2008 Faculty Report - Levin College of Law - University of Florida
2008 Faculty Report - Levin College of Law - University of Florida
2008 Faculty Report - Levin College of Law - University of Florida
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
UF <strong>Law</strong><br />
<strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> LAW | <strong>2008</strong> report from the faculty
“When UF <strong>Law</strong> celebrates its centennial in 2009,<br />
it will do so proudly as a strong, thriving law school.”<br />
Applications from highly qualified<br />
struction <strong>of</strong> the college’s academic space<br />
I invite you to view more information<br />
STATE OF THE COLLEGE<br />
students to our J.D., LL.M. and S.J.D.<br />
programs increase each year. We have<br />
during this decade.<br />
The generous support <strong>of</strong> our alumni and<br />
about the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and its<br />
faculty at www.law.ufl.edu, and to visit us<br />
expanded our Graduate Tax Program,<br />
friends has helped us pass the halfway point<br />
online or in person in Gainesville.<br />
which is consistently regarded as one<br />
<strong>of</strong> the nation’s best and now <strong>of</strong>fers the<br />
LL.M. in International Taxation and the<br />
in our $47-million capital campaign, and<br />
along with tuition devolution was instrumental<br />
in allowing us to continue our progress<br />
—Robert H. Jerry, II<br />
Dean; <strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
S.J.D. in Graduate Taxation in addition to<br />
despite <strong>Florida</strong>’s tight budget climate.<br />
the LL.M. in Graduate Taxation. Our highly<br />
Recent guests to our campus have in-<br />
regarded Environmental and Land Use<br />
cluded U.S. Supreme Court Justices Sandra<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Program now <strong>of</strong>fers the nation’s first<br />
Day O’Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg<br />
LL.M. in these closely-related fields.<br />
and former Secretary <strong>of</strong> State Madeline<br />
We concluded a $25-million expan-<br />
Albright, and this fall we will be honored<br />
sion and renovation project in 2005 that<br />
with visits by both U.S. Supreme Court<br />
added two classroom towers and com-<br />
Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. and U.S.<br />
pletely renovated and upgraded our library,<br />
Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.<br />
and construction is now underway on<br />
Greater than all this is our pride in our<br />
the $6-million Martin H. <strong>Levin</strong> Advocacy<br />
faculty, the heart <strong>of</strong> our institution, whose<br />
Center, which will house a state-<strong>of</strong>-the-art<br />
exceptional productivity and vibrant schol-<br />
courtroom and complete the total recon-<br />
arship are chronicled in this report.<br />
U F L A W 3
faculty impact<br />
PASSION<br />
“The faculty <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong><br />
<strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> demonstrates a<br />
passion for teaching combined with a<br />
remarkable commitment to scholarly<br />
productivity. The result is an intellectually-charged<br />
atmosphere that is vibrant,<br />
dynamic, and collaborative. During the<br />
past three years, the faculty has published<br />
53 books (including casebooks),<br />
with publishers including NYU, Oxford,<br />
Princeton, and the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chicago.<br />
The faculty has also published 251 law<br />
review articles and book chapters, with<br />
publishers including Ashgate, Cambridge,<br />
and Harvard. As associate dean for<br />
faculty development, I am proud to present<br />
this record <strong>of</strong> scholarship produced<br />
by the UF law faculty during the past<br />
three years.”<br />
— Christine Klein<br />
Associate Dean for <strong>Faculty</strong> Development;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
The UF <strong>Law</strong> faculty has been a leader in<br />
shaping academic thought and public policy.<br />
Examples include:<br />
•<strong>Faculty</strong> papers have influenced national<br />
and international policy. Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Patricia<br />
E. Dilley’s proposal on “Restoring Old Age<br />
Income Security for Low Wage Workers”<br />
won one <strong>of</strong> 12 Rockefeller Foundation Innovation<br />
Awards <strong>of</strong> $30,000 to strengthen<br />
social security for vulnerable groups;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Alyson C. Flournoy co-edited<br />
“CPR for the Environment: Breathing New<br />
Life into the Nation’s Major Environmental<br />
Statutes, A Legislative Sourcebook <strong>of</strong><br />
Progressive Ideas” (2007), which was<br />
distributed to members <strong>of</strong> Congress and<br />
staff; and Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Michelle S. Jacobs<br />
was a contributing author to the U.N.<br />
Shadow <strong>Report</strong> (U.S. Human Rights<br />
Network Committee for the Elimination <strong>of</strong><br />
Racial Discrimination).<br />
•<strong>Faculty</strong> books include Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Mark A. Fenster,<br />
Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power<br />
in American Culture (U. Minn. Press. <strong>2008</strong>);<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol<br />
& Stephen J. Powell, Lecturer in <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Director, International Trade <strong>Law</strong> Program,<br />
Just Trade: A New Covenant Linking Trade<br />
and Human Rights (NYU Press 2009);<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor William H. Page, The Micros<strong>of</strong>t<br />
Case: Antitrust, High Technology, and Consumer<br />
Welfare (with John Lopatka) (Univ.<br />
<strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 2007); Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Barbara<br />
Bennett Woodhouse, Hidden in Plain Sight:<br />
The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> Children’s Rights from Ben<br />
Franklin to Lionel Tate (Princeton <strong>University</strong><br />
Press, <strong>2008</strong>); and Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Michael Allan<br />
Wolf, The Zoning <strong>of</strong> America: Euclid v. Ambler<br />
(<strong>University</strong> Press <strong>of</strong> Kansas, <strong>2008</strong>).<br />
•<strong>Faculty</strong> articles have been recognized as the<br />
best in the field, including work by<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Mary Jane Angelo (article<br />
chosen as one <strong>of</strong> top 10 land use and<br />
environmental articles published in 2006)<br />
and Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Danaya C. Wright (article<br />
selected as winner <strong>of</strong> the 2005 Donald<br />
Sutherland Award for the most important<br />
article in English legal history from the<br />
American Society for Legal History).<br />
4 U F L A W U F L A W 5
new faculty<br />
BUILDING<br />
UF <strong>Law</strong> welcomes the following new faculty members<br />
New Advocacy Center<br />
Under Construction<br />
On the heels <strong>of</strong> a major facilities expansion<br />
in 2005, construction began<br />
this summer on the Martin H. <strong>Levin</strong><br />
<strong>Law</strong> Advocacy Center, the core <strong>of</strong> a<br />
$6-million construction project that will<br />
expand legal advocacy education and<br />
provide state-<strong>of</strong>-the-art trial facilities for<br />
the college. The impressive stand-alone<br />
20,000 sq. foot center will boast a twostory<br />
grand foyer and glass entry with<br />
an open staircase that will rise south <strong>of</strong><br />
Bruton-Geer Hall. It will house a fully<br />
functional trial and appellate courtroom<br />
on the first floor with a 98-seat gallery,<br />
bench for seven judges, a jury box and<br />
attorneys’ tables. The courtroom also<br />
will accommodate judges’ chambers<br />
and a jury deliberation room.<br />
Charlene Luke<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Charlene Luke has joined the<br />
faculty as an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
and will teach income, corporate,<br />
and partnership taxation. She<br />
was previously an assistant<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>essor at <strong>Florida</strong> State<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
visiting faculty at the <strong>University</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Utah S.J. Quinney <strong>College</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>. Before teaching, Luke<br />
was an associate at Dechert<br />
in Philadelphia, Penn. Luke<br />
received a bachelor’s and law<br />
degree from Brigham Young<br />
<strong>University</strong>. She graduated from<br />
law school summa cum laude<br />
and was first in her class.<br />
Daniel Sokol<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
D. Daniel Sokol has joined the<br />
faculty as an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
teaching corporations and<br />
business organizations law.<br />
Before joining UF <strong>Law</strong>, he was<br />
a visiting associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Missouri<br />
School <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and a fellow at<br />
the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin<br />
<strong>Law</strong> School. After earning a<br />
bachelor’s in history and political<br />
science from Amherst <strong>College</strong>,<br />
he went on to earn a Master<br />
<strong>of</strong> Studies in modern history<br />
from the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oxford.<br />
After earning his law degree<br />
from the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chicago,<br />
Sokol worked as an associate at<br />
Swidler Berlin Shereff Friedman<br />
in Washington, D.C., and Steel<br />
Hector & Davis in Miami, Fla.,<br />
where he specialized in antitrust,<br />
international trade<br />
and corporate law.<br />
E. Lea Johnston<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
E. Lea Johnston will join the<br />
faculty in 2009 as an assistant<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>essor. She will teach courses<br />
in criminal law, criminal procedure<br />
– adversary systems, and<br />
immigration. After earning her<br />
bachelor’s degree from Princeton<br />
<strong>University</strong> in ecology and evolutionary<br />
biology, Johnston served<br />
as the director <strong>of</strong> the Maryland<br />
Public Interest Research Group,<br />
where she focused on toxics and<br />
energy issues. After receiving her<br />
J.D. from Harvard <strong>Law</strong> School,<br />
Johnston clerked with the U.S.<br />
Court <strong>of</strong> Appeals for the Ninth<br />
Circuit in Seattle, Washington<br />
and worked as a litigation associate<br />
at Arnold & Porter LLC in<br />
Washington, D.C. Her teaching<br />
experience includes serving as a<br />
member <strong>of</strong> the Board <strong>of</strong> Student<br />
Advisors at Harvard <strong>Law</strong> School,<br />
where she taught legal research,<br />
appellate brief writing, and oral<br />
advocacy skills.<br />
Deborah Cupples<br />
Legal Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Deborah Cupples has joined the<br />
faculty as a lecturer and legal<br />
skills pr<strong>of</strong>essor and will teach<br />
legal drafting. She previously<br />
served UF <strong>Law</strong> as an adjunct<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>essor teaching legal drafting<br />
and was a part-time attorney at<br />
F. Parker <strong>Law</strong>rence, P.A. Cupples<br />
earned her bachelor’s degree<br />
in English, master’s degree in<br />
political science, and J.D. from<br />
the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong>.<br />
Robin Davis<br />
Legal Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Robin Davis has joined the<br />
faculty as a legal skills pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
