Law School Professors published extensively this past year on such subjects as tax treatment of venture capital deals, racial profiling, open source software code, and money laundering. Here’s a sampling of their work. 

Janet Cooper Alexander (MA ’73) Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law

ARTICLES: “Procedural Design and Terror Victim Compensation,” De Paul Law Review (forthcoming 2003)

Michelle Alexander ’92 Associate Professor of Law (Teaching) 

ARTICLES/REPORTS: “The California DWB Report: A Report from the Highways, Trenches and Halls of Power in California,” American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (April 2002) • “Overreacting to Racial Profiling: A Response to Presser,” Litigation, American Bar Association (forthcoming fall 2003)

Barbara Allen Babcock Judge John Crown Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “Pioneer Attorney’s Feminism Ennobled Her Legal Efforts,” L.A. Daily Journal, pp. 6-7 (February 8, 2002) • “Preserving the Jury’s Privacy,” New York Times, p. A21 (July 24, 2002) • “Tribute to Norman Lefstein: Lefstein to the Defense,” 36 Indiana Law Review 13-15 (2003)

Joseph Bankman Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business 

BOOKS: Federal Income Tax: Examples and Explanations, 3rd edition, with K. Pratt and T. Griffith, Aspen Publishers, 2002 • Federal Income Taxation, 13th edition, with W. Klein & D. Shaviro, Aspen Publishers (2003) 

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Modeling the Tax Shelter World,” 55 Tax Law Review 455-464 (2002) • “The Engler-Knoll Consumption Tax Proposal: What Transition Rule Does Fairness (or Politics) Require?” 56 SMU Law Review 83-97 (2003) • “An Academic’s View of the Tax Shelter Battle,” Brookings Institution (forthcoming 2003) • “The Story of INDOPCO: What Went Wrong in the Capitalization v. Deduction Debate?” in Tax Stories, P. Caron, editor, Foundation Press (2003)

R. Richard Banks (BA ’87, MA ’87) Associate Professor of Law

ARTICLES/BOOK CHAPTERS: “Intimacy and Equality: The Limits of Antidiscrimination,” 38 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 455 (2003) • “Beyond Profiling: Race, Policing, and the Drug War,” 56 Stanford Law Review (forthcoming October 2003) • “The Story of Brown v. City of Oneonta: The Uncertain Meaning of Racial Discrimination under the Equal Protection Clause,” in Constitutional Law Stories, Michael Dorf, editor, Foundation Press (forthcoming)

John H. Barton ’68 George E. Osborne Professor of Law, Emeritus 

ARTICLES: “United States Law of Genomic and PostGenomic Patents,” 33 IIC: International Review of Industrial Property and Copyright Law 779-789 (2002) • “Patents, Genomics, Research and Diagnostics,” 77 Academic Medicine 2039-47 (December 2002) 

OF NOTE: Integrating Intellectual Property Rights and Development Policy, et al., London: The Commission on Intellectual Property Rights (September 2002)

Bernard S. Black ’82 George E. Osborne Professor of Law 

BOOKS: The Law and Finance of Corporate Acquisitions, 3rd edition, with Ronald Gilson and Robert Daines (forthcoming 2003) ARTICLES: “Delaware’s Takeover Law: The Uncertain Search for Hidden Value,” with Reiner H. Kraakman, 96 Northwestern University Law Review 521-566 (winter 2002) • “The Non-Correlation Between Board Independence and Long-Term Firm Performance,” with Sanjai Bhagat, 27 Journal of Corporation Law 231-273 (2002) • “The Legal and Institutional Preconditions for Strong Securities Markets,” 34 Securities Law Review 73-147 (2002) • “Institutional Reform in Transition: A Case Study of Russia,” with Anna Tarassova, 10 Supreme Court Economic Review 211-278 (2003) • “The Role of Self-Regulation in Supporting Korea’s Securities Markets,” 3 Journal of Korean Law (forthcoming 2003) 

