REPORT FROM THE FACULTY - Levin College of Law - University ...
REPORT FROM THE FACULTY - Levin College of Law - University ...
REPORT FROM THE FACULTY - Levin College of Law - University ...
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<strong>REPORT</strong> <strong>FROM</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>FACULTY</strong>
2 U F L A W<br />
A Word From the Dean<br />
I am both honored and proud to introduce this Report<br />
From the Faculty at the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida. UF’s law school has long been a very<br />
good institution, but thanks to careful planning, hard work<br />
by our faculty, and support from our alumni and friends, it<br />
is getting stronger every year.<br />
Among the most visible signs <strong>of</strong> our progress is a substantial,<br />
ongoing construction project that will renovate,<br />
replace or build anew 150,000 square feet <strong>of</strong> academic space<br />
at the college. Our new classroom education towers, which<br />
opened this fall, provide our students and faculty with 11<br />
spacious, state-<strong>of</strong>-the-art classrooms. The expansion and renovation<br />
<strong>of</strong> our Legal Information Center, including our new<br />
reading room, rare book room and new or renovated classrooms,<br />
will be completed next summer. The challenge <strong>of</strong><br />
inhabiting a facility under construction has been formidable,<br />
but we look forward to celebrating in the Fall <strong>of</strong> 2005 our<br />
top quality facilities and new technological capabilities.<br />
We also have undertaken a close examination <strong>of</strong> our<br />
organizational structure and academic programs, and we are<br />
in the process <strong>of</strong> implementing a strategic plan articulated<br />
by the faculty that builds upon our strengths. As is true at<br />
any law school, whether we achieve our aspirations will ultimately<br />
depend upon our faculty.<br />
The pages that follow showcase a highly productive and<br />
energetic community <strong>of</strong> scholars who are known and respected<br />
for their research and law-reform efforts in both academia<br />
and the legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession. They have organized and led<br />
conferences this year in such diverse areas as transformative<br />
mediation, law and technology, race and race relations, children<br />
and families, growth management, pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism, and<br />
global trade. Many <strong>of</strong> their books, treatises and articles are<br />
definitive works.<br />
No less significant has been our ability to recruit many<br />
new, outstanding colleagues. In the current year, for example,<br />
we have welcomed to our college former New York<br />
<strong>University</strong> Tax Program Director Paul R. McDaniel, Harvard<br />
<strong>Law</strong> School faculty member Diane M. Ring, and Mary Jane<br />
Angelo, former senior attorney for the U.S. Environmental<br />
Protection Agency in Washington, D.C.<br />
I am proud <strong>of</strong> the faculty’s many accomplishments, but<br />
we aspire to accomplish much more. We are pleased that<br />
our efforts to enhance faculty recruitment, retention and<br />
support will be assisted by newly installed <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida President Bernard Machen, who has identified faculty<br />
development as a priority for his administration.<br />
This is an exciting time to be part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, but I firmly believe our best<br />
years are in our future.<br />
— Robert H. Jerry, II, Dean,<br />
<strong>Levin</strong>, Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
The Fredric G. <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
■ With 1,200 students, 100 full-time faculty and some 40 adjuncts,<br />
the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> is the nation’s 12th largest law school,<br />
with a broad and comprehensive curriculum that allows students to<br />
focus on and demonstrate interest in specific areas through six J.D.<br />
certificate programs and numerous joint degree programs. The<br />
school’s strong clinical <strong>of</strong>ferings provide quality experiential learning<br />
experiences to students while delivering competent legal services to<br />
indigent citizens.<br />
■ The college’s LL.M. and S.J.D. in Graduate Tax and LL.M. in<br />
Comparative <strong>Law</strong>, together with its specialized centers, institutes<br />
and program areas (see page 12), enhance the school’s curriculum<br />
and rich international <strong>of</strong>ferings and strengthen its ties with other<br />
programs and scholars around the globe.<br />
■ The college and a number <strong>of</strong> its programs — particularly Graduate Tax and Environmental <strong>Law</strong> — are<br />
consistently ranked among the best in the country.<br />
■ More than 10 prospective students apply for each available seat (17.5 applied for every seat in Fall 2003 and 2004),<br />