and associate director <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Institute for Dispute Resolution.<br />
Davis will teach mediation and<br />
mediation clinic. Since 1994,<br />
she has been the alternative<br />
dispute resolution director <strong>of</strong><br />
the Eighth Judicial Circuit. In<br />
spring <strong>2008</strong>, Davis served as<br />
an adjunct pr<strong>of</strong>essor at UF <strong>Law</strong><br />
teaching alternative dispute<br />
resolution and mediation. She<br />
received her J.D. cum laude<br />
from the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong><br />
<strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
bachelor’s magna cum laude<br />
from Michigan State <strong>University</strong>.<br />
6 U F L A W U F L A W 7
faculty scholarship<br />
Mary Jane Angelo<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Harnessing the Power <strong>of</strong> Science in Environmental <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
Why We Should, Why We Don’t, and How We Can,” 86<br />
Texas L. Rev. 1527 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “The Killing Fields: Reducing<br />
the Casualties in the Battle Between U.S. Endangered<br />
Species and Pesticide <strong>Law</strong>,” 32 Harvard Envtl. L. Rev.<br />
95 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Incorporating Emergy Synthesis into<br />
Environmental <strong>Law</strong>: an Integration <strong>of</strong> Ecology, Economics,<br />
and <strong>Law</strong>” (with Mark T. Brown), 37 Envtl. L. 963 (2007)<br />
• “Reforming the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and<br />
Rodenticide Act,” CPR for the Environment: Breathing New<br />
Life into the Nation’s Major Environmental Statutes, A<br />
Legislative Sourcebook <strong>of</strong> Progressive Ideas for Members<br />
<strong>of</strong> Congress and Staff (Alyson Flournoy and Matthew<br />
Shudtz, eds.) (2007) • “Regulating Evolution for Sale: an<br />
Evolutionary Biology Model for Regulating the Unnatural<br />
Selection <strong>of</strong> Genetically Modified Organisms,” 42 Wake<br />
Forest L. Rev. 93 (2007) • “Embracing Uncertainty,<br />
Complexity, and Change: An Eco-Pragmatic Reinvention<br />
<strong>of</strong> a First-Generation Environmental <strong>Law</strong>,” 33 Ecology<br />
L. Q. 105 (2006), reprinted in 38 Land Use and<br />
Environmental L. Rev. (2007) (collecting top ten land<br />
use and environmental law articles published in 2006) •<br />
“Crouching Textualist, Hidden Intentionalist: Reclaiming Our<br />
Stolen ‘GreenDestiny’ Out <strong>of</strong> the Judicial Sparring Over the<br />
Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Environmental Statutes,” in Strategies for<br />
Environmental Success in an Uncertain Judicial Climate<br />
(Michael Allan Wolf, ed.) (2005) • “Redressing the Failure<br />
<strong>of</strong> Environmental <strong>Law</strong> to Protect Birds and Their Habitat”<br />
(with Anthony J. Cotter), 20 Nat. Res. & Env’t 22 (2005)<br />
Thomas T. Ankersen<br />
Legal Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director,<br />
Conservation Clinic and Costa Rica <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
“Anchoring Away: Government Regulation and the<br />
Rights <strong>of</strong> Navigation in <strong>Florida</strong>” (with Richard Hamann),<br />
<strong>Florida</strong> Sea Grant, Technical Publication # 157 (2006<br />
revision) • “Defending the Polygon: The Emerging Human<br />
Right to Communal Property” (with Thomas Ruppert),<br />
59 Oklahoma L. Rev 681 (2006) • “Tierra y Libertad:<br />
The Social Function Doctrine and Land Reform in Latin<br />
America” (with Thomas Ruppert), 19 Tulane Envt’l L. J.<br />
69 (2006) • “Towards a Bioregional Approach to Tropical<br />
Forest Conservation: Costa Rica’s Greater Osa Bioregion”<br />
(with Steven A. Mack and Kevin Regan), 38 Futures<br />
J. 406 (2006) • “Applying Clinical Legal Education to<br />
Community Smart Growth: The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong><br />
Conservation Clinic” (with Nicole C. Kibert) in Partnerships<br />
for Smart Growth: <strong>University</strong>-Community Collaboration for<br />
Better Public Places 64 (Wim Wiewel & Gerrit-Jan Knaap,<br />
eds.) (2005)<br />
Fletcher N. Baldwin, Jr.<br />
Chesterfield Smith Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Honorary Fellow, Institute<br />
for Advanced Legal Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London;<br />
Director, Center for International Financial Crime Studies;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>esseur au Centre du Droit de l’Entreprise, Montpellier<br />
“The Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>: Essential Component <strong>of</strong> the Financial<br />
War Against Organized Crime and Terrorism in the<br />
Americas” (with T. DiPerna), 18 N. J. Financial Crime<br />
(Institute Advanced Legal Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London<br />
2007) (chosen as <strong>2008</strong> outstanding published paper<br />
in the journal by the Institute <strong>of</strong> Advanced Legal<br />
Studies, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London) • “Down to the Wire:<br />
Assessing the Constitutionality <strong>of</strong> the National Security<br />
Agency’s Warrantless Wiretapping Program: Exit The<br />
Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>” (with Robert Shaw), 17 U. Fla. J. L.<br />
& Pub. Pol’y 430 (2006) • “Exposure <strong>of</strong> Financial<br />
Institutions to Criminal Liability,” 13 J. Financial Crime<br />
387 (2006) • “Money Laundering Countermeasures<br />
with Primary Focus on Terrorism and the USA Patriot<br />
Act <strong>of</strong> 2001” in 3 Current Developments in Monetary<br />
and Financial <strong>Law</strong> (International Monetary Fund Pub’l,<br />
Washington, D.C., 2005)<br />
Yariv Brauner<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
U.S. International Taxation: Cases and Materials<br />
(with Reuven S. Avi-Yonah and Diane Ring) (<strong>University</strong><br />
Casebook Series, Foundation Press, 2nd ed., 2005)<br />
• “International Trade and Tax Agreements May Be<br />
Coordinated, But Not Reconciled,” 25 Va. Tax Rev. 251<br />
(2005) • “Taxing Cross-Border Mergers & Acquisitions<br />
in a Globalizing World,” 6 Fla. Tax Rev. 1027 (2005),<br />
“Integration in an Integrating World,” 2 NYU J. <strong>Law</strong> &<br />
Business 51 (2005)<br />
Dennis A. Calfee<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Alumni Research Scholar<br />
Federal Estate and Gift Taxation (with Richard B. Stephens<br />
et. al) (8th ed., 2006)<br />
Bill Chamberlin<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Joseph L. Brechner<br />
Eminent Scholar <strong>of</strong> Mass Communications<br />
“Safe from Sex Offenders? Legislating Internet Publication<br />
<strong>of</strong> Sex Offender Registries,” 39 Urb. <strong>Law</strong>. 1 (2007) • “The<br />
Freedom <strong>of</strong> Information Act: 1966-2006; A Retrospective<br />
on the Rise <strong>of</strong> Privacy Protection over the Public Interest in<br />
Knowing What the Government’s Up To,” 11 Comm. L. &<br />
Pol’y, 511 (2006) • “The Marion Brechner Citizen Access<br />
Project” (with Cristina Popescu and Michael Weigold) in<br />
Communication and <strong>Law</strong>: Multidisciplinary Approaches to<br />
Research (Amy Reynolds and Brooke Barnett, eds.) (2005)<br />
• The <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Public Communication, (Allyn and Bacon;<br />
Longman Publishers USA, 2005)<br />
<strong>Faculty</strong> Scholarship since 2005. <strong>Faculty</strong> vita and lists<br />
<strong>of</strong> publications are online at www.law.ufl.edu/faculty/<br />
Angelo Ankersen Baldwin Brauner Calfee Chamberlin<br />
8 U F L A W U F L A W 9
Jonathan R. Cohen<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director,<br />
Institute for Dispute Resolution<br />
“Coping with Lasting Social Injustice,” 13 Washington &<br />
Lee J. <strong>of</strong> Civil Rights & Social Injustice 259 (2007) •<br />
“The Culture <strong>of</strong> Legal Denial” in The Affective Assistance<br />
<strong>of</strong> Counsel: Practicing <strong>Law</strong> as a Healing Pr<strong>of</strong>ession<br />
(Marjorie A. Silver, ed., 2007) • “Judaism without<br />
Ordinary <strong>Law</strong>: Toward a Broader View <strong>of</strong> Sanctification,”<br />
71 The Reconstructionist 1, 50 (2006) • “The Culture<br />
<strong>of</strong> Legal Denial,” 84 Neb. L. Rev. (2005) • “The<br />
Immorality <strong>of</strong> Denial,” 79 Tul. L. Rev. 903 (2005) • “A<br />
Taxonomy <strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution Ethics” in Handbook <strong>of</strong><br />
Dispute Resolution (Robert Bordone and Michael M<strong>of</strong>fitt,<br />
eds.) (2005) • “In God’s Garden: Creation and Cloning in<br />
Jewish Thought” in The Human Cloning Debate (Glenn<br />
McGee and Arthur Caplan, eds.) (Berkeley Hills Books,<br />
4th ed., 2004), reprinted in Ethical Issues: Western<br />
Philosophical and Religious Perspectives 480 (Terrence<br />
Reynolds, ed., 2006)<br />
Stuart R. Cohn<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Gerald A. Sohn Scholar;<br />
Associate Dean for International Studies; Director,<br />
International and Comparative <strong>Law</strong> Certificate Program<br />
“Freeze-Outs and Squeeze-Outs in American and Polish<br />
<strong>Law</strong>: Comparisons, Contrasts and Recommendations,”<br />
U. Warsaw L.R. (<strong>2008</strong>), “Capital Offense: The SEC’s<br />
Continuing and Mysterious Failure to Address Capital-<br />
Raising Concerns <strong>of</strong> Small Business,” 4 NYU J. <strong>Law</strong> &<br />
Business 1 (2007) • Securities Counseling for Small<br />
and Emerging Companies (West Group, 2006 & 2007<br />
ed.) • <strong>Florida</strong> Business <strong>Law</strong>s Annotated: Commentary,<br />
Cases and Forms (2006-07 & 2007-08 ed.) • “Good<br />
Corporate Governance in Developing Nations: Idealism<br />
and Realism,” United Nations Institute for Training and<br />
Research Best Practice Series (2006)<br />
Charles W. Collier<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Philosophy<br />
“Presidential Debates and Deliberative Democracy,”<br />
117 Yale L. J. Pocket Part (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Terrorism as an<br />
Intellectual Problem,” 55 Buffalo L. Rev. 815 (2007) •<br />
Speech and Communication in <strong>Law</strong> and Philosophy, 12<br />
Legal Theory 1 (2006) • Review <strong>of</strong> Owen Fiss, The <strong>Law</strong><br />
as It Could Be, 116 Ethics 412 (2006) • “Affirmative<br />
Action and the Decline <strong>of</strong> Intellectual Culture,” 55 J. <strong>of</strong><br />
Legal Education 3 (2005)<br />
Elizabeth Dale<br />
Affiliate Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> History<br />
“Employee Speech & Management Rights: A<br />
Counterintuitive Reading <strong>of</strong> Garcetti v. Ceballos,” 29<br />
Berkeley Journal <strong>of</strong> Employment & Labor <strong>Law</strong> 175<br />
(<strong>2008</strong>) • “Criminal Justice in the United States, 1780-<br />
1920: A Government <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>s or Men?” in 2 Cambridge<br />
History <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> in America (Christopher Tomlins and<br />
Michael Grossberg, eds.) (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Review Essay: Two<br />
Ways <strong>of</strong> Looking at the Founding,” 35 History: Reviews<br />
<strong>of</strong> New Books 129 (2007) • “Review Essay: Two Ways<br />
<strong>of</strong> Looking at the Founding,” 35 History: Reviews <strong>of</strong><br />
New Books 129 (2007) • “Review: Thurman Arnold: A<br />
Biography,” 25 <strong>Law</strong> and History Review 435 (2007) •<br />
“Getting Away With Murder,” 111 American Historical<br />
Rev. 95 (2006) • “Review: Black Chicago’s First<br />
Century, Vol. 1: 1833-1900,” 93 J. <strong>of</strong> American History<br />
237 (2006)<br />
Jeffrey Davis<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Gerald A. Sohn Scholar<br />