Paul Brest Professor of Law, Emeritus 

ARTICLES: “Comments on Grutter v. Bollinger,” 51 Drake Law Review 683-693 (2003) • “Preface: How This Symposium Came About,” 97 Northwestern University Law Review 1079-1080 (spring 2003)

Gerhard Casper Professor of Law, President Emeritus, Peter and Helen Bing Professor in Undergraduate Education, Senior Fellow, Institute for International Studies, and Professor of Political Science (by courtesy), Stanford University 

ARTICLES: “Tribute to Professor Gerald Gunther: Gerry,” 55 Stanford Law Review 647-650 (December 2002) 

LECTURES: “Thinking in a Free and Open Space,” Commencement Convocation, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Yale University (May 25, 2003) • “Rule of Law? Whose Law?” Keynote Address at the 2003 CEELI Award Ceremony and Luncheon, San Francisco (August 9, 2003) 

OF NOTE: Appointed Member, U.S. Technology and Privacy Advisory Committee (TAPAC)

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

BOOKS: 2003 Supplement to Kaplan, Danelski, and Cohen, Constitutional Law: Civil Liberty and Individual Rights, Foundation Press • 2003 Supplement to Barrett, Varat, and Cohen, Constitutional Law Cases and Materials, Foundation Press • 2003 Supplement to The First Amendment: Constitutional Protection of Expression and Conscience, Foundation Press 

ARTICLES: “Tribute to Professor Gerald Gunther: Gerald Gunther,” 55 Stanford Law Review 651-652 (December 2002)

G. Marcus Cole [SEE PROFILE, P. 25] Professor of Law, Helen L. Crocker Faculty Scholar, and Academic Associate Dean for Curriculum

ARTICLES: “Delaware Is Not a State: Are We Witnessing Jurisdictional Competition in Bankruptcy?” 55 Vanderbilt Law Review 1845 (2002) • “Limiting Liability Through Bankruptcy,” 70 University Cincinnati Law Review 1245 (2002) • “A Modest Proposal for Bankruptcy Reform,” 5 The Green Bag 269, 2nd edition (2002) • “Discourse in the Garden of Good and Evil,” 37 Journal of Blacks in Higher Education (fall 2002) 

LECTURES AND PRESENTATIONS: “Private Dissolution and Restructuring of Failed Technology Firms in Silicon Valley,” Hoover Institution Economics Seminar, Stanford University (May 12, 2003) • “The Quiet Man: Reflections on the Next Wave Bankruptcy Case and the Next Wave of Regulatory Innovation,” Florida State University Law School (April 8, 2003) 

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 903 (January 2003) 

Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar (MA ’96, PhD ’00) Assistant Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “The Tenuous Relationship between the Fight against Money Laundering and the Disruption of Criminal Finance,” 93 Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 311 (2003) • “The International Criminal Court and the Political Economy of Antitreaty Discourse,” 55 Stanford Law Review 1597 (2003) • “Choosing AntiTerror Targets by National Origin and Race,” 6 Harvard Latino Law Review (2003) • “Notice, Comment, and the Regulatory State: A Case Study from the USA Patriot Act,” Administrative Law & Regulatory News (2003) 

PRESENTATIONS “The Treatment of Immigrants since September 11,” Holmes Debates, Library of Congress (2003) 

OF NOTE: Advisor, Report on TopOff II Simulated Terrorist Attack, Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford (2003) • Vice Chair, Rulemaking Committee, American Bar Association Section on Administrative Law (2003)

Michele Landis Dauber Assistant Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “The 9th Circuit Follows,” Legal Times (August 19, 2002) • “The 9th Circuit Follows: Court’s Reversals Stem from Being Too Law-Abiding, Not Too Liberal!” law.com (August 23, 2002)

John J. Donohue III William H. Neukom Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “Book Review: Can Gun Control Work? [by James Jacobs, Oxford University Press, 2002],” in The American Prospect (December 16, 2002) • “Statistics Show Concealed Carry Won’t Reduce Crime,” Columbus Dispatch (Ohio), Op-Ed, p. 9A (June 7, 2003) BOOK 