and recent classes are the most qualified in law school history. The quality <strong>of</strong> the student body also is reflected in its<br />
activities, and student organizations such as Trial Team and Moot Court have placed at the top in regional and national<br />
competitions in recent years.<br />
■ The school’s alumni and friends collaborate with faculty in new initiatives, and have been increasingly active in<br />
fundraising and participation in school events. Their help enabled the college to begin construction in 2003 on a major<br />
expansion and renovation project (see page 17) scheduled for completion in 2005. ❒
Report From the Faculty<br />
Faculty Overview<br />
The <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> faculty — as<br />
evidenced in the following list <strong>of</strong> significant<br />
scholarship since 2000 — have earned their<br />
excellent reputations through years <strong>of</strong> innovative<br />
research and writing and their leadership<br />
and involvement with academic, pr<strong>of</strong>essional<br />
and legal organizations in this country and<br />
abroad. Many have made a pr<strong>of</strong>ound impact on<br />
the legal pr<strong>of</strong>ession as it is studied and practiced,<br />
and even in shaping policy on a global<br />
scale.<br />
UF law faculty also are focusing on<br />
improving their already strong institution —<br />
from academic programs to facilities — to<br />
better prepare students for today’s legal environment,<br />
advance legal knowledge, fulfill the<br />
college’s public service mission, and make its<br />
collective vision <strong>of</strong> joining the nation’s top law<br />
schools a reality.<br />
Under the leadership this year <strong>of</strong> new Dean<br />
Robert Jerry, faculty are following a strategic<br />
plan developed and approved in May 2002 that<br />
is improving the student-teacher ratio, augmenting<br />
skills training, better supporting and<br />
thereby enhancing faculty scholarship and<br />
teaching, and making dynamic changes in the<br />
school’s institutional focus.<br />
UF law’s faculty is larger than that <strong>of</strong><br />
many schools, and frequently partners with<br />
leading private practitioners to keep course<br />
<strong>of</strong>ferings relevant. The college’s 59 full-time<br />
and four affiliate tenured or tenure-track<br />
faculty includes 22 (37 percent) women, and<br />
10 (16 percent) minorities (five African-<br />
Americans, four Latinos/as, one Native<br />
American). In addition, 41 faculty support the<br />
college through clinical, research, writing,<br />
information and administrative programs, and<br />
about 40 adjuncts teach in specialty areas and<br />
courses such as patent and agricultural law.<br />
Student evaluations reflect high satisfaction<br />
with pr<strong>of</strong>essors (overall 4.20 rating, with five<br />
denoting “excellent”). Also:<br />
■ Most faculty members graduated from outstanding<br />
law schools at or near the top <strong>of</strong> their<br />
classes, and were editors or members <strong>of</strong> their<br />
respective law reviews. More than 20 clerked at the<br />
appellate level (half in federal court) and two for the<br />
U.S. Supreme Court, and 35 were associates or partners<br />
at law firms (15 for five years or more). More<br />
than a dozen earned Ph.D.’s, 13 have LL.B. or<br />
LL.M.’s, 43 hold master’s degrees and seven<br />
received Fulbright awards.<br />
2004-05 Books & Casebooks<br />
■ Stuart R. Cohn: Florida Business <strong>Law</strong>s Annotated: Commentary, Cases<br />
and Forms, 2003-04 ed. (Westgroup)<br />
■ Thomas F. Cotter: Intellectual Property: Economic and Legal Dimensions <strong>of</strong><br />
Rights and Remedies (Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press, forthcoming 2004) (with<br />
Blair).<br />
■ Michael K. Friel: Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individual Income, 7th ed. (LexisNexis, 2004)<br />
(with Burke).<br />
■ Michael W. Gordon: International Business Transactions: A Problem Oriented<br />
Coursebook, with Documents Supplement and Teacher’s Manual, 7th ed. (Westgroup 2004)<br />
(with Folsom & Spanogle); NAFTA: A Problem-Oriented Coursebook, with Documents<br />
Supplement and Teacher’s Manual, 2nd ed. (Westgroup, forthcoming late 2004/early 2005)<br />
(with Folsom, Lopez & Gantz); International Civil Dispute Resolution: A Problem-<br />
Oriented Coursebook, with Documents Supplement and Teacher’s Manual (Westgroup<br />
2004) (with Baldwin, Brand & Epstein); International Business Transactions in a Nutshell,<br />
7th ed. (Westgroup 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle); International Trade & Investment in<br />
a Nutshell, 3rd ed. (Westgroup 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle); Concise Hornbook on<br />
International Business (Westgroup, forthcoming early 2005) (with Folsom & Spanogle).<br />
■ Jerold H. Israel: White Collar Crime in a Nutshell, 3rd ed.<br />