“<strong>Florida</strong>’s Beefed-Up Assignment for the Benefit <strong>of</strong><br />
Creditors as an Alternative to Bankruptcy,” 19 U. Fla. J.<br />
L. & Pub. Pol. 17 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Ending the Nonsense: The<br />
In Pari Delicto Doctrine Has Nothing To Do With What<br />
is Section 541 Property <strong>of</strong> the Bankruptcy Estate,” 21<br />
Emory Bankr. Dev. J. 519 (2005)<br />
George R. Dekle<br />
Legal Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Prosecution Principles: A Clinical Handbook (Thomson<br />
West, American Casebook Series, 2007)<br />
Patricia E. Dilley<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Reinventing Retirement: Reforming Social Security,<br />
Medicare, and Private Pension Plans,” 10 Emp. Rts. &<br />
Emp. Pol’y J. 2 (2006)<br />
Nancy E. Dowd<br />
Chesterfield Smith Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Co-Director, Center on Children and Families<br />
“Multiple Parents/Multiple Fathers,” 9 J. L. and Family<br />
Studies 231 (2007) • Handbook <strong>of</strong> Children, Culture<br />
and Violence (with chapters by Dowd and Barbara<br />
Bennett Woodhouse) (with Dorothy Singer and Robin<br />
Fretwell, eds.) (Sage Publications, 2006) • “Parentage at<br />
Birth: Birth Fathers and Social Fatherhood,” 14 Wm. &<br />
Mary Bill Rts J. 909 (2006) • “Fathers and the Supreme<br />
Court: Founding Fathers and Nurturing Mothers,” 54<br />
Emory L. J. 1271 (2005) • “From Genes, Marriage, and<br />
Money to Nurture: Redefining Fatherhood,” Future <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Family (Mark Rothstein, ed.) (2005)<br />
administrative law<br />
“I always tell students on the first day <strong>of</strong><br />
my Administrative <strong>Law</strong> course that this will<br />
likely be the most boring, complicated, and<br />
abstract class they’ll take in law school<br />
— but perhaps the most important <strong>of</strong> all,<br />
given the size <strong>of</strong> our federal, state, and<br />
local administrative state. I try to share my<br />
strangely obsessive joy about the subject in<br />
my scholarship and teaching, and I think<br />
by the end <strong>of</strong> the semester most <strong>of</strong> my students<br />
view the course as challenging but<br />
fascinating, and maybe even a little fun.<br />
No other subject in law school deals with<br />
a part <strong>of</strong> the government that is so seemingly<br />
lawless and so integral to our health<br />
and well-being and so crucial to the world<br />
around us. My own research asks how our<br />
administrative process can best balance<br />
our need to inform the public effectively <strong>of</strong><br />
government actions against the need for<br />
government to operate effectively, and how<br />
constitutional rights <strong>of</strong> property and due<br />
process limit, but don’t cripple, government’s<br />
authority to regulate and create<br />
regulatory procedures.”<br />
— Mark Fenster<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor.<br />
His areas <strong>of</strong> expertise include land use, FOIA and<br />
public access to government information, property,<br />
legal theory, administrative law, and contemporary<br />
cultural theory.<br />
Cohen Cohn Collier Dale Davis Dekle Dilley Dowd<br />
10 U F L A W U F L A W 11
environment & lanD use<br />
“The environmental problems we’re facing<br />
are so fundamental and serious that the laws<br />
and policies we are adopting and will need to<br />
adopt are inevitably going to go beyond the<br />
bounds <strong>of</strong> what we traditionally thought <strong>of</strong> as<br />
environmental law.”<br />
—Alyson Flournoy<br />
UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director,<br />
Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
Nation’s First Environmental and Land<br />
Use <strong>Law</strong> LL.M.<br />
In a world grappling with critical shortages <strong>of</strong> water,<br />
increasing developmental pressures and the unknown<br />
but real threats <strong>of</strong> climate change, environmental and<br />
land use law policies and applications are changing<br />
almost as fast as the weather. To prepare a new generation<br />
<strong>of</strong> environmental lawyers to meet these challenges,<br />
the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong> <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> now <strong>of</strong>fers<br />
the Master <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>s (LL.M.) in the closely-combined<br />
fields <strong>of</strong> environmental and land use law.<br />
The LL.M. program will educate students on the<br />
historical and legal underpinnings <strong>of</strong> environmental<br />
and land use law policies, and will encourage them<br />
to think creatively to innovate solutions to pressing<br />
environmental and related social issues. A major<br />
strength <strong>of</strong> the program is the diversity <strong>of</strong> faculty, which<br />
has expertise in a wide array <strong>of</strong> fields, including water<br />
law, international trade, land use law, natural resources<br />
law and others.<br />
In addition, the LL.M. program is unique in that six<br />
<strong>of</strong> the 26 required credit hours must be from relevant<br />
courses that have substantial non-law content — either<br />
<strong>of</strong>fered outside the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> or jointly by the<br />
law school and another department.<br />
Mark A. Fenster<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power in American<br />
Culture (revised 2nd ed. <strong>2008</strong>) • “Regulating Land Use<br />
in a Constitutional Shadow: The Institutional Contexts <strong>of</strong><br />
Exactions,” 58 Hastings L. J. 729 (2007) • “The Folklore<br />
<strong>of</strong> Legal Biography,” 105 Michigan L. Rev. 1265 (2007) •<br />
“Takings, Version 2005: The Legal Process <strong>of</strong> Constitutional<br />
Property Rights,” 9 <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Pennsylvania J. <strong>of</strong><br />
Constitutional L. 667 (2007) • “Coolhunting the <strong>Law</strong>,” 12<br />
Harv. Negotiation L. Rev. 157-173 (2007) • “On Idiocratic<br />
Theory: A Reply,” 19 Critical Review 147 (2007) • “The<br />
Opacity <strong>of</strong> Transparency,” 91 Iowa L. Rev. 885 (2006) •<br />
“Murray Edelman: Polemicist <strong>of</strong> Public Ignorance,” 17 Critical<br />
Rev. 367 (2005) • “The Birth <strong>of</strong> a Logical System: Thurman<br />
Arnold and the Making <strong>of</strong> Modern Administrative <strong>Law</strong>,” 83<br />
Or. L. Rev. 69 (2005) • “Takings Formalism, Regulatory<br />
Formulas: Exactions and the Consequences <strong>of</strong> Clarity,” 92<br />
Cal. L. Rev. 609 (2004), reprinted in Zoning and Planning<br />
Handbook (2005) and Land Use and Environmental L. Rev.<br />
(A. Dan Tarlock & David Callies, eds., 2005) (collecting “best<br />
land use and environmental law articles” published in 2004)<br />
Joan D. Flocks<br />
Director, Social Policy Division, Center for Governmental<br />
Responsibility<br />
“<strong>Florida</strong> Farmworkers’ Perceptions and Lay Knowledge <strong>of</strong><br />
Occupational Pesticides” (with P. Monaghan, S. Albrecht,<br />
and A. Bahena), Journal Comm. Health 32(3) (2007) •<br />
“Stakeholder Analysis <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong> Farmworker Housing”<br />
(with A. Burns), J. Agromedicine 11(1) (2006)<br />
Alyson Craig Flournoy<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director,<br />
Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
“Supply, Demand, and Consequences: The Impact <strong>of</strong><br />
Information Flow on Individual Permitting Decisions under<br />
Section 404 <strong>of</strong> the Clean Water Act,” 83 Indiana L. J. 537<br />
(<strong>2008</strong>) • Squandering Public Resources: A Center for<br />
Progressive Reform <strong>Report</strong> (with Margaret Clune Giblin and<br />
Matt Shudtz) (2007) • “CPR for the Environment: Breathing<br />
New Life into the Nation’s Major Environmental Statutes, A<br />
Legislative Sourcebook <strong>of</strong> Progressive Ideas for Members <strong>of</strong><br />
Congress and Staff” (co-edited and co-authored introduction<br />
with Matthew Shudtz) (2007) • “Following the Court Off-Road<br />
in SUWA,” in Strategies for Environmental Success in an<br />
Uncertain Judicial Climate (Michael Allan Wolf, ed.) (2005)<br />
• “Regulations in Name Only: How the Bush Administration’s<br />
National Forest Planning Rule Frees the Forest Service<br />
From Mandatory Standards and Public Accountability”<br />
(with Margaret Clune and Robert Glicksman), White Paper<br />
published by the Center for Progressive Reform (2005)<br />
Michael K. Friel<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Dean and<br />
Director, Graduate Tax Program<br />
Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individual Income (with Martin Burke) (LexisNexis,<br />
8th ed., 2007 & <strong>2008</strong> Supp.) • Understanding Federal<br />
Income Taxation (with Martin Burke) (3rd ed., <strong>2008</strong>) •<br />
Treatise, Modern Estate Planning (with Martin Burke and<br />
Elaine Gagliardi) (2nd ed., 2004-<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
Michael W. Gordon<br />
John H. and Mary Lou Dasburg Pr<strong>of</strong>essor in Corporate <strong>Law</strong><br />
<strong>Florida</strong> Corporations Manual (Five Volumes, LexisNexis,<br />
1974, revised 2007) • International Business Transactions:<br />
A Problem-Oriented Coursebook (with Folsom, Spanogle<br />
and Fitzgerald) (West Group, 9th ed., 2006) • “Forum Non<br />
Conveniens Misconstrued: A Response to Henry Saint Dahl,”<br />
38 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 141 (2006) • “Mexican<br />
<strong>Law</strong> by Zamora, et al.,” 37 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev.<br />
611 (2006) • NAFTA and Free Trade in the Americas: A<br />
Problem-Oriented Coursebook (with Folsom and Gantz) (West<br />
Fenster Flocks Flournoy Friel Gordon Calvert Hanson<br />
Group, 2nd ed., 2005) • Principles <strong>of</strong> International Business<br />
Transactions (with Folsom and Spanogle) (West Group, 2005)<br />
Linda Calvert Hanson<br />
Assistant Dean, Career Services<br />
“The <strong>Law</strong> School Perspective <strong>of</strong> Small Firm Practice,” in Link<br />
(2006) • “<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Externship<br />
Program” (with Michael T. Olexa), The <strong>Florida</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Practice<br />
Link: A Journal <strong>of</strong> the General Practice, Solo and Small<br />
Firm Section <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Florida</strong> Bar 1 (2005) • “Building Allies<br />
Through a Career Services Student Advisory Panel,” NALP<br />
Bulletin 14 (2005)<br />
Jeffrey L. Harrison<br />
Stephen C. O’Connell Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Wojciech J. Kocot, Comparing Promises: A US and Polish<br />
Perspective,” 8 Warsaw <strong>University</strong> L. Rev. 72 (<strong>2008</strong>) •<br />
<strong>Law</strong> and Economics (with Jules Theeuwes) (Norton and<br />
Co., <strong>2008</strong>) • “Economics <strong>of</strong> Business Associations,”<br />
in Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and Society (2007) • <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Economics: Positive, Normative and Behavioral Perspectives<br />
(Thomson-West, 2nd ed., 2007) • <strong>Law</strong> and Economics in<br />
a Nutshell (Thomson-West, 4th ed., 2007) • “Trademark<br />
and Status Signaling: Tattoos for the Privileged,” 59 Fla. L.<br />
Rev. 195 (2007) • “An Instrumental Approach to Market<br />
Power and Antitrust Policy,” 59 SMU L. Rev. 1673 (2006) •<br />
“Post-Tenure Scholarship and its Implications,” 17 U. Fla. J.<br />
L. & Pub. Pol’y 139 (2006) • “<strong>Faculty</strong> Ethics in <strong>Law</strong> School:<br />
Shirking, Capture, and ‘The Matrix,’” 82 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev.<br />
397 (2005) • “A Positive Externalities Approach to Copyright:<br />