CHAPTERS: “Divining the Impact of Concealed-Carry Laws,” in Evaluating Gun Policy: Effects on Crime and Violence, Jens Ludwig and Philip J. Cook, editors, Wash., D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, pp. 287-341 (2003) 

George Fisher Professor of Law, Robert E. Paradise Faculty Scholar, and Academic Associate Dean for Research 

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

ARTICLES: “Power Over Principle,” The New York Times, Op-Ed, (September 7, 2002)

Richard Thompson Ford (BA ’88) Professor of Law and Justin M. Roach, Jr. Faculty Scholar 

ARTICLES: “Beyond Difference,” in Left Legalism/Left Critique, Janet Halley and Wendy Brown, editors, Duke University Press (2002) • “Unnatural Groups: A Reacton to Owen Fiss’s Groups and the Equal Protection Clause,” 2003 Issues in Legal Scholarship (online journal), Article 12, Robert Post, editor (2003) • “Bourgeois Communities,” Stanford Law Review (forthcoming)

Barbara H. Fried William W. and Gertrude H. Saunders Professor of Law 

BOOK CHAPTER: “Why Proportionate Taxation?” in Tax Justice: The Ongoing Debate, Dennis J. Ventry Jr., editor, Urban Institute Press (2002) 

ARTICLES: “Proportionate Taxation as a Fair Division of the Social Surplus: The Strange Career of an Idea,” Economics and Philosophy (forthcoming 2003) • “‘If You Don’t Like It, Leave It’: The Problem of Exit in Social Contractarian Arguments,” 31 Philosophy & Public Affairs 40-70 (winter 2003) • “Ex Ante/Ex Post,” 13 Journal of Contemporary Legal Issues (forthcoming 2003)

Lawrence M. Friedman Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law 

BOOKS: American Law in the 20th Century, Yale University Press (2002)

BOOK CHAPTERS: “Changing Times: Technology and Law in the Modern Era,” in Recht Im Wandel Seines Sozialen Und Technologischen Umfeldes, Jurgen Becker, editor, Verlag C.H. Beck (2002) • “Legality and Its Discontents,” in Legality and Community: On the Intellectual Legacy of Philip Selznick, Robert A. Kagan, et al., editor, Berkeley Public Policy Press (2002) 

ARTICLES: “California Death Trip,” with Paul W. Davies, 36 Indiana Law Review 17-32 (2003) 

Ronald J. Gilson Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business 

ARTICLES: “Lipton and Rowe’s Apologia for Delaware: A Short Reply,” 27 Delaware Journal of Corporate Law 37-52 (2002) • “Understanding Venture Capital Structure: A Tax Explanation for Convertible Preferred Stock,” with David M. Schizer, 116 Harvard Law Review 874-916 (January 2003) • “Engineering a Venture Capital Market: Lessons from the American Experience,” 55 Stanford Law Review 1067-1103 (April 2003)

Paul Goldstein Stella W. and Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law 

BOOK: Copyright’s Highway: From Gutenberg to the Celestial Jukebox, Revised Edition, Stanford University Press (2003) 

BOOK CHAPTER: “Perspectives on Research and Educational Uses in Copyright and Author’s Right,” in The Future of Intellectual Property in the Global Market of the Information Society, Centrum voor Intellectuele Rechten (2003)

William B. Gould IV Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus 

BOOKS: Diary of a Contraband: The Civil War Passage of a Black Sailor, Stanford University Press (2003) 

BOOK CHAPTERS: “Labor Law,” in Introduction to the Law of the United States, 2nd edition, David S. Clark and Tugrul Ansay, editors, Kluwer Law International (2002)