(Westgroup, 2004) (with Podgor); Principles <strong>of</strong> Criminal Procedure:<br />
Investigation (Westgroup, 2004) (with LaFave & King); Principles <strong>of</strong><br />
Criminal Procedure: Post-Investigation (Westgroup, 2004) (with LaFave<br />
and King); Criminal Procedure and the Constitution, 1999-2004 eds.<br />
(Westgroup) (with Kamisar & LaFave); Criminal Procedure Hornbook,<br />
4th ed. (Westgroup, 2004) (with Lafave & King).<br />
■ Christine A. Klein: Natural Resources <strong>Law</strong>: A Place-Based Book <strong>of</strong> Problems and<br />
Cases (Aspen Publishers, forthcoming 2005) (with Cheever and Birdsong).<br />
■ Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky: Freedom <strong>of</strong> the Press: A Reference Guide to the U.S.<br />
Constitution (2004).<br />
■ <strong>Law</strong>rence Lokken: Federal Taxation <strong>of</strong> Employee Compensation (Warren Gorham &<br />
Lamont, 2004) (with Bittker); Fundamentals <strong>of</strong> International Taxation (Warren Gorham &<br />
Lamont, 2004/2005 ed.) (with Bittker).<br />
■ Pedro A. Malavet: America’s Colony: The Political and Cultural Conflict<br />
between the United States and Puerto Rico (NYU Press, 2004).<br />
■ Martin J. McMahon, Jr.: 2004-1 Semi-Annual Cumulative<br />
Supplement and 2004-2 Semi-Annual Cumulative Supplements to<br />
Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individuals, 3rd. ed. (Warren, Gorham<br />
& Lamont, 2002) (with Bittker & Zelenak); and Federal Income<br />
Taxation, Cases and Materials, 5th ed. (Foundation Press, 2004) (with<br />
McDaniel, Simmons & Abreu).<br />
■ William H. Page: Kintner’s Federal Antitrust <strong>Law</strong>, (11 vols.) 2004 supplements<br />
(with Lapatka and Bauer).<br />
■ Juan Francisco Perea: Race and Races: Cases and Resources for a Diverse America,<br />
2nd ed. (forthcoming 2005) (with Delgado, Harris, Stefancic and Wildman).<br />
■ Don C. Peters: Paper-chasing Types: The Myers-Briggs and <strong>Law</strong> Study<br />
(forthcoming 2005).<br />
■ Christopher L. Peterson: Taming the Sharks: Towards a Cure for the High<br />
Cost Credit Market (Univ. <strong>of</strong> Akron Press, 2004).<br />
■ David M. Richardson: Federal Tax Procedure (Textbook, forthcoming<br />
Summer 2005, Matthew Bender Graduate Tax Series) (with Borison and<br />
Johnson).<br />
■ Sharon E. Rush: The Challenges <strong>of</strong> Teaching Race: Huck and the Color<br />
Line (Rowman and Littlefield, 2005).<br />
■ Katheryn Russell-Brown: Underground Codes: Race, Crime and Related<br />
Fires (New York <strong>University</strong> Press, 2004).<br />
■ Michael L. Seigel: Improbable Events (Novel, forthcoming 2005).<br />
■ Christopher Slobogin: <strong>Law</strong> and the Mental Health System:<br />
Civil and Criminal Aspects, 4th ed. (2004) (with Reisner & Rai).<br />
■ Stephen J. Willis: Electronic Teaching Materials for Tax<br />
Exempt Organizations (Thomson West, 2004); Financial<br />
Calculations for <strong>Law</strong>yers (Book World Publishers, 2004).<br />
■ Michael Allan Wolf: Powell on Real Property (general ed., 17 vols.)<br />
(Mathew Bender). ❒<br />
U F L A W 3
4 U F L A W<br />
CALLY JORDAN:<br />
Key legislation in Vietnam.<br />
WINSTON NAGAN:<br />
Understanding governance<br />
and human rights in Africa<br />
and other countries.<br />
CHRISTOPHER SLOBOGIN:<br />
Legislation on rights <strong>of</strong><br />
mentally disabled.<br />
PATRICIA DILLEY:<br />
Seminal work in Social<br />
Security Tax.<br />
■ UF law faculty also are publishing more — and in more<br />
distinguished venues — than ever before, with 61 treatises,<br />
casebooks or similar major books in the past seven years. The<br />
per capita rate for 2000-01 was 0.45, representing 25 books by 13<br />
faculty. From 1996-2003, the faculty authored 264 articles in law<br />
reviews and specialty journals published by law schools, compared<br />
to 141 such articles in the previous self-study period — almost a 90<br />
percent increase. Placement also improved, with 73 articles appearing<br />
in reviews published at the top 50 schools in U.S. News &<br />
World Report rankings (compared to 32 before, an increase <strong>of</strong> 130<br />
percent). Twenty-two appeared in reviews published by the top 25<br />
law schools in U.S. News rankings (compared to 16 previously, a<br />
27 percent increase). Statistics now being compiled regarding<br />
placements in top law reviews indicate that this positive trend is<br />
continuing, with multiple placements in reviews at Harvard,<br />
UCLA, California, Minnesota, Northwestern, Vanderbilt and<br />
Cornell, to list a few. In addition, a number <strong>of</strong> faculty are now<br />
working on books with contracts from Harvard, Cambridge and<br />
Chicago.<br />
Influence Significant and Widespread<br />
The influence <strong>of</strong> faculty at the UF <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> reaches far<br />
beyond campus. As teachers, they shape future pr<strong>of</strong>essionals,<br />
teachers, leaders and decision makers. And as researchers, scholars,<br />