Theory and Practice,” 13 J. Intell. Prop. L. 1 (2005)<br />
Edward T. Hart<br />
Head <strong>of</strong> Technical Services & Adjunct Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
“Service to Distance Learners: A Student’s Perspective,” 8<br />
Legal Information Management 64 (<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
Harrison<br />
Hart<br />
12 U F L A W U F L A W 13
international law<br />
“Working in international legal studies, especially<br />
at the intersection <strong>of</strong> human rights<br />
and trade — which, along with humanitarian<br />
law (the law <strong>of</strong> war), are the most active<br />
arenas in the international field — is sobering,<br />
challenging, and exciting. Sobering because<br />
notwithstanding trade’s promise <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>its and<br />
prosperity — a promise that the human rights<br />
community hoped would work towards eradicating<br />
poverty, especially abject (Iiving under<br />
$1 USD/day) and extreme (living under $2<br />
USD/day) poverty — there is still around the<br />
world an unacceptably immense amount <strong>of</strong> human<br />
privation in all aspects <strong>of</strong> life. Challenging<br />
because, if one focuses on human well-being,<br />
which requires enjoyment <strong>of</strong> civil and political<br />
as well as social, economic and cultural rights,<br />
trade can indeed promote human flourishing.<br />
Yet, the trade field has been and continues to<br />
act and be perceived as wholly independent<br />
and apart from the human rights model. Exciting,<br />
however, because <strong>of</strong> the opportunity to do<br />
groundbreaking work that affects peoples’ lives<br />
simply by focusing on the myriad intersections<br />
<strong>of</strong> these fields and elucidating how recognizing<br />
and embracing their interdependence will<br />
take us far in both achieving trade’s promise <strong>of</strong><br />
prosperity and promoting human thriving.”<br />
Berta Esperanza HernÁndez-Truyol<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director, Center<br />
on Children and Families<br />
Just Trade: A New Covenant Linking Trade and Human Rights<br />
(with Stephen J. Powell) (NYU Press 2009) • “Afterword:<br />
Beyond the First Decade: a Forward-looking History <strong>of</strong><br />
LatCrit Theory, Community and Praxis (LatCrit at Ten Years),”<br />
26 Chicano-Latino L. Rev. 237 (2006) • “Beyond the<br />
First Decade: a Forward-looking History <strong>of</strong> LatCrit Theory,<br />
Community and Praxis (LatCrit X: Critical Approaches to<br />
Economic In/Justice),” 17 Berkeley La Raza L. J. 169 (2006)<br />
• “Children and Immigration: International, Local, and Social<br />
Responsibilities,”15 B. U. Pub. Int. L. J. 297 (2006) • “On<br />
Disposable People and Human Well-Being: Health, Money<br />
and Power,” 13 U. C. Davis J. Int’l L. & Pol’y, 35 (2006) •<br />
“Sexual Labor and Human Rights,” 37 Colum. Hum. Rts.<br />
L. Rev. 391 (2006) • “Asking the Family Question,” 38<br />
Fam. L. Q. 481 (2005) • “Gender Injustice: An International<br />
Comparative Analysis <strong>of</strong> Equality in Employment,” 37 Geo.<br />
Wash. Int’l L. Rev. 1031 (2005) • “Globalized Citizenship:<br />
Sovereignty, Security and Soul,” 50 Villanova L. Rev.<br />
1009 (2005) • Book Review, “<strong>Law</strong> is Not Enough,” Geo.<br />
Washington Int’l L. J. (2005) • “Traveling the Boundaries<br />
<strong>of</strong> Statelessness: Global Passports and Citizenship” (with<br />
Matthew Hawk) 52 Clev. St. L. Rev. 97 (2005)<br />
Richard H. Hiers<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Emeritus; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Religion<br />
“Institutional Academic Freedom or Autonomy Grounded Upon<br />
the First Amendment: A Jurisprudential Mirage,” 30 Hamline<br />
L. Rev. 1 (2007) • “Justice and Compassion in Biblical<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” 1 Convergence 75 (2006) • “The Death Penalty<br />
and Due Process in Biblical <strong>Law</strong>,” 81 U. Det. L. Rev. 751<br />
(2004) • “Institutional Academic Freedom: A Constitutional<br />
Misconception. Did Grutter v. Bollinger Perpetuate the<br />
Confusion?” 30 J. C. & U. L. 531 (2004)<br />
David M. Hudson<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director, LL.M. in Comparative <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
Black Letter on Federal Income Tax (with Stephen A. Lind)<br />
(10th ed., 2007) • The Fla. Tax Review (2002-2005, ed.)<br />
Thomas R. Hurst<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Samuel T. Dell Research Scholar<br />
“Hedge Funds in the 21st Century: Do the Benefits Outweigh<br />
Potential Dangers to the Financial Markets?,” 29 Co. <strong>Law</strong>.<br />
228 (2007) • Unincorporated Business Associations, Cases<br />
and Materials (co-author) (West, 3rd. ed., 2006) • “A Post-<br />
Enron Examination <strong>of</strong> Corporate Governance Problems in the<br />
Investment Company Industry,” 27 Co. <strong>Law</strong>. 41 (2006) •<br />
Cases and Materials on Corporations (with William A. Gregory)<br />
(Lexis Nexis, 2nd ed., 2005) • “The Unfinished Business <strong>of</strong><br />
Mutual Fund Reform,” 26 Pace L. Rev. 113 (2005)<br />
Jerold H. Israel<br />
Ed Rood Eminent Scholar in Trial Advocacy and Procedure;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Francis A. Allen, The Gainesville Years,” 59 Fla. L. Rev. VII<br />
(2007) • Criminal Procedure Treatise (with W. LaFave &<br />
O. Kerr) (7 vols. 3d ed. 2007) • Criminal Procedure (with<br />
Wayne LaFave and Nancy King) (2nd ed., pocket parts<br />
2007) • Criminal Procedure – Constitutional Limitations<br />
in a Nutshell (with Wayne Lafave) (Thomson/West, 7th ed.,<br />
2006) • Criminal Procedure and the Constitution (with<br />
Yale Kamisar et. al) (2006) • Advanced Criminal Procedure<br />
(with Yale Kamisar et. al) (11th ed., 2005) • Basic Criminal<br />
Procedure (with Yale Kamisar et. al) (11th ed., 2005) •<br />
Modern Criminal Procedure (with Yale Kamisar et. al) (11th<br />
ed., 2005, with 2006 supp.)<br />
Michelle S. Jacobs<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
UN Shadow <strong>Report</strong> (U.S. Human Rights Network<br />
Committee for the Elimination <strong>of</strong> Racial Discrimination,<br />
<strong>2008</strong>) (contributing author) • “Loyalty’s Reward — A Felony<br />
Conviction: Recent Prosecutions <strong>of</strong> High-Status Female<br />
Offenders,” 33 Fordham Urb. L. J. 843 (2006)<br />
Robert H. Jerry, II<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Dean<br />
Understanding Insurance <strong>Law</strong> (with Douglas Richmond)<br />
(4th ed., <strong>2008</strong>) • “Life, Health, and Disability Insurance:<br />
Understanding the Relationships,” 35 J. L. Medicine &<br />
Ethics 80 (2007) • “Reflections on Leadership,” 38 The<br />
U. <strong>of</strong> Toledo L. Rev. 539 (2007) • “Defining and Achieving<br />
Excellence,” <strong>Law</strong> School Leadership Strategies (Aspatore<br />
Books, 2006) • “Regulating the Business <strong>of</strong> Insurance:<br />
Federalism in an Age <strong>of</strong> Difficult Risk,” 41 Wake Forest L.<br />
Rev. 835 (2006) • “Life and Disability Insurance,” Materials<br />
on Family Wealth Management (Turnier and McCouch, eds.)<br />
(Thomson West, 2005)<br />
E. Lea Johnston<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor (joining UF faculty Jan. 2009)<br />
“An Administrative ‘Death Sentence’ for Asylum Seekers:<br />
Deprivation <strong>of</strong> Due Process Under 8 U.S.C. §158(d)(6)’s<br />
Frivolousness Standard,” 82 Wash. L. Rev. 831 (2007)<br />
Clifford A. Jones<br />
Associate in <strong>Law</strong> Research/Lecturer,<br />
Center for Governmental Responsibility<br />
‘Hail to the Cheese’: Stephen Colbert, Technology, and<br />
Corporate Political Advocacy in the <strong>2008</strong> Presidential<br />
Campaign,” in 15 Business Research Yearbook 202 (R.A.<br />
Oglesby & M. G. Adams, eds., <strong>2008</strong>) • “Patent Power<br />
and Market Power: Rethinking the Relationship Between<br />
Intellectual Property Rights and Market Power in Antitrust<br />
Analysis,” Handbook <strong>of</strong> Intellectual Property and Competition<br />
<strong>Law</strong> (J. Drexl, ed.) (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2007) •<br />
— Berta E. HernÁndez-Truyol<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director, Center<br />
on Children and Families. She is widely published in law<br />
reviews and journals, and her areas <strong>of</strong> expertise include international<br />
law, international human rights, issues <strong>of</strong> race,<br />
gender, and culture in the law, and dispute resolution.<br />
Hernández-Truyol Hiers Hudson Hurst Israel Jacobs Jerry Johnston Jones<br />
14 U F L A W U F L A W 15
“Private Antitrust in the Global Market,” in Economic <strong>Law</strong><br />
and Justice in Times <strong>of</strong> Globalization: Festschrift for Carl<br />
Baduenbacher 443 (Monti et al., ed. 2007) • “The Third<br />
Devolution in European Competition <strong>Law</strong>: Private Enforcement<br />
After the Green Paper,” 3 (1) Competition L. Rev. 1 (2007)<br />
• The Second Devolution <strong>of</strong> European Competition <strong>Law</strong>: The<br />
Political Economy <strong>of</strong> Antitrust Enforcement Under a ‘More<br />
Economic Approach,’” in The More Economic Approach to<br />
European Competition <strong>Law</strong> 65 (D. Schmidtchen, M. Albert,<br />
& S. Voight, eds., Tübingen, Germany: Mohr Siebieck, 2007)<br />
• “Nostradamus Strikes Again: A Premature U.S. Perspective<br />
on the EU’s Green Paper on Private Enforcement,” Newest<br />
Developments in European and International Competition<br />
<strong>Law</strong>—Twelfth St. Gallen International Competition <strong>Law</strong><br />
Forum 360 (C. Baudenbacher, ed., 2006) • “Out Of<br />
Guatemala? Election <strong>Law</strong> Reform in <strong>Florida</strong> and the Legacy<br />
<strong>of</strong> Bush v. Gore in the 2004 Presidential Election,” 5 Election<br />
L. J. 121 (2006) • “Campaign Finance Reform and the<br />
Internet: Regulating Web Messages in the 2004 Election and<br />
Beyond,” in 1 The Internet Election: Perspectives on the<br />
Role <strong>of</strong> the Web in Campaign 2004 (Andrew P. Williams<br />
& John C. Tedesco, eds.) (Rowman & Littlefield) (2006)<br />
• “Foundations <strong>of</strong> Competition Policy in the EU and USA:<br />
Conflict, Convergence, and Beyond” in The Evolution <strong>of</strong><br />
European Competition <strong>Law</strong>—Whose Regulation, Which<br />
Competition? 17 (H. Ullrich, ed.) (Edward Elgar Publishing,<br />
2006) • “Private Competition <strong>Law</strong> Enforcement in Europe:<br />
A Growth Market” in Newest Developments in European<br />
and International Competition <strong>Law</strong>—Eleventh St. Gallen<br />
International Competition <strong>Law</strong> Forum 113 (C. Baudenbacher,<br />
ed., 2005)<br />
Christine A. Klein<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Dean, <strong>Faculty</strong> Development<br />
“Water Transfers: The Case Against Transbasin Diversions<br />
in the Eastern States,” 25 UCLA J. Envtl. <strong>Law</strong> & Policy 101<br />
(<strong>2008</strong>) • “Mississippi River Stories: Lessons from a Century<br />
<strong>of</strong> Unnatural Disasters” (with Sandra B. Zellmer), 60 SMU L.<br />
Rev. 1471 (2007) • “Survey <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong> Water <strong>Law</strong>,” Waters<br />
and Water Rights (Robert E. Beck, ed., Matthew Bender &<br />
Co., Inc.) (rev. vol. 6 [2005] and 2007 Supp) • “The New<br />
Nuisance: An Antidote to Wetland Loss, Sprawl, and Global<br />
Warming,” 48 B. C. L. Rev. 1155 (2007) • “The <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Lakes: From Protectionism to Sustainability,” 2006 Mich.<br />
St. U. L. Rev. 1 (2006) • Natural Resources <strong>Law</strong>: A Place-<br />
Based Book <strong>of</strong> Problems and Cases (with Federico Cheever<br />
and Bret C. Birdsong) (Aspen, 2005) • “On Integrity: Some<br />
Considerations for Water <strong>Law</strong>,” 56 Ala. L. Rev. 1009 (2005)<br />