Henry T. Greely (BA ’74) C. Wendell and Edith M. Carlsmith Professor of Law 

BOOKS: “Genome Research and Minorities,” in Pharmacogenomics: Social, Ethical, and Clinical Dimensions, Mark A. Rothstein, editor, John Wiley & Sons (2003) 

LECTURES: “Ethical Issues in the Use of Human Brain Stem Cells in Mouse Models, Biomedical Ethics Grand Rounds,” Stanford University (October 3, 2002) • “What Matters to Me and Why?” Office for Religious Life, Stanford University (February 12, 2003) • “Medical Malpractice: A Debate (with Richard Epstein),” Federalist Society, Stanford University (February 27, 2003) • “Hi, I’m Mickey: Ethical and Social Issues Raised by the Human Neuron Mouse,” Workshop on Interspecific Chimeras, Dalhousie University (April 11, 2003) • “Philosophy Talk: Morality, Immortality, and Bioscience in the 21st Century,” Stanford Alumni Day, Stanford University (May 17, 2003) • “Genetics and the Law,” Federal Judicial Center, Stanford University (May 24, 2003) • “Legal and Social Issues in the Biosciences,” Japan Stanford Association Annual Meeting (July 9, 2003) • “Stem Cells: Policy and Politics,” Canadian Stem Cell Network (September 20, 2003) • “Disability, Enhancement, and the Meaning of Sports,” Stanford Sports Law Conference (September 18, 2003) • “Prediction, Litigation, Privacy, and Property: Some Possible Legal and Social Implications of Advances in Neuroscience,” AAAS Workshop on Neuroscience and the Law (September 12, 2003)

Thomas C. Grey (BA ’63) Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “Judicial Review and Legal Pragmatism,” 38 Wake Forest Law Review 473-511 (2003) LECTURES: “Holmes and Strict Liability in Tort,” Annual Meeting of the American Society for Legal History (November 9, 2002)

Joseph A. Grundfest ’78 W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business 

ARTICLES: “Give the SEC Its Due: More Money,” Wall Street Journal, Op-Ed, p. A22 (October 29, 2002) • “Punctuated Equilibria in the Evolution of United States Securities Regulation,” 8 Stanford Journal of Law, Business & Finance 1-8 (fall 2002)

Thomas C. Heller Lewis Talbot and Nadine Hearn Shelton Professor of International Legal Studies 

BOOK: Beyond Common Knowledge, with Erik Jensen, Stanford University Press (2003) 

ARTICLES/ESSAYS: “Lawyers and Political Scientists: How Much Common Ground?” Max Planck Institute on The Law of Common Goods, Bonn, Germany (2003) • “Carbon Intensity of Electricity Generation and CDM Baselines: Case Studies of Three Chinese Provinces,” with Chi Zhang and Michael May, Energy Policy (forthcoming) • “Beyond Kyoto: Development and Climate,” with P. R. Shukla, Pew Center on Climate Change (forthcoming)

Deborah R. Hensler Judge John W. Ford Professor of Dispute Resolution 

BOOK: Asbestos Litigation Costs and Compensation: An Interim Report, Rand Institute for Civil Justice (2002) 

ARTICLES: “Suppose It’s Not True: Challenging Mediation Ideology,” 2002 Journal of Dispute Resolution 81-99 (2002)

Pamela S. Karlan Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law 

BOOKS: The First Amendment, 2nd edition, with Geoffrey R. Stone, Louis M. Seidman, Cass R. Sunstein, and Mark V. Tushnet, Aspen Publishers (2003) 

ARTICLES: “Ballots and Bullets: The Exceptional History of the Right to Vote,” University of Cincinnati Law Review, (2003) (William Howard Taft Lecture) • “Elections and Change Under ‘Voting With Dollars,’” 91 California Law Review 705 (2003) • “Groups, Politics, and the Equal Protection Clause,” with Samuel Issacharoff, Miami Law Review (2003) • “When Freedom Isn’t Free: The Costs of Judicial Independence in Bush v. Gore,” 64 Ohio State Law Journal 265 (2003) 