writers and activists, their work impacts the study and practice <strong>of</strong><br />
law, political agendas and policy making from the local to the global<br />
level. To list a few examples drawn from diverse areas:<br />
■ Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Cally Jordan was recently asked by the<br />
World Bank — at the request <strong>of</strong> the Vietnamese government — to<br />
work on the second stage <strong>of</strong> reforms to its corporate law. Jordan<br />
helped prepare the first business enterprise legislation introduced in<br />
Vietnam. Its business community attributes the stunning economic<br />
growth in Vietnam since 1999 (fourth fastest growing economy in<br />
the world) in large part to this legislation.<br />
■ Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Winston P. Nagan, FRSA, Samuel T. Dell Research<br />
Scholar, affiliate pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> anthropology, and founding director<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Institute for Human Rights and Peace Development, has<br />
served as board chairman <strong>of</strong> Amnesty International USA, and<br />
works to enhance understanding <strong>of</strong> governance and human rights in<br />
Africa and other countries. He facilitated creation <strong>of</strong> the Human<br />
Rights and Peace Centre at Makerere <strong>University</strong> in Uganda, and<br />
helps coordinate Southeastern European peace conferences.<br />
■ Stephen C. O’Connell Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Christopher Slobogin is widely<br />
published and quoted by the media on mental health and search<br />
and seizure issues, and was reporter for two American Bar<br />
Association Task Forces — Non-Responsibility for Crime and<br />
Technologically-Assisted Physical Surveillance — which produced<br />
standards adopted by the ABA House <strong>of</strong> Delegates. He also drafted<br />
commentary for the three Recommendations currently proposed by<br />
the ABA Task Force on Mental Disability and the Death Penalty,<br />
and is chairing the Florida Committee on Implementation <strong>of</strong> the<br />
ABA’s Moratorium on the Death Penalty. In Virginia, he drafted<br />
legislation — subsequently passed — concerning evaluation <strong>of</strong><br />
people with mental disability who are charged with crime.<br />
■ Research and scholarship by the school’s top-ranked Graduate<br />
Tax faculty (also see page 14) continues to impact the study and<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>ession <strong>of</strong> tax law. The work <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Patricia E. Dilley, for<br />
JEFFREY DAVIS:<br />
Principal draftsman <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida’s innovative<br />
Judgement Lien <strong>Law</strong>.<br />
JON MILLS: Chairs Florida<br />
Supreme Court Committee on<br />
Privacy and Court Records.<br />
WILLIAM PAGE: Research on<br />
antitrust law & economics.<br />
JONATHAN COHEN:<br />
Research on legal dimensions<br />
<strong>of</strong> apology helped lead to<br />
new evidentiary rules in<br />
Florida and other states.
Focus on Interdisciplinary<br />
Scholarship<br />
UF’s law school is home to one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
country’s largest concentrations <strong>of</strong> faculty<br />
publishing in Critical Legal Studies, an<br />
interdisciplinary approach to the law.<br />
With the creation <strong>of</strong> the Center for the<br />
Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations in the<br />
late 1990s, the UF <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> has<br />
emerged on the forefront <strong>of</strong> Critical Legal<br />
Studies and Critical Race Theory, with<br />
books by six faculty — Katheryn Russell-<br />
Brown (pictured, from left), Berta<br />
Hernandez-Truyol, Juan Perea, Michelle Jacobs, Nancy Dowd and Pedro Malavet — included in New York <strong>University</strong> Press’<br />
celebrated Critical America Series, more than any other school.<br />
Faculty with significant scholarship in related areas also include Kenneth Nunn, Sharon Rush and Sherrie Russell-<br />
Brown, as well as many others who study the law and how it intersects with other disciplines. Dozens <strong>of</strong> other UF law<br />
faculty also have participated in scholarship that attempts to view law in the broader context <strong>of</strong> the social sciences and<br />
other academic disciplines, including Paul Magnarella (Anthropology); Thomas Cotter (Intellectual Property); Jeffrey<br />
Harrison and William Page (Economics); Cally Jordan (Finance); Alyson Flournoy (Environmental Philosophy); Elizabeth<br />
Dale, Michael Wolf and Danaya Wright (History); Jonathan Cohen and Charles Collier (Philosophy); Robert M<strong>of</strong>fat<br />
(Philosophy & Sociology); Barbara Noah (Medicine); Mark Fondacaro and Christopher Slobogin (Psychology); Winston Nagan<br />
(Society & Policy Sciences); Nancy Dowd, Michelle Jacobs and Barbara Bennett Woodhouse (Families and Gender); Bill<br />