Elizabeth T. Lear<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“National Interests, Foreign Injuries and Forum Non<br />
Conveniens,” 41 U. C. Davis L. Rev. 559 (2007) •<br />
“Congress, the Federal Courts, and Forum Non Conveniens:<br />
Friction on the Frontier <strong>of</strong> the Inherent Power,” 91 Iowa L.<br />
Rev. 1147 (2006)<br />
Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Where’s the Harm?: Free Speech and the Regulation <strong>of</strong><br />
Lies,” 65 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. (<strong>2008</strong>) • “U.S. Media <strong>Law</strong><br />
Update,” 13 Media & Arts. L. Rev. (Andrew Kenyon, ed.,<br />
<strong>2008</strong>) • “Medium-Specific Regulation <strong>of</strong> Attorney Advertising:<br />
A Critique,” (with Tera Peterson), 18 Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> L. and Public<br />
Pol’cy 257 (2007) • First Amendment <strong>Law</strong>: Cases and<br />
Materials (with Ronald Krotoszynski et. al) (Aspen, 2007) •<br />
“U.S. Media <strong>Law</strong> Developments 2007,” 12 Media and Arts<br />
L. Rev. 387 (2007) • “Authorship, Audiences & Anonymous<br />
Speech” (with Tom Cotter), 82 Notre Dame <strong>Law</strong> Rev. 1537<br />
(2007) • Mass Media <strong>Law</strong>: Cases and Materials (with Marc<br />
Franklin and David A. Anderson) (7th ed., 2005)<br />
Joseph W. Little<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Alumni Research Scholar<br />
Worker’s Compensation (with Eaton and Smith) (Rev. ed.,<br />
2005)<br />
<strong>Law</strong>rence Lokken<br />
Hugh F. Culverhouse Eminent Scholar in Taxation;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Income Effectively Connected with U.S. Trade or Business:<br />
A Survey and Appraisal,” 86 Taxes 61 (<strong>2008</strong>) • Federal<br />
Taxation <strong>of</strong> Employee Compensation (with Boris I. Bittker)<br />
(Warren Gorham and Lamont, 2006) • Fundamentals <strong>of</strong><br />
International Taxation (with Boris I. Bittker) (2006/2007<br />
ed.) • “Territorial Taxation: Why Some U.S. Multinationals<br />
May Be Less Than Enthusiastic About the Idea (and Some<br />
Ideas They Really Dislike),” 59 SMU <strong>Law</strong>. Rev. 751 (2006)<br />
• Federal Taxation <strong>of</strong> Income, Estates and Gifts (with<br />
Boris I. Bittker) (Vol. 3 and 4, 3rd ed., 2005) • “Whatever<br />
Happened to Subpart F? U.S. CFC Legislation After the<br />
Check-the-Box Regulations,” 7 Fla. Tax Rev. 185 (2005)<br />
Charlene Luke<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Risk, Return, and Objective Economic Substance,” 27<br />
Virginia Tax Rev. 783 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Taxing Risk: An Approach to<br />
Variable Insurance Reform, 55 Buffalo L.Rev. 251 (2007) •<br />
“Beating the ‘Wrap’: The Agency Effort to Control Wraparound<br />
Insurance Tax Shelters,” 25 Virginia Tax Rev. (2005)<br />
Paul J. Magnarella<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Criminology and <strong>Law</strong>;<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Anthropology, African Studies, and<br />
European Studies<br />
“The Hutu-Tutsi Conflict in Rwanda,” Perspectives on<br />
Contemporary Ethnic Conflict, (S.C. Saha, ed.) (2006) •<br />
antitrust LAW<br />
“Antitrust fascinates me because it consistently<br />
raises issues <strong>of</strong> economics, history,<br />
politics, technology, and human motivation<br />
in cases that involve complex procedures,<br />
international dimensions, and high stakes<br />
for the parties and for consumers. The<br />
Micros<strong>of</strong>t litigation, which has been a<br />
focus <strong>of</strong> my work for several years, has all<br />
<strong>of</strong> these facets and more.”<br />
— William H. Page<br />
Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar and Senior<br />
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. He is co-author<br />
<strong>of</strong> The Micros<strong>of</strong>t Case: Antitrust, High Technology,<br />
and Consumer Welfare (Univ. <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press 2007)<br />
and more than 40 articles and book chapters on<br />
antitrust law and economics.<br />
Klein Lear Lidsky Little Lokken Luke Magnarella<br />
16 U F L A W U F L A W 17
“Turkish-American Intellectual Exchange and Community<br />
Research in Turkey (1930-1980),” 27 The Turkish Studies<br />
Ass’n J. 69 (2006) • “Protecting Indigenous Rights,” 5<br />
Human Rights and Human Welfare, 125 (2005)<br />
Pedro A. Malavet<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“The Story <strong>of</strong> Downes v. Bidwell: ‘The Constitution Follows<br />
the Flag … But Doesn’t Quite Catch Up With It,’” in Race<br />
and the <strong>Law</strong> Stories (Rachel Moran and Devon Carbado,<br />
eds.) (Foundation Press, <strong>2008</strong>) • “Afterword: Outsiders<br />
Citizenships and Multidimensional Borders: The Power and<br />
Danger <strong>of</strong> Not Belonging,” 52 Cleveland State L. Rev. 321<br />
(2005)<br />
Amy R. Mashburn<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Can Xenophon Save the Socratic Method?” 30 Thomas<br />
Jefferson L. Rev. 597 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Fiduciary Duties to Clients<br />
with Mental Disabilities” (with Christopher Slobogin), 68<br />
Fordham L. Rev. 1581 (2000), an edited version reprinted<br />
in Minding Justice: <strong>Law</strong>s that Deprive People With Mental<br />
Disabilities <strong>of</strong> Life and Liberty (Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />
2006)<br />
Diane H. Mazur<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
<strong>Law</strong> and Popular Culture: Text, Notes, and Questions<br />
(with Papke et al.) (LexisNexis 2007) • “Rum, Sodomy,<br />
and the Lash: What the Military Thrives On and How It<br />
Affects Legal Recruitment and <strong>Law</strong> Schools,” 14 Duke J.<br />
Gender L. & Pol’y 1143 (2007) • “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell:<br />
The Contours <strong>of</strong> Judicial Deference to Military Personnel<br />
Policies,” 14 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol’y 1173 (2007) •<br />
“Military Values in <strong>Law</strong>,” 14 Duke J. Gender L. & Pol’y<br />
977 (2007) • “A Blueprint for <strong>Law</strong> School Engagement<br />
with the Military,” 1 J. Nat’l Sec. L. & Pol’y 473 (2005)<br />
• “The Bullying <strong>of</strong> America: A Cautionary Tale About<br />
Military Voting and Civil-Military Relations,” 4 Election L.<br />
J. 105 (2005)<br />
Paul R. McDaniel<br />
James J. Freeland Eminent Scholar in Taxation; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Federal Income Taxation, Cases and Materials (with<br />
M. McMahon, Jr., D. Simmons & G. Polsky) (6th ed.,<br />
Foundation Press, <strong>2008</strong>) • “Territorial vs. Worldwide<br />
International Tax Systems: Which is Better for the U.S.,”<br />
8 Fla. L. Rev. 283 (2007), reprinted in 62 The Record<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Association <strong>of</strong> the Bar <strong>of</strong> the City <strong>of</strong> New York 70<br />
(2007) • Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Partnerships and S<br />
Corporations (with Martin McMahon and Dan Simmons)<br />
(Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2006) • “The Charitable<br />
Contributions Deduction (Revisited),” 59 SMU L. Rev. 773<br />
(2006) • Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Corporations (with<br />
Martin McMahon and Dan Simmons) (Foundation Press,<br />
3rd ed., 2006) • Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Business<br />
Organizations (with Martin McMahon and Dan Simmons)<br />
(Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2006) • Introduction to United<br />
States International Taxation (Aspen, 5th ed., 2005) • “An<br />
Analysis <strong>of</strong> Tax Expenditure Accounting in Selected OECD<br />
Countries” (2005)<br />
Martin J. McMahon, Jr.<br />
Clarence J. TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Federal Income Taxation, Cases and Materials (with P.<br />
McDaniel, D. Simmons & G. Polsky) (6th ed., Foundation<br />
Press, <strong>2008</strong>) • “Comparing the Application <strong>of</strong> Judicial<br />
Interpretative Doctrines to Revenue Statutes on Opposite<br />
Sides <strong>of</strong> the Pond,” in Comparative Perspectives on<br />
Revenue <strong>Law</strong>: Essays in Honor <strong>of</strong> John Tiley (Peter Harris<br />
& David Oliver, eds.) (Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press, <strong>2008</strong>)<br />
• “Recent Developments in Federal Income Taxation: The<br />
Year 2007” (with Ira B. Shepard & Daniel L. Simmons),<br />
8 <strong>Florida</strong> Tax Rev. 715 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Recent Developments<br />
in Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2006” (with Ira<br />
B. Shepard), 8 Fla. Tax Rev. 433 (2007) • “Recent<br />
Developments in Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2005”<br />
(with Ira B. Shepard), 8 Fla. Tax Rev. 5 (2007) • Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Business Organizations (with Paul<br />
McDaniel and Daniel Simmons) (Foundation Press, 4th ed.,<br />
2006) • Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Corporations (with<br />
Paul McDaniel and Daniel Simmons) (Foundation Press, 3rd<br />
ed., 2006) • Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Partnerships and<br />
S Corporations ) (with Paul McDaniel and Daniel Simmons)<br />
(Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2006) • “An Income Tax Is<br />
Superior to a Wage or Consumption Tax,” 110 Tax Notes<br />
1353 (2006) • “Privilege and the Work Product Doctrine<br />
in Tax Cases” (with Ira B. Shepard), 58 The Tax <strong>Law</strong>yer<br />
405 (2005) • “Recent Developments in Federal Income<br />
Taxation: The Year 2004” (with Ira B. Shepard), 7 Fla. Tax<br />
Rev. 47 (2005) • “Recognition <strong>of</strong> Gain by a Partnership<br />
Issuing an Equity Interest for Services: The Proposed<br />
Regulations Get It Wrong,” 109 Tax Notes 1161 (2005)<br />
• Semi-annual cumulative supplements since 2003 to<br />
Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individuals (with Boris I. Bittker<br />
and <strong>Law</strong>rence A. Zelenak)<br />
Jon L. Mills<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Dean Emeritus; Director,<br />
Center for Governmental Responsibility<br />
Privacy: The Lost Right (Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, <strong>2008</strong>)<br />
• “Two Contemporary Privacy Issues in Poland: Liability<br />
for Internet Publication and the Registration <strong>of</strong> Communist<br />
Party Affiliation,” Univ. <strong>of</strong> Warsaw L. Rev. (<strong>2008</strong>) • “<strong>Law</strong><br />
Schools as Agents <strong>of</strong> Change and Justice Reform in the<br />
Dispute resolution<br />
“I have long been intrigued by a few related<br />
issues: How people understand and deal<br />
with conflict and the distinction between<br />
self and other. How people conceive<br />
<strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essional-client relationships and<br />
decision-making within such relationships.<br />
How a person’s mindset affects his perceptions,<br />
performance and sense <strong>of</strong> well-being.<br />
These interests have led me to study the<br />
roles <strong>of</strong> lawyers, clients, and mediators,<br />
and the states <strong>of</strong> consciousness that they<br />
employ when working together. The general<br />
thrust <strong>of</strong> my work is to try to broaden the<br />
‘philosophical map’ that lawyers and mediators<br />
use.”<br />
— Leonard L. Riskin<br />
Chesterfield Smith Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; former chair<br />
<strong>of</strong> the AALS sections on <strong>Law</strong> and Medicine and<br />
Dispute Resolution and director <strong>of</strong> the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Missouri School <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Center for<br />
the Study <strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution. He has written<br />