BRIEFS: Branch v. Smith, 538 U.S. (2003) (brief for appellants) • Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. (2003) (brief for amicus curiae American Association of Law Schools) • Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. (2003) (brieffor amici curiae constitutional law professors)

Mark G. Kelman William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law 

BOOK CHAPTERS/ARTICLES: “Law and Behavioral Science: Conceptual Overviews,” 97 Northwestern University Law Review 1347-1392 (spring 2003) • “Introduction to the Disability Rights Symposium,” 14.2 Stanford Law & Policy Review 235-237 (2003) 

Michael Klausner [SEE STORY, P. 12] Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law

ARTICLES: “When Time Isn’t Money: Foundation Payouts and the Time Value of Money,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, vol. 1, No. 1 (2003) • “Institutional Shareholders, Private Equity, and Antitakeover Protection at the IPO Stage,” University of Pennsylvania Law Review (forthcoming 2003)

William Koski (PhD ’03) Associate Professor of Law (Teaching

ARTICLES/REPORTS: “Of Fuzzy Standards and Institutional Constraints: A Re-Examination of the History of Educational Finance Reform Litigation,” Santa Clara Law Review (forthcoming in Volume 43) • “Fuzzy Standards, Institutional Constraints, and Judicial Attitudes: The Politics of State Supreme Court DecisionMaking in Educational Finance Reform Litigation,” unpublished PhD Dissertation, Stanford University School of Education (2003) • “Forward: The Political Construction of Youth Crime and its Policy Consequences,” 14 Stanford Law & Policy Review 1-8 (2003) • “What Educational Resources Do Students Need to Meet California’s Educational Content Standards? A Textual Analysis of California’s Educational Content Standards and Their Implications for Basic Educational Conditions and Resources,” expert witness report, Williams v. California, No. 312236, California Supreme Court (2002) 

IN COURT: Emma C. v. Delaine Eastin, Case No. C-96-4179 (TEH), co-counsel on behalf of plaintiff (2003)

Lawrence Lessig Professor of Law and John A. Wilson Distinguished Faculty Scholar 

BOOKS: Internet Law, with Jonathan L. Zittrain, Charles R. Nesson, William W. Fisher III, and Yochai Benkler, Foundation Press (2002) • Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Control Creativity, Penguin Press (forthcoming 2004) 

BOOK CHAPTERS: Introduction to Free Software, Free Society: Selected Essays of Richard M. Stallman, GNU Press (2002) • “The Place of Cyberlaw,” in The Place of Law, Austin Sarat and Martha Merrill Umphrey, editors (November 2002) • “Open Source Baselines: Compared to What?” in Government Policy Towards Open Source Software, Robert W. Hahn, editor (2002) 

ARTICLES: “Viewpoints: Racing against Time; Freeing Creative Ideas from Copyright Protections That Last Too Long,” CIO Insight (December 1, 2002) • “A Threat to Innovation on the Web, Financial Times, Op-Ed (December 12, 2002) • “The Creative Commons,” RBL, Tokyo (2003) • “Protecting Mickey Mouse at Art’s Expense,” New York Times (January 18, 2003) • “Governance,” The COOK Report on Internet (March 2003) • “Spectrum for All,” CIO Insight (March 1, 2003) • “Wireless Spectrum: Defining the ‘Commons’ in Cyberspace,” CIO Insight (March 13, 2003) • “Spamsters Know the Law Will Never Be Enforced,” Philadelphia Inquirer (May 9, 2003) • “An Information Society: Free or Feudal?” The COOK Report on Internet (July-Sept. 2003) 

LECTURES/PRESENTATIONS: “Free Culture: The Struggle to Liberate Creativity and the Internet from the Law,” Shanahan Lecture, Cooper Union, New York (May 2003) • “Building the Creative Commons,” Lazerow Lecture, UCLA (May 2003) • “Protecting a Creative Commons for Knowledge,” McGovern Lecture, Medical Libraries Association (May 2003) • “Building the Creative Commons,” Judge James R. Browning Lecture in Law School, Missoula, Montana (April 2003)