Chamberlin and Lyrissa Lidsky (Mass Media); Michael Seigel (Pragmatism & Philosophy); and Mark Fenster, Martin<br />
McMahon, Sharon Rush and Walter Weyrauch (Society & Culture).<br />
The college also draws on the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida’s curricular strength in other ways, such as by teaming with UF<br />
specialists on research and cross-disciplinary training, or by featuring guest presentations by UF experts. Students can<br />
take courses in other colleges or earn joint degrees, which the college <strong>of</strong>fers in nearly unsurpassed numbers. ❒<br />
example, was referenced in the Virginia Tax Review as “seminal<br />
in the area <strong>of</strong> Social Security tax thinking,” and her work<br />
is cited in leading journals and by top tax faculty nationwide.<br />
■ Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jeffrey Davis, as reporter for the Special<br />
Committee on Post-Judgment Remedies <strong>of</strong> the Business<br />
Section <strong>of</strong> The Florida Bar, was principal draftsman <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida’s new and highly creative Judgement Lien <strong>Law</strong>, F.S.<br />
55.200 et. seq. Davis continues to be deeply involved in refining<br />
and further developing the law. In June 2004, at the annual<br />
meeting <strong>of</strong> The Florida Bar, Davis and Associate Dean for<br />
International Studies/Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Stuart Cohn became only the<br />
second and third recipients ever <strong>of</strong> the Business Section’s<br />
Distinguished Lifetime Service Award.<br />
■ Center for Governmental Responsibility Director/Dean<br />
Emeritus/Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jon Mills was involved with a series <strong>of</strong><br />
cases in the Florida Supreme Court on constitutional and privacy<br />
issues — including the controversial Dale Earnardt case.<br />
He now chairs a Florida Supreme Court Committee on<br />
Privacy and Court Records aimed at developing a uniform<br />
statewide policy to ensure this information is filtered out <strong>of</strong><br />
court records before it is placed in media like the Internet and<br />
bulk electronic access systems.<br />
■ William H. Page, Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar in<br />
Electronic Communications & Administrative <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Associate Dean for Faculty Development, has recently studied<br />
the role <strong>of</strong> expert economic testimony in antitrust litigation, the<br />
effects <strong>of</strong> state antitrust class actions on consumers, the limits<br />
that federal antitrust law places on state regulation, and legacy <strong>of</strong><br />
the Micros<strong>of</strong>t antitrust case.<br />
■ Research on legal dimensions <strong>of</strong> apology by Associate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Jonathan R. Cohen, Associate Director <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Institute for Dispute Resolution, helped lead to new evidentiary<br />
rules in a number <strong>of</strong> states — including Florida —<br />
which previously excluded apologies (in medical malpractice<br />
actions) and expressions <strong>of</strong> sympathy (in civil actions generally)<br />
from admissibility into evidence.<br />
■ Faculty have been involved, pro bono, in scores <strong>of</strong><br />
international, national, state and local endeavors —<br />
including the American Bar Association and Association<br />
<strong>of</strong> American <strong>Law</strong> Schools. Since 1996, faculty have served<br />
as chairs <strong>of</strong> the ABA Committee on Teaching Taxation (Tax<br />
Section), Antitrust Committee (Administrative <strong>Law</strong> Section)<br />
and Ad Hoc Committee on <strong>Law</strong> School Outreach (Criminal<br />
Justice Section); co- or vice chair <strong>of</strong> the International <strong>Law</strong><br />
Section, Food & Drug <strong>Law</strong> Committee (Administrative <strong>Law</strong><br />
& Regulation Practice Section) and Committee on<br />
Negotiation (Section on Dispute Resolution); and as members<br />
<strong>of</strong> many other committees and task forces. They also chaired<br />
AALS sections on Criminal Justice, Jewish <strong>Law</strong>, Property,<br />
Socioeconomics and the <strong>Law</strong>, and Tax, and served on others.<br />
Note: Also see recent faculty accomplishments under<br />
“Specialty Areas,” beginning page 12. ❒<br />
U F L A W 5
6 U F L A W<br />
Faculty Scholarship<br />
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THOMAS T. ANKERSEN<br />
Director, Conservation<br />
Clinic and Costa Rica<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Program; Legal<br />
Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Bioregional and<br />
Conservation Planning on<br />
Costa Rica’s Osa<br />
Peninsula,” Futures J. (forthcoming 2004)<br />
(with Steven A. Mack). ■ “Inside the<br />