extensively on alternative dispute resolution,<br />
especially negotiation and mediation. He also<br />
teaches and studies mindful awareness as a<br />
way to improve lawyering.<br />
Malavet Mashburn Mazur McDaniel McMahon Mills<br />
18 U F L A W U F L A W 19
Americas (with Timothy McLendon), 20 Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l L. 5<br />
(special edition, <strong>2008</strong>) • “Legal Education in the Americas:<br />
The Anchor for Hemispheric Justices,” 17 U. Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l<br />
L. 1 (2005)<br />
Robert C. L. M<strong>of</strong>fat<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Philosophy<br />
“Fairness and Self Interest: Re Forming Immigration<br />
Reform,” 13 Nexus 103 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Social Impacts<br />
on the Criminal <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Enforcement <strong>of</strong> Morality:<br />
Some Reflections on the Anglo-American Debate,” 38<br />
Rechtstheorie 1 (2007) • “How Can <strong>Law</strong> Pave the Road<br />
to Perpetual Peace? What <strong>Law</strong> Does and What <strong>Law</strong> Does<br />
Well,” in Kant and the Problems <strong>of</strong> the Contemporary<br />
World 295 (Justyna Miklaszewska, ed.) (Krakow, Poland:<br />
The Jagiellonian <strong>University</strong> Press, 2006) • “Not the <strong>Law</strong>’s<br />
Business: The Politics <strong>of</strong> Tolerance and the Enforcement <strong>of</strong><br />
Morality,” 57 Fla. L. Rev. 1097 (2005)<br />
Winston P. Nagan<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Samuel T. Dell Research Scholar; Affiliate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Anthropology; Director, Institute <strong>of</strong> Human<br />
Rights and Peace Development<br />
“Globalism from an African Perspective: The Training <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>Law</strong>yers for A New and Challenging Reality,” 17 Iowa J.<br />
Transnational L. and Contemporary Problems 2 (<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
• “Transitional Justice: The Moral Foundation <strong>of</strong> Trials<br />
and Commissions in Social and Political Transformation,”<br />
13 East African J. <strong>of</strong> Peace & Human Rts. 3 (2007)•<br />
“Communications Theory and World Public Order:<br />
The Anthropomorphic, Jurisprudential Foundations <strong>of</strong><br />
International Human Rights” (with Craig Hammer), 47<br />
Va. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l L. 3 (2007) • “Mohamed and Another<br />
v. President <strong>of</strong> Republic <strong>of</strong> South Africa and Others —<br />
Constitutional Restraints on the Executive Branch <strong>of</strong><br />
the South African Government: The Rational Limits <strong>of</strong><br />
Intergovernmental and Intragovernmental Cooperation in<br />
the Prosecution <strong>of</strong> Terrorists” (with Craig Hammer), 16<br />
L. and Society Trust Rev. 220 (2006) • “The New Bush<br />
National Security Doctrine and the Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>” (with C.<br />
Hammer), published in two parts in the May and June<br />
issues <strong>of</strong> the Russian journal <strong>Law</strong> and Politics (2006) •<br />
“Old Poison in New Bottles: Trafficking and the Extinction<br />
<strong>of</strong> Respect” (with Alvaro de Medeiros), 14 Tul. J. Intl. &<br />
Comp. <strong>Law</strong> 225 (2006) • “Patriotism, Nationalism, and<br />
the War On Terror: A Mild Plea in Avoidance” (with Craig<br />
Hammer), 56 Fla. L. Rev. 933 (2004), reprinted in Amer.<br />
J. <strong>of</strong> Immigration and Naturalization <strong>Law</strong> (2005) • “The<br />
Global Challenge To Legal Education: Training <strong>Law</strong>yers For<br />
a New Paradigm Of Economic, Political and Legal Cultural<br />
Expectations in the 21st Century” (with Danie Visser),<br />
11 ILSA Journal <strong>of</strong> Int’l & Comp. <strong>Law</strong> 1 (2005) • “Truth,<br />
Reconciliation, and the Fragility <strong>of</strong> Heroic Activism,” 5<br />
Global Jurist Advances, Art. 2 (2005)<br />
Lars Noah<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“The Little Agency That Could (Act with Indifference to<br />
Constitutional and Statutory Strictures),” 93 Cornell L. Rev.<br />
901 (<strong>2008</strong>) • <strong>Law</strong>, Medicine, and Medical Technology:<br />
Cases and Materials (Foundation Press, 2nd ed.) (2007)<br />
• “Too High a Price for Some Drugs?: The FDA Burdens<br />
Reproductive Choice,” 44 San Diego L. Rev. 231 (2007) •<br />
“Treat Yourself: Is Self-Medication the Prescription for What<br />
Ails American Health Care?” 19 Harv. J. L. & Tech. 359<br />
(2006) • “Managing Biotechnology’s [R]evolution: Has<br />
Guarded Enthusiasm Become Benign Neglect?” 11 Va. J. L. &<br />
Tech. 4 (2006) • “A Drug by Any Other Name...?: Paradoxes<br />
in Dietary Supplement Risk Regulation,” 17 Stanford L. &<br />
Policy Rev. 165 (2006) • “An Inventory <strong>of</strong> Mathematical<br />
Blunders in Applying the Loss-<strong>of</strong>-a-Chance Doctrine,” 24 Rev.<br />
Litig. 369 (2005) • “Medical Education and Malpractice:<br />
What’s the Connection?” 15 Health Matrix 149 (2005)<br />
Kenneth B. Nunn<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director, Center on Children and<br />
Families<br />
The MacMillan Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Race and Racism<br />
(Consulting Editor for Race and Constitutional <strong>Law</strong>)<br />
(2007) • “‘Still Up On the Ro<strong>of</strong>’: Race, Victimology and<br />
the Response to Hurricane Katrina,” in Hurricane Katrina:<br />
America’s Unnatural Disaster (Jeremy I. Levitt & Matthew<br />
C. Whitaker, eds.) (2007) • “Diversity As a Dead End,”<br />
35 Pepperdine L. Rev.705 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Foreword: New<br />
Explorations in Culture and Crime — Definitions, Theory,<br />
Method,” 17 Fla. J. <strong>Law</strong> & Pub. Pol’y vii (2006)<br />
Elizabeth Outler<br />
Head <strong>of</strong> Public Services & Tax <strong>Law</strong> Librarian<br />
“Researching Initiatives and Referendums: A Guide for<br />
<strong>Florida</strong>,” 26 Legal Reference Services Quarterly 63<br />
(2007); “RIA Federal Tax Handbook 2006” (book review),<br />
Legal Information Alert 13 (Feb. 2006)<br />
William H. Page<br />
Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar in Electronic<br />
Communications and Administrative <strong>Law</strong>; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs<br />
“Bargaining in the Shadow <strong>of</strong> the European Micros<strong>of</strong>t<br />
Decision: The Micros<strong>of</strong>t-Samba Protocol License” (with<br />
Seldon J. Childers), 102 Northwestern U. L. Rev. Colloquy<br />
302 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “S<strong>of</strong>tware Development as an Antitrust<br />
Remedy: Lessons from the Enforcement <strong>of</strong> the Micros<strong>of</strong>t<br />
Communications Protocol Licensing Requirement” (with<br />
Seldon J. Childers), 14 Michigan Telecommunications<br />
intellectual property<br />
“This is an exciting time to be writing<br />
about workplace intellectual property<br />
disputes. The pace <strong>of</strong> technological and<br />
cultural changes present many challenges<br />
to the protection <strong>of</strong> intellectual property,<br />
particularly trade secrets. I am pleased<br />
that my research can make a contribution<br />
toward the theoretical and practical approaches<br />
to these problems.”<br />
— Elizabeth A. Rowe<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; former litigation partner<br />
at Hale and Dorr, LLP (now WilmerHale)<br />
in Boston; was named one <strong>of</strong> the top five<br />
up-and-coming attorneys in Massachusetts.<br />
Her areas <strong>of</strong> expertise include workplace<br />
intellectual property disputes, trade secrets,<br />
trademark litigation, and patent litigation.<br />
M<strong>of</strong>fat Nagan Noah Nunn Outler Page<br />
20 U F L A W U F L A W 21
and Technology L. Rev. (2007) • The Micros<strong>of</strong>t Case:<br />
Antitrust, High Technology, and Consumer Welfare (with<br />
John Lopatka) (Univ. <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 2007) • Kintner’s<br />
Federal Antitrust <strong>Law</strong> (11 vols., with Joseph Bauer<br />
and John Lopatka) (Lexis, supplements since 2004) •<br />
“Introduction: Reexamining the Standards for Certification<br />
<strong>of</strong> Antitrust Class Actions,” Antitrust 53 (2007) •<br />
“Workable Antitrust Remedies,” Antitrust Source (2007)<br />
• “Communication and Concerted Action,” 38 Loyola U.<br />
Chicago L. J. 405 (2007) • “Economic Authority and<br />
the Limits <strong>of</strong> Expertise in Antitrust Cases” (with John<br />
Lopatka), 90 Cornell L. Rev. 617 (2005) • “Bargaining and<br />
Monopolization: In Search <strong>of</strong> the ‘Boundary <strong>of</strong> Section 2<br />
Liability’ between Aspen and Trinko” (with John Lopatka),<br />
73 Antitrust L. J. 115 (2005) • “Class Certification in the<br />
Micros<strong>of</strong>t Indirect Purchaser Litigation,” 1 J. <strong>of</strong> Competition<br />
L. and Economics 303 (2005)<br />
Juan F. Perea<br />
Cone Wagner Nugent Johnson Hazouri and Roth Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Latinos and the <strong>Law</strong> (with Richard Delgado and Jean<br />
Stefancic) (<strong>2008</strong>) • Race and Races: Cases and Resources<br />
for a Diverse America (with Richard Delgado et. al) (2nd<br />
ed., 2007) • “Mi Pr<strong>of</strong>undo Azul: Why Latinos Have a Right<br />
to Sing the Blues” in Colored Men and Hombres Aqui:<br />
Hernandez v. Texas and the Rise <strong>of</strong> Mexican American<br />
<strong>Law</strong>yering (Michael A. Olivas, ed., 2006)<br />
Don C. Peters<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director, Institute for Dispute Resolution;<br />
Director, Virgil Hawkins Civil Clinics;<br />
Trustee Research Fellow; Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and Families<br />
“Yes We Can: Overcoming Barriers to Mediating Private<br />
Commercial Disputes” (with Eva Gmurzynska), 8 Warsaw<br />
<strong>University</strong> L. Rev. 122 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Just Say No: Minimizing<br />
Limited Authority Negotiating in Court-Mandated Mediation,”<br />
8 Pepperdine Dispute Resolution L.J. 273 (<strong>2008</strong>) • Juris<br />
Types: Learning <strong>Law</strong> Through Self-Understanding (with<br />
Martha M. Peters) (Center for Applications <strong>of</strong> Psychological<br />
Type, 2007) • “When <strong>Law</strong>yers Move Their Lips: Attorney<br />
Truthfulness in Mediation and a Modest Proposal,” 2007 J.<br />
<strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution 119 • “To Sue is Human: To Settle<br />
Divine: Intercultural Collaborations to Expand the Use <strong>of</strong><br />
Mediation in Costa Rica,” 17 Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l. <strong>Law</strong> 1 (2005) •<br />
“Creating and Certifying the Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Mediator: Education<br />
and Credentialing” (with Joseph Stulberg et. al), 28 American<br />
J. <strong>of</strong> Trial Advocacy 75 (2005) • “Do Moving Lips Indicate<br />
That <strong>Law</strong>yers Are Lying When Negotiating and Mediating,” 9<br />
Conflict Management 22 (2005)<br />
Stephen J. Powell<br />
Lecturer in <strong>Law</strong>; Director, International Trade <strong>Law</strong><br />
Program, Center for Governmental Responsibility<br />
Just Trade: A New Covenant Linking Trade and Human<br />
Rights (with Berta Hernández-Truyol) (NYU Press 2009) •<br />
“Should or Must: Nature <strong>of</strong> the Obligation <strong>of</strong> States to Use<br />
Trade Instruments for the Advancement <strong>of</strong> Environmental,<br />
Labor, and Other Human Rights,” 45 Alberta L. Rev. 443<br />
(2007) • “Peru-United States Trade Promotion Agreement:<br />
The New Economic Model for Civil Society?” in Acuerdo de<br />
Promoción Comercial Perú—Estados Unidos (Universidad<br />
Peruana de Ciencas Aplicadas, 2007) • Small Steps:<br />
