crime,” 39 Houston Law Review 1 (2002) • “Civic Oratory in Lawyerland,” 101 Columbia Law Review 1782 (2001) 

LECTURES: “Values, Violence, and the Second Amendment: American Character, Constitutionalism, and Crime,” Endowed Frankel Lecture, University of Houston Law School (November 15, 2001) • “The Meaning of Literary in Law,” presentation at Conference on Law and Literature, University of Frankfurt-am-Maine, Germany (October 8, 2001)