Polygon: Emerging Community Tenure<br />
Systems and Forest Resource Extraction,”<br />
Working Forests in the Tropics: Conservation<br />
through Sustainable Management (Columbia<br />
Press, 2004) (Zarin & Schmink, eds.) (with<br />
Grenville Barnes). ■ “Applying Clinical<br />
Legal Education to Community Smart<br />
Growth: The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida<br />
Conservation Clinic,” <strong>University</strong> Efforts to<br />
Encourage Smart Growth (Lincoln Institute<br />
for Land Policy, 2004) (Knaap & Wiewel,<br />
eds.) (with Nicole Kibert). ■ “Shared<br />
Knowledge, Shared Jurisprudence: Learning<br />
to Speak Environmental Creole (Criollo),” 16<br />
Tulane Envt’l L. J. 807 (2003).<br />
FLETCHER N.<br />
BALDWIN, JR.<br />
Chesterfield Smith<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Honorary<br />
Fellow, Institute for<br />
Advanced Legal Studies,<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London;<br />
Director, Center for<br />
International Financial Crime Studies;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>esseur au Centre de Droit du<br />
l’Entreprise, Montrpellier I<br />
■ “The Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, Terrorism, and<br />
Countermeasures, Including the USA Patriot<br />
Act <strong>of</strong> 2001,” 16 Fla. J. Int’l L. 43 (2004).<br />
■ “The Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, Human Rights and<br />
Proportionality as Components <strong>of</strong> the War<br />
Against Terrorism: Is the USA Judiciary in<br />
Self-Imposed Exile?” 7 J. Money Laundering<br />
Control 218 (2004) (Univ. <strong>of</strong> London, Henry<br />
Stewart Pub’l.). ■ “Terrorism and the USA<br />
Patriot Act 2001 — An Analysis,” Money<br />
Laundering, Asset Forfeiture, and Financial<br />
Crimes (Oceana Publications, Inc., 2004).<br />
■ “Le terrorisme et les mesures de rétorsion<br />
incluant le USA Patriot Act de 2001,” La<br />
Semaine Juridique, Entreprise et Affaries<br />
(2003). ■ “USA Patriot Act <strong>of</strong> 2001 — An<br />
Analysis,” Money Laundering, Asset<br />
Forfeiture, and Financial Crimes (Oceana<br />
Publications, Inc., 2002). ■ “Money<br />
Laundering Countermeasures with Primary<br />
Focus Upon Terrorism and the USA Patriot<br />
Act 2001,” 6 J. Money Laundering Control<br />
105 (2002). ■ “Organized Crime, Terrorism<br />
and Money Laundering in the Americas,” 15<br />
Fla. J. Int’l L. 3 (2002). ■ “E-Commerce,<br />
Privacy and Financial Crimes: Threat or<br />
Hype, Self-Preservation or Erosion <strong>of</strong><br />
Constitutional and Human Rights?,”<br />
Cybercrime and Security (Oceana<br />
Publications, Inc., 2001). ■ “Observations<br />
Concerning the Proposed Civil Asset<br />
Forfeiture Reform Act 2000,” International<br />
Money Laundering, Asset Forfeiture, and<br />
Financial Crimes (Oceana Publications, Inc.,<br />
2001). ■ “E-Commerce and Financial<br />
Crimes,” Money Laundering, Asset<br />
Forfeiture, and Financial Crimes (Oceana<br />
Publications, Inc., 2001). ■ “United States<br />
and Civil in Rem Forfeiture: The History and<br />
Its Ancient Roots,” 3 J. Money Laundering<br />
Control 204 (2000). ■ “Organized Crime in<br />
the Americas and Transnationally,” 13 Fla. J.<br />
Int’l L. 79 (2000).<br />
DENNIS A. CALFEE<br />
Alumni Research Scholar,<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Federal Estate and Gift<br />
Taxation and accompanying<br />
Instructor’s Manual and<br />
Study Problems (Warren,<br />
Gorham & Lamont, 8th ed.,<br />
2002) (with Richard B. Stephens, Guy B.<br />
Maxfield, Stephen A. Lind and Robert B.<br />
Smith).<br />
JONATHAN R. COHEN<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Associate Director,<br />
Institute for Dispute<br />
Resolution<br />
■ “Future Research on<br />
Disclosure <strong>of</strong> Medical<br />
Errors,” 141 Annals <strong>of</strong><br />
Internal Medicine 481 (Sept. 21, 2004).<br />
■ “In God’s Garden: Creation and Cloning<br />
in Jewish Thought,” The Human Cloning<br />
Debate (4th and 3rd ed., Berkeley Hills<br />
Books, 2004 & 2002) (Glenn McGee &<br />
Arthur Caplan, eds.). ■ “The Immorality <strong>of</strong><br />
Denial,” Tulane L. Rev. (forthcoming 2004).<br />
■ “A Taxonomy <strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution<br />
Ethics,” Handbook <strong>of</strong> Dispute Resolution<br />
(Robert Bordone & Michael M<strong>of</strong>fitt, eds.)<br />
(forthcoming 2004). ■ “Toward Candor after<br />
Medical Error: The First Apology <strong>Law</strong>,” 5<br />
Harvard Health Policy Rev. 1, 21 (Spring<br />
2004). ■ “The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Respect in<br />
Negotiation,” What’s Fair: Ethics for<br />
Negotiators 257 (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass,<br />
2004) (Carrie Menkel-Meadow & Michael<br />
Wheeler, eds.). ■ “Let’s Put Ourselves Out <strong>of</strong><br />
Business: On Respect, Responsibility and<br />
Dialogue in Dispute Resolution,” 108 Penn<br />
State L. Rev. 227 (2003). ■ “Adversaries?<br />