Ending Trade’s Splendid Isolation from Human Rights<br />
(PUC-Río Núcleo de Direitos Humanos 2007) • “Toward<br />
a Vibrant Peruvian Middle Class: Effects <strong>of</strong> the Peru-United<br />
States Free Trade Agreement on Labor Rights, Biodiversity,<br />
and Indigenous Populations” (with Paola Chavarro), 19 Fla.<br />
J. Int’l L. 93 (2007) • “The Cotton and Sugar Subsidies<br />
Decisions: WTO’s Dispute Settlement System Rebalances<br />
the Agreement on Agriculture” (with Andrew Schmitz),<br />
10 Drake J. Ag. L. 287 (2005) • “Regional Economic<br />
Arrangements and the Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> in the Americas: The<br />
Human Rights Face <strong>of</strong> Free Trade Agreements,” 17 Fla. J.<br />
Int’l L. 59 (2005)<br />
M. Kathleen Price<br />
Clarence J. TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Dean, Library and<br />
Technology<br />
“AALL History through the Eyes <strong>of</strong> Its Presidents,” 98 L.<br />
Lib’y J. 299 (2006) • “<strong>Law</strong> Librarian and International<br />
Legal Information: Careers in Legal Information” in Careers<br />
in International <strong>Law</strong>: A Guide to Career Paths and<br />
Internships in International <strong>Law</strong> 36 (Marion Staunton, ed.)<br />
(2005) • “A Tribute to J. Myron Jacobstein (Universities <strong>of</strong><br />
Illinois and Colorado, Columbia and Stanford Universities<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Librarian and <strong>Law</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor and Former American<br />
Ass’n <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Libraries President),” 97 L. Lib’y J. 623<br />
(2005)<br />
David M. Richardson<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Federal Tax Procedure (with Jerome Borison and Steve<br />
Johnson) (Matthew Bender Graduate Tax Series, 2005)<br />
Leonard L. Riskin<br />
Chesterfield Smith Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Is That All There Is?: ‘The Problem’ in Court-Oriented<br />
Mediation” (with Nancy A. Welsh), 15 Geo. Mason L.<br />
Rev. 863 (<strong>2008</strong>) • “Eleven Big Ideas about Conflict:<br />
A Superficial Guide for the Thoughtful Journalist,” J.<br />
<strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution 157 (2007) • “The Place <strong>of</strong><br />
Mindfulness in Healing and the <strong>Law</strong>,” in Shifting the Field<br />
<strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> & Justice 99 (Linda Hager et. al, eds.) (Center for<br />
<strong>Law</strong> and Renewal, 2007) • “Awareness in <strong>Law</strong>yering: A<br />
Constitutional <strong>Law</strong><br />
“As progressive as the new South African<br />
Constitution is with respect to expressly<br />
protecting education and other socioeconomic<br />
rights like housing and medical<br />
care, the lingering real and harsh effects <strong>of</strong><br />
apartheid’s injustices provide overwhelming<br />
practical obstacles to the attainment<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Constitution’s expressed ideals.<br />
Fortunately, South Africa’s Constitutional<br />
Court seems committed to the ideals<br />
even as it judiciously maneuvers through<br />
the practical realities that inevitably limit<br />
the enforcement <strong>of</strong> its rulings. Many<br />
lessons can be learned from studying this<br />
country’s struggle to overcome its past and<br />
create a society where everyone enjoys the<br />
right to freedom, equality, and dignity —<br />
the Constitution’s three core values.”<br />
— Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Sharon Rush<br />
Irving Cypen Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Co-Founder, Center for<br />
the Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations: Associate<br />
Director, Center on Children and Families. Taught<br />
in UF <strong>Law</strong>’s Summer Study Abroad Program in<br />
Cape Town, South Africa. Her areas <strong>of</strong> expertise<br />
include constitutional law, civil procedure, federal<br />
courts, fourteenth amendment, and race relations.<br />
Perea Peters Powell Price Richardson Riskin<br />
22 U F L A W U F L A W 23
Primer on Paying Attention,” in The Affective Assistance<br />
<strong>of</strong> Counsel: Practicing <strong>Law</strong> as a Healing Pr<strong>of</strong>ession 447<br />
(Marjorie A. Silver, ed.) (2007) • “Decision-Making in<br />
Mediation: The New Old Grid and the New New Grid<br />
System,” 79 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1 (2003) (translated into<br />
Portuguese and published at 4 Estudoa em Arbitragem,<br />
Mediacao e Negociacao 129 (Univeristy <strong>of</strong> Brasilia <strong>Faculty</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, 2007) • “Knowing Yourself: Mindfulness,” in The<br />
Negotiator’s Fieldbook 239 (Christopher Honeyman &<br />
Andrea K. Schneider, eds.) (American Bar Association,<br />
2006) • Dispute Resolution and <strong>Law</strong>yers (with Westbrook<br />
et. al) (West Group, 3d ed. 2005; abridged 3d ed., 2006)<br />
Elizabeth A. Rowe<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Introducing A Take-Down for Trade Secrets on the Internet,”<br />
2007 Wisconsin L. Rev. 1041 (2007) • “Saving Trade Secret<br />
Disclosures on the Internet Through Sequential Preservation,”<br />
42 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1 (2007), republished at 2007<br />
Boston <strong>College</strong> Intellectual Prop. & Technology Forum<br />
249 (2007) • “The Experimental Use Exception to Patent<br />
Infringement: Do Universities Deserve Special Treatment,”<br />
57 Hastings L. J. 921 (2006), republished at 59 Maine L.<br />
Rev. 283 (2007) • “When Trade Secrets Become Shackles:<br />
Fairness and the Inevitable Disclosure Doctrine,” 7 Tul. J.<br />
Tech. and Intell. Prop. 167 (2005)<br />
Sharon E. Rush<br />
Irving Cypen Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and Families<br />
“Whither Sexual Orientation Analysis?: The Proper<br />
Methodology When Due Process and Equal Protection<br />
Intersect,” 16 Wm. & Mary Bill <strong>of</strong> Rts. J. 1 (<strong>2008</strong>) •<br />
“Time Out For Huckleberry Finn,” in Education Landscapes<br />
in the 21 st Century: Cross-cultural Challenges and Multidisciplinary<br />
Perspectives (Cambridge Scholars Pub.,<br />
<strong>2008</strong>) • ‘Hidden’ Lessons: Teaching and Learning Across<br />
the Color Line (Rowman and Littlefield, 2006) • “Toto, I<br />
have a feeling we are still in Kansas,” Voices <strong>of</strong> the Brown<br />
Generation: Memories and Reflections <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essors<br />
(M.W. Robinson and R.J. Bonnie, eds.) (2005)<br />
Katheryn Russell-Brown<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director,<br />
Center for the Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations<br />
Guest Editor, 6 Journal <strong>of</strong> Criminology and Public Policy<br />
(2007) • Protecting Our Own: Race, Crime, and African-<br />
Americans (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006) • “While Visions<br />
<strong>of</strong> Deviance Danced in Their Heads,” in After the Storm:<br />
Black Intellectuals Explore the Meaning <strong>of</strong> Hurricane<br />
Katrina (David Troutt, ed.) (2006) • “Black Protectionism<br />
as a Civil Rights Strategy,” 53 Buffalo L. Rev. 1 (2005) •<br />
“The Myth <strong>of</strong> Race and Crime,” in Demystifying Crime and<br />
Criminal Justice (Bohm and Walker, eds.) (2005)<br />
Michael L. Seigel<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Corporate America Fights Back: The Battle Over Waiver <strong>of</strong><br />
the Attorney Client Privilege,” 49 Boston <strong>College</strong> L. Rev. 1<br />
(<strong>2008</strong>) • “The Admissibility <strong>of</strong> Co-Conspirator Statements<br />
in a Post-Crawford World” (with Daniel Weisman), 34<br />
<strong>Florida</strong> State <strong>University</strong> L. Rev. 877 (2007) • “Bringing<br />
Coherence to Mens Rea Analysis for Securities-Related<br />
Offenses,” 2006 Wisconsin L. Rev. 1564 (2006) • “Some<br />
Preliminary Statistical, Qualitative, and Anecdotal Findings<br />
<strong>of</strong> an Empirical Study <strong>of</strong> Collegiality Among <strong>Law</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essors,”<br />
13 Widener L. R. (2006) • “Prosecuting Martha: Federal<br />
Prosecutorial Power and the Need for a <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Counts” (with<br />
Christopher Slobogin), 109 Penn State L. Rev. 1107 (2005)<br />
and reprinted in Martha Stewart’s Legal Troubles: A Domestic<br />
Diva’s Interaction With <strong>Law</strong> and the Legal System, (Joan<br />
Heminway, ed.) (2006) • “The Effective Use <strong>of</strong> War Stories<br />
in Teaching Evidence,” 50 St. Louis <strong>University</strong> L. Rev. 1191<br />
(2006) • Improbable Events: Murder at Ellenton Hall (novel,<br />
iUniverse, Inc., 2005)<br />
Michael R. Siebecker<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“The Duty <strong>of</strong> Care and Data Control Systems in the Wake<br />
<strong>of</strong> Sarbanes-Oxley,” 83 Chicago-Kent L. Rev. (<strong>2008</strong>) •<br />
“Building a ‘New Institutional’ Approach to Corporate<br />
Speech,” 59 Alabama L. Rev. 247 (<strong>2008</strong>) (lead article)<br />
• “Corporate Speech, Securities Regulation and an<br />
Institutional Approach to the First Amendment,” 48<br />
William and Mary L. Rev. (2006), reprinted in The First<br />
Amendment Handbook 601 (Rodney M. Smolla ed. <strong>2008</strong>)<br />
D. Daniel Sokol<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Order Without (Enforceable) <strong>Law</strong>: Why Countries Enter<br />
into Non-Enforceable Competition Policy Chapters in Free<br />
Trade Agreements,” 83 Chicago-Kent L. Rev. 231 (<strong>2008</strong>) •<br />
“Monopolists Without Borders: The Institutional Challenge<br />
<strong>of</strong> International Antitrust in a Global Gilded Age,” 4<br />
Berkeley Business L.J. 37 (2007) • “How to Think About<br />
the Globalization <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and <strong>Law</strong> Firms,” 14 Indiana J. <strong>of</strong><br />
Global Legal Studies 5 (2007)<br />
Lee-ford Tritt<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director, Center for Estate and Elder<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Planning; Director, Estates and Trusts Practice<br />
Certificate Program; Associate Director, Center on Children<br />
and Families<br />
“Liberating Estates <strong>Law</strong> from the Constraints <strong>of</strong> Copyright,”<br />
38 Rutgers L. J. 109 (2006)<br />
Land use law<br />
“At the beginning <strong>of</strong> my academic career, I<br />
studied with admiration the bibliography <strong>of</strong><br />
a leading land use planning law pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
who had written articles, books, and monographs<br />
intended for four important audiences:<br />
students, judges, practitioners, and scholars in<br />
law and law-related disciplines. Perhaps this<br />
helps explain the range <strong>of</strong> my own writings,<br />
such as these recent and current projects: A<br />
history <strong>of</strong> the origins <strong>of</strong> American zoning law;<br />
a consideration <strong>of</strong> William Faulkner as a legal<br />
commentator; a study <strong>of</strong> the U.S. Supreme<br />
Court and the environment; an evaluation <strong>of</strong><br />
the media reaction to the Kelo case; a land<br />
use planning casebook; a review <strong>of</strong> a book by<br />
a leading private property rights scholar; and<br />
a real property deskbook. What this seemingly<br />
dissimilar group has in common is that I consistently<br />
view legal developments, doctrines,<br />
and themes through the lens <strong>of</strong> history, my first<br />
and most enduring field <strong>of</strong> inquiry.”<br />
— Michael Allan Wolf<br />
Richard E. Nelson Chair in Local Government <strong>Law</strong>;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor. The General Editor <strong>of</strong> Powell on Real Property<br />