Miguel A. Méndez Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law 

BOOK CHAPTERS/ARTICLES: “Expert Testimony and the Opinion Rule: Conforming the Evidence Code to the Federal Rules,” 37 University of San Francisco Law Review 411-440 (winter 2003) • “Prueba Pericial en los Estados Unidos de América,” en La Prueba en el Nuevo Proceso Penal Oral, Rodrigo Coloma Correa, editor, Lexis Nexis (2003) • “Hearsay and Its Exceptions: Conforming the Evidence Code to the Federal Rules,” 37 University of San Francisco Law Review 351 (2003) 

John Henry Merryman [SEE PROFILE, P. 29] Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law, Emeritus and Affiliated Professor in the Department of Art 

BOOKS: Law, Ethics, and the Visual Arts, 4th edition, with Albert E. Elsen, Kluwer Law International (2002) BOOK CHAPTERS: “Counterfeit Art and Artists’ Rights,” in Creative Ideas for Intellectual Property: The ATRIP papers 2000-2001, Francois Dessemontet and Raphael Gani, editors, Centre du droit de l’enterprise (2002)

A. Mitchell Polinsky Josephine Scott Crocker Professor of Law and Economics

BOOKS: An Introduction to Law and Economics, 3rd edition, Aspen Publishers (2003) 

BOOK CHAPTERS/ARTICLES: “A Note on Settlements Under the Contingent Fee Method of Compensating Lawyers,” with Daniel L. Rubinfeld, 22 International Review of Law and Economics 217-225 (August 2002) • “Strict Liability vs. Negligence in a Market Setting,” in Economics and Liability for Environmental Problems Kathleen Sergerson, editor, Ashgate Publishing (2002) • “Fixed-Price versus Spot-Price Contracts: A Study in Risk Allocation,” (reprint of a previously published journal article), in Economic Analysis of the Law; Selected Readings, Donald A. Wittman, editor, Blackwell Publishing (2003) 

LECTURES/SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS: “Optimal Sanctions When Wealth Can Be Audited,” Annual Meeting of the American Law and Economics Association, Cambridge, MA (May 4-5, 2002) • “Remedies for Price Overcharges: The Deadweight Loss of Coupons and Discounts,” Law and Economics Summer Institute, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA (August 1-2, 2003) 

BRIEFS: State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Curtis B. Campbell, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 01-1289 (2002), (brief amicus curiae in support State Farm, with Steven Shavell and the Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation)

Robert L. Rabin A. Calder Mackay Professor of Law

BOOKS: Torts Stories, with Stephen Sugarman, Foundation Press (2003)

ARTICLES: “The Fault of Not Knowing,” 4 Theoretical Inquiries in Law 427 (2003) • “Indeterminate Future Harm in the Context of September 11,” 88 Virginia Law Review 1831 (2002) 

LECTURES/PRESENTATIONS: “The Sept. 11 Victim Compensation Fund: A Circumscribed Response or an Auspicious Model?” 9th Annual Symposium on Tort Law and Social Policy, After Disaster: The September 11 Compensation Fund and the Future of Civil Justice, De Paul Law School (April 24-25, 2003) • “Reliance on Scientific Evidence in Tort Litigation: The U.S. Experience,” Annual International Conference on Civil Law, The Relationship Between Science and Law from the Perspective of Comparative Law, Scuola Superiore, Pisa, Italy (May 22–24, 2003)

Margaret Jane Radin (BA ’63) William Benjamin Scott and Luna M. Scott Professor of Law 

BOOKS: Internet Commerce: The Emerging Legal Framework, with John Rothchild and Gregory Silverman, Foundation Press (2002 and 2003) • Supplement to Internet Commerce, Foundation Press (2003) 