Partners? How about Counterparts? On<br />
Metaphors in the Practice and Teaching <strong>of</strong><br />
Negotiation and Dispute Resolution,” 20<br />
Conflict Resolution Quarterly 433 (Summer<br />
2003). ■ “The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Respect in<br />
Negotiation,” 18 Negotiation J. 2 (2002). ■<br />
“Legislating Apology: The Pros and Cons,”<br />
70 U. Cinn. L. Rev. 3 (2002). ■ “When<br />
People Are the Means: Negotiating with<br />
Respect,” 14 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 739<br />
(2001). ■ “Apology and Organizations:<br />
Exploring an Example from Medical<br />
Practice,” 27 Fordham U. L. J. 1447 (2000).<br />
STUART R. COHN<br />
Associate Dean for<br />
International Studies;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Gerald A.<br />
Sohn Scholar; Director <strong>of</strong><br />
International and<br />
Comparative <strong>Law</strong><br />
Certificate Program<br />
■ “The Non-Merger Virtual Merger: Is<br />
Corporate <strong>Law</strong> Ready For Virtual Reality?,”<br />
29 Del. J. Corp. L. 1 (2004). ■ “Poland and<br />
United States Business <strong>Law</strong>s: A Commentary<br />
on Differing Historical and Doctrinal Bases,”<br />
3 Warsaw U. L. Rev. 20 (2004). ■ “Capital<br />
Market Development and Regulation,”<br />
United Nations Inst. for Training and Res.,<br />
(online course, Feb. 2004). ■ Florida<br />
Business <strong>Law</strong>s Annotated: Commentary,<br />
Cases and Forms (2003-04 ed.). ■ Securities<br />
Counseling for New and Developing<br />
Countries (Westgroup, 2003 and 2002 eds.).<br />
■ “The Development <strong>of</strong> Micro-Cap<br />
Securities Markets,” Sub-Saharan Africa:<br />
New Approaches to Fostering Enterprise<br />
Growth (U.N. Institute for Training and<br />
Research, 2002). ■ “Confidence Building in<br />
Sub-Saharan Stock Markets,” Capital Market<br />
Development: The Road Ahead (U.N.<br />
Institute for Training and Research, 2000).<br />
CHARLES W. COLLIER<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Affiliate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Philosophy<br />
■ “Affirmative Action and<br />
the Decline <strong>of</strong> Intellectual<br />
Culture,” 54 J. Legal Educ.<br />
(2004). ■ “The Harsh<br />
Judgment <strong>of</strong> History: The<br />
Terrorist Worldview and Intellectual Values,”<br />
50:1 Dissent 62 (2003). ■ “The Wrath <strong>of</strong><br />
History,” 12 The Responsive Community 57<br />
(2002). ■ “Hate Speech and the Mind-Body<br />
Problem: A Critique <strong>of</strong> Postmodern<br />
Censorship Theory,” 7 Legal Theory 203
Faculty Take Priority With New <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida President J. Bernard Machen<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida President Dr. James Bernard Machen<br />
announced an initiative this August designed to increase the number<br />
<strong>of</strong> faculty, and bolster faculty salaries and research dollars. The UF<br />
Faculty Challenge aims to raise $150 million to give faculty the tools<br />
they need to enhance classroom instruction and conduct world-class<br />
research. The Challenge is part <strong>of</strong> a plan to make UF one <strong>of</strong> the<br />
nation’s premier research universities.<br />
“In order for the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida to reach its potential, we<br />
must find ways to do a better job supporting our faculty,” Machen<br />
said. “The purpose <strong>of</strong> this initiative is to build an endowment to provide for<br />
competitive salaries, so the university can attract and retain the best and<br />
brightest faculty and give them the tools they need to excel.”<br />
By appealing to donors to support the challenge, the university intends to<br />
provide more discretionary funds for faculty research, which could be used for<br />
equipment, studies or stipends for student research assistants. Gifts to the<br />
Challenge <strong>of</strong> $100,000 or more are eligible for state matching funds. In an effort<br />
to garner more support, for every gift <strong>of</strong> $1 million or more, Machen has pledged<br />
to add $250,000 from a discretionary fund <strong>of</strong> private donations specifically for<br />
the Faculty Challenge. These additions will follow state matching funds and will<br />
continue until the fund is exhausted.<br />
The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees unanimously elected Machen as<br />
the university’s 11th president Oct. 8, 2003. Dr. Machen, who previously served<br />
as president <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Utah, assumed his new position Jan. 5, and<br />
quickly identified recruitment and retention <strong>of</strong> quality faculty members as a top priority.<br />
Prior to Utah, Dr. Machen was provost and vice president for academic affairs and dean <strong>of</strong> the School <strong>of</strong> Dentistry at<br />
the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Michigan; assistant and associate dean in the School <strong>of</strong> Dentistry at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> North Carolina at<br />