and the author <strong>of</strong> The Zoning <strong>of</strong> America: Euclid<br />
v. Amber (<strong>2008</strong>), his areas <strong>of</strong> expertise include land use<br />
planning, environmental law, property, local government,<br />
urban revitalization, and legal and constitutional history.<br />
Rowe Rush Russell-Brown Seigel Siebecker Sokol Tritt<br />
24 U F L A W U F L A W 25
Christopher Vallandingham<br />
Foreign & International <strong>Law</strong> Librarian<br />
“The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Spying: A Review <strong>of</strong> the Literature,” 16 Def.<br />
Intell. J. 121 (2007) • “Tracking Down Legal Sources on<br />
Prestatehood <strong>Florida</strong>,” in Prestatehood Legal Materials: A<br />
Fifty-State Research Guide (Michael Chiorazzi & Marguerite<br />
Most, eds.) (2005)<br />
Jeffry S. Wade<br />
Director, Environmental Division, Center for Governmental<br />
Responsibility<br />
“Privatization and the Future <strong>of</strong> Water Services,” 20 <strong>Florida</strong><br />
J. <strong>of</strong> International L. 179 (<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
Walter O. Weyrauch<br />
Distinguished Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Stephen C. O’Connell Chair; Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and Families<br />
“The Experience <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>lessness,” 10 New Criminal L. Rev.<br />
415 (2007)<br />
Steven J. Willis<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and Families<br />
The Tax <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Charities and Other Exempt Organizations:<br />
Statutory Supplement (with David A. Brennen & Beverly<br />
I. Moran) (Thomson West, 2nd ed., <strong>2008</strong>) • The Tax <strong>Law</strong><br />
<strong>of</strong> Charities and Other Exempt Organizations: Cases,<br />
Materials, Questions, and Activities (with Darryll K.<br />
Jones et. al) (Thomson West, 2nd ed., 2007) • “People<br />
in Glass Houses,” 113 Tax Notes 477 (2006) • Financial<br />
Calculations for <strong>Law</strong>yers (<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong>, Department<br />
<strong>of</strong> Continuing Education 2006) • Federal Tax Accounting<br />
(with Michael B. Lang & Elliott Manning) (Lexis Publishing<br />
2005)<br />
Jessica Wittman<br />
Electronic Services Librarian, Legal Information Center<br />
“Beyond Print: A Second Life for Continuing Education,”<br />
27.3 Legal Information Alert 1 (<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
Michael Allan Wolf<br />
Richard E. Nelson Chair in Local Government <strong>Law</strong>;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
The Zoning <strong>of</strong> America: Euclid v. Ambler (<strong>University</strong> Press<br />
<strong>of</strong> Kansas, <strong>2008</strong>) • Powell on Real Property (Matthew<br />
Bender-LexisNexis, General Editor) • “William Faulkner, Legal<br />
Commentator: Humanity and Endurance in Hollywood’s<br />
Yoknapatawpha,” 77 Mississippi <strong>Law</strong> Journal 957 (<strong>2008</strong>)<br />
• “Hysteria v. History: Public Use in the Public Eye,” in<br />
Private Property, Community, and Eminent Domain (Robin<br />
Paul Malloy, ed.) (Ashgate Publishing, <strong>2008</strong>) • “Looking<br />
Backward: Richard Epstein Ponders the ‘Progressive’ Peril,’”<br />
Book Review, 105 Mich. L. Rev. 1233 (2007) • “Supreme<br />
Guidance for Wet Growth: Lessons from the High Court on<br />
the Powers and Responsibilities <strong>of</strong> Local Governments,”<br />
9 Chapman L. Rev. 233 (2006) • “Introduction: A New<br />
Realism About Environmental <strong>Law</strong>” and “‘They Endured’:<br />
Mining the Supreme Court’s Serviceable Past,” in Strategies<br />
for Environmental Success in an Uncertain Judicial Climate<br />
(Michael Allan Wolf, ed.) (ELI, 2005)<br />
Barbara Bennett Woodhouse<br />
David H. <strong>Levin</strong> Chair in Family <strong>Law</strong>;<br />
Director, Center on Children and Families;<br />
Director, Family <strong>Law</strong> Certificate Program<br />
Hidden in Plain Sight: The Tragedy <strong>of</strong> Children’s Rights from<br />
Ben Franklin to Lionel Tate (Princeton <strong>University</strong> Press, <strong>2008</strong>)<br />
• “Cleaning Up Toxic Violence: An Ecogenerist Paradigm,”<br />
in Handbook <strong>of</strong> Children, Culture and Violence (Dowd<br />
et al, eds.) (2006) • “Ecogenerism: An Environmentalist<br />
Approach to Protecting Endangered Children,”12 Va. J.<br />
Soc. Pol’y & L. (2005) • “The Family Supportive Nature <strong>of</strong><br />
the U.N. Convention on the Rights <strong>of</strong> the Child” and “The<br />
Changing Status <strong>of</strong> the Child,” in The U.N. Convention on<br />
the Rights <strong>of</strong> the Child: An Analysis <strong>of</strong> Treaty Provisions and<br />
Implications <strong>of</strong> U.S. Ratification (Jonathan Todres et. al, eds.)<br />
(Transnational Publishers, 2006) • “Waiting for Loving: The<br />
Child’s Fundamental Right to Adoption,” 34 Capital U. L.<br />
Rev. 297 (2005) • “Foreword,” 16 U. Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> L. and Public<br />
Pol’y V (2005) • “Martyrs, Media and the Web: Examining a<br />
Grassroots Children’s Rights Movement Through the Lens <strong>of</strong><br />
Social Movement Theory,” 5 Whittier J. Child & Fam. Advoc.<br />
121 (2005)<br />
Danaya C. Wright<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
“Charitable Deductions for Rail-Trail Conversions: Reconciling<br />
the Partial Interest Rule and the National Trails System Act”<br />
(with Scott Bowman), 32 Wm. & Mary Envt’l L & Pol’y Rev. 1<br />
(<strong>2008</strong>) • “Rails-to-Trails: Conversion <strong>of</strong> Railroad Corridors to<br />
Recreational Trails,” in 78A Powell on Real Property (Michael<br />
Allan Wolf, ed.) (2007) • “The Legacy <strong>of</strong> Colonialism: <strong>Law</strong><br />
and Women’s Rights in India” (with Varsha Chitnis), 64<br />
Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1315 (2007) • “Legal Rights and<br />
Women’s Autonomy: Can Family <strong>Law</strong> Reform in Muslim<br />
Countries Avoid the Contradictions <strong>of</strong> Victorian Domesticity?”<br />
5.1 Hawwa (2007) • “Collapsing Liberalism’s Public/Private<br />
Divide: Voldemort’s War on the Family,” 12 Texas Wesleyan<br />
L. Rev. 434 (2005) • “Well-Behaved Women Don’t Make<br />
History: Rethinking Family, <strong>Law</strong>, and History Through<br />
an Analysis <strong>of</strong> the First Nine Years <strong>of</strong> the English Divorce<br />
and Matrimonial Causes Court (1858-1866),” Wisconsin<br />
Women’s L. J. 211 (2005) (winner <strong>of</strong> the 2005 Donald<br />
Sutherland Award for the most important article in English<br />
legal history from the American Society for Legal History)<br />
Administration<br />
Robert H. Jerry, II; Dean; <strong>Levin</strong>, Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong><br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
William H. Page; Senior Associate Dean for Academic<br />
Affairs; Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar<br />
Stuart R. Cohn; Associate Dean for International<br />
Studies; Gerald A. Sohn Scholar; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
Michael K. Friel; Associate Dean and Director,<br />
Graduate Taxation Program; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
Rachel Inman; Associate Dean for Students<br />
Christine Klein; Associate Dean for <strong>Faculty</strong><br />
Development; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
M. Kathleen Price; Associate Dean, Library and<br />
Technology; Clarence J. TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
Linda Calvert Hanson; Assistant Dean for<br />
Career Services<br />
Michael Patrick; Assistant Dean for Admissions<br />
John Plummer; Assistant Dean for<br />
Administrative Affairs<br />
Debra D. Amirin; Communications Director<br />
Kelley Frohlich; Senior Director <strong>of</strong> Development<br />
and Alumni Affairs<br />
Produced by the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Office <strong>of</strong><br />
Communications for the Associate Dean for <strong>Faculty</strong><br />
Development. Send updates or corrections to Associate<br />
Dean for <strong>Faculty</strong> Development Christine Klein, <strong>Levin</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, PO Box 117633, Gainesville, FL<br />
32611-7633, or e-mail KleinC@law.ufl.edu.<br />
Primary photography by Joshua Luckman.<br />
Design by JS Design<br />
The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Florida</strong> is committed to non-discrimination<br />
with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age,<br />
disability, gender, marital status, sexual orientation,<br />
national origin, political opinions or affiliations, and<br />
veteran status.<br />
Vallandingham Wade Weyrauch Willis Wittman<br />
Wolf Woodhouse Wright<br />
26 U F L A W
UF LEVIN COLLEGE OF LAW<br />
n One <strong>of</strong> the nation’s LARGEST LAW SCHOOLS, with 1,300<br />
students, approximately 60 tenure/tenure track faculty and<br />
40-plus other full-time faculty who support the college through<br />
clinical, research, skills training and administrative programs. It<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers J.D. certificate programs in Environmental and Land Use<br />
<strong>Law</strong>, Estates and Trusts Practice, Family <strong>Law</strong>, Intellectual Property<br />
<strong>Law</strong>, and International and Comparative <strong>Law</strong>; an extensive<br />
array <strong>of</strong> joint degree programs; specialized centers, institutes<br />
and program areas; and strong clinical <strong>of</strong>ferings.<br />
n A high quality, comprehensive law school, with LEADING<br />
PROGRAMS in GRADUATE TAXATION, ENVIRONMENTAL<br />
AND LAND USE LAW, and FAMILY LAW. The Graduate<br />
Taxation Program, which <strong>of</strong>fers the LL.M. in Taxation, LL.M.<br />
in International Taxation and S.J.D. in Taxation, is widely<br />
and consistently regarded as one <strong>of</strong> the nation’s top two<br />
programs. The Environmental <strong>Law</strong> Program now <strong>of</strong>fers the<br />
nation’s first LL.M. in the closely-related fields <strong>of</strong> environmental<br />
and land use law.<br />
n Has <strong>of</strong>fered STRONG INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS for<br />
more than three decades, and many members <strong>of</strong> the faculty<br />
are experts in international legal issues. These programs and<br />
its LL.M. in Comparative <strong>Law</strong> Program for foreign lawyers<br />
expand the school’s curriculum and international <strong>of</strong>ferings<br />
and strengthen its ties with programs and scholars around<br />
the globe.<br />
n Has a longstanding tradition <strong>of</strong> preparing its<br />
graduates for significant leadership roles. Its<br />
alumni include four presidents <strong>of</strong> the American Bar Association<br />
since 1973 — five when UF <strong>Law</strong> graduate Steve Zack takes<br />
<strong>of</strong>fice as president-elect in 2009-10 and serves as president in<br />
2010-11, the majority <strong>of</strong> The <strong>Florida</strong> Bar presidents, including<br />
its current president, John G. White III; four governors <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>Florida</strong>; and hundreds <strong>of</strong> state senators and representatives<br />
and <strong>Florida</strong> Cabinet members. Nine graduates became college<br />
presidents, including at UF. A dozen have served as deans <strong>of</strong><br />
law schools. It is ranked fourth among public law schools in<br />
<strong>2008</strong> (eighth overall) in the number <strong>of</strong> its graduates serving as<br />
federal district and circuit court judges.<br />
The Foundation for The Gator Nation<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
P.O. Box 117633<br />
Gainesville, FL 32611-7633<br />
Non-Pr<strong>of</strong>it<br />
Organization<br />
U.S. Postage<br />
PAID<br />
Gainesville, FL<br />
Permit No. 726