BOOK CHAPTERS/ARTICLES: “The Evolution of Property and Contract in the Digital Environment,” submitted for a book being published by the Centre for Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy at the University of Toronto (forthcoming) • “Online Standardization and the Integration of Text and Machine,” 70 Fordham Law Review 1125-1146 (2002) • “Can the Rule of Law Survive Bush v. Gore?” in Bush v. Gore: The Question of Legitimacy, Bruce Ackerman, editor, Yale University Press (2002) • “Incomplete Commodification in the Computerized World,” in The Commodification of Information, Neil Netanel and Niva Elkin-Koren, editors, Kluwer Academic Press (2002) • “Cloning and Commodification,” 53 Hastings Law Journal 1123 (2002)

Deborah L. Rhode [SEE STORY, P. 9] Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law 

BOOKS: The Difference “Difference’’ Makes: Women and Leadership, Stanford University Press (2003) 

ARTICLES: “Lawyers, Ethics, and Enron,” 8 Stanford Journal of Law, Business & Finance 9-38 (fall 2002) • “Searching for Balanced Lives,” 20 GPSOLO 14-19 (January/ February 2003) • “Women and the Profession: Defining the Challenges,” 88 Women Lawyers Journal 15, 21 (winter 2003) • “Air Force Rape: Change the Culture,” National Law Journal, p. A13 (April 21, 2003) 

Kenneth E. Scott ’56 Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business, Emeritus 

LECTURES: “The German 2- Tier Board,” Federal Reserve Bank ofChicago, 39th Annual Conference: Corporate Governance (May 8, 2003) • “Corporate Governance in the United States,” Institute for Law and Finance, Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universitat (June 4-5, 2003)

Jeff Strnad Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “Taxes and Nonrenewable Resources: The Impact on Exploration and Development,” 55 Southern Methodist University Law Review 1683-1752 (fall 2002) • “Some Macroeconomic Interactions with Tax Base Choice,” 56 Southern Methodist University Law Review 171-199 (winter 2003) • “Taxing Convertible Debt,” 56 Southern Methodist University Law Review 399-452 (winter 2003) • “Laboring in the Pin Factory: More on Taxing Convertible Debt,” 56 Southern Methodist University Law Review 471-499 (winter 2003)

Kathleen M. Sullivan Dean and Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Stanley Morrison Professor of Law 

BOOK CHAPTERS/ARTICLES: “Tribute to Professor Gerald Gunther: Memories of Gerald Gunther,” 55 Stanford Law Review 643-646 (December 2002) • “The New Religion and the Constitution,” 116 Harvard Law Review 1397-1421 (March 2003) • “Tribute to Laurence H. Tribe,” 59 Annual Survey of American Law 15-20 (2003) • “Under a Watchful Eye: Incursions on Personal Privacy,” in The War on Our Freedoms, Richard C. Leone and Greg Anrig, Jr., editors, Public Affairs Books (2003) 

Barton H. Thompson, Jr. JD/MBA ’76 (BA ’72) [SEE STORY, P. 18] Robert E. Paradise Professor of Natural Resources Law and Vice Dean

BOOKS: Environmental Law, with James E. Salzman, Foundation Press (2002) 

ARTICLES: “Answering Lord Perry’s Question: Dissecting Regulatory Overfishing,” with Josh Eagle, 46 Ocean and Coastal Management 649-680 (2003) • “Constitutionalizing the Environment: The History and Future of Montana’s Environmental Provisions,” 64 Montana Law Review 157 (2003)

Robert Weisberg ’79 Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law 

ARTICLES: “Norms and the Criminal Law and the Norms of Criminal Law Scholarship,” 93 Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 467 (2003) • “Restorative Justice and the Dangers of Community,” Utah Law Review (forthcoming fall 2003) 

BRIEFS: Robert Weisberg, Peter J. Henning, and Lisa B. Kemler, Brief Amicus Curiae of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers in Support of Respondent, Price v. Vincent, United States Supreme Court, No. 02-524 (Feb. 24, 2003)