Chapel Hill; and associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor and pr<strong>of</strong>essor at UNC-Chapel Hill. He attended Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong> and received his<br />
doctor <strong>of</strong> dental surgery degree from St. Louis <strong>University</strong>. He also has a master’s in pediatric dentistry and doctorate in<br />
educational psychology, both from the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Iowa. He is a diplomate <strong>of</strong> the American Board <strong>of</strong> Pediatric Dentistry,<br />
was president <strong>of</strong> the American Association <strong>of</strong> Dental Schools, and served on the Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees <strong>of</strong> the 2002 Salt Lake<br />
Olympic Committee. ❒<br />
(2001). ■ Basic Themes in <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Jurisprudence (Anderson Publishing, 2000).<br />
■ “<strong>Law</strong> As Interpretation,” 76 Chic.-Kent L.<br />
Rev. 779 (2000).<br />
THOMAS F. COTTER<br />
UF Research Foundation<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Director <strong>of</strong><br />
Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong><br />
Program<br />
■ “Accommodating the<br />
Unauthorized Use <strong>of</strong><br />
Copyrighted Works for<br />
Religious Purposes Under the Fair Use<br />
Doctrine and Copyright Act Section,” 110<br />
(3), 22 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment L. J.<br />
43 (2004). ■ Intellectual Property: Economic<br />
and Legal Dimensions <strong>of</strong> Rights and<br />
Remedies (Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />
forthcoming 2004) (with Roger D. Blair). ■<br />
“An Economic Analysis <strong>of</strong> Enhanced<br />
Damages and Attorneys’ Fees for Willful<br />
Patent Infringement,” 14 Federal Circuit Bar<br />
J. (forthcoming 2004). ■ “Antitrust<br />
Implications <strong>of</strong> Patent Settlements Involving<br />
Reverse Payments: Defending a Rebuttable<br />
Presumption <strong>of</strong> Illegality in Light <strong>of</strong> Some<br />
Recent Scholarship,” 71 Antitrust L. J. 1069<br />
(2004). ■ “Market Fundamentalism and the<br />
TRIPs Agreement,” 21 Cardozo Arts & Ent.<br />
L. J. (forthcoming 2004). ■ “<strong>Law</strong>,<br />
Economics, and Intellectual Property,” (Book<br />
Review <strong>of</strong> William M. Landes & Richard A.<br />
Posner, The Economic Structure <strong>of</strong><br />
Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong>,<br />
Antitrustsource.com (March 2004). ■<br />
“Gutenberg’s Legacy: Copyright,<br />
Censorship, and Religious Pluralism,” 91<br />
Cal. L. Rev. 323 (2003). ■ “Prolegomenon to<br />
a Memetic Theory <strong>of</strong> Copyright: Comments<br />
on <strong>Law</strong>rence Lessig’s The Creative<br />
Commons,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 779 (2003). ■<br />
“Refining the ‘Presumptive Illegality’<br />
Approach to Patent Settlements Involving<br />
Reverse Payments: A Comment on<br />
Hovenkamp, Janis, and Lemley,” 87 Minn. L.<br />
Rev. 1789 (2003). ■ “Written on the Body:<br />
Intellectual Property Rights in Tattoos,<br />
Makeup, and Other Body Art,” 10 UCLA<br />
Ent. L. Rev. 97 (2003) (with Angela M.<br />
Mirabole). ■ “Strict Liability and Its<br />
Alternatives in Patent <strong>Law</strong>,” 17 Berkeley<br />
Tech. L. J. 799 (2002) (with Roger D. Blair).<br />
■ “Introduction to Symposium on<br />
Intellectual Property, Development, and<br />
Human Rights,” 14 Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l L. 147<br />
(2002). ■ “Are Settlements <strong>of</strong><br />
Pharmaceutical Patent Disputes Illegal Per<br />
Se?,” 47 Antitrust Bull. 491 (2002) (with<br />
Roger D. Blair). ■ “Rethinking Patent<br />
Damages,” 10 Tex. Intell. Prop. L. J. 1<br />
(2001) (with Roger D. Blair). ■ “The Elusive<br />
Logic <strong>of</strong> Standing Doctrine in Intellectual<br />
Property <strong>Law</strong>,” 74 Tul. L. Rev. 1323 (2000)<br />
(with Roger D. Blair). ■ “Pragmatism”<br />
(Update), in 4 Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> the American<br />
Constitution Supplement 1983 (2d ed. 2000)<br />
(Leonard W. Levy & Kenneth J. Karst, eds.).<br />
JEFFREY DAVIS<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Gerald A.<br />
Sohn Scholar<br />
■ “Ending the Nonsense:<br />
The In Pari Delicto<br />
Doctrine Has Nothing To<br />
Do With What is Section<br />
541 Property <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Bankruptcy Estate,” Emory Bankruptcy<br />
Developments J. (forthcoming 2005). ■<br />
“Fixing Florida’s Execution Lien <strong>Law</strong>, Part<br />
Two: Florida’s New Judgment Lien on<br />
Personal Property,” 54 Fla. L. Rev. 119<br />
(2002).<br />
PATRICIA E. DILLEY<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Leverage, Linkage, and<br />
Leakage: Problems with<br />
the Private Pension System<br />
and How They Should<br />
Inform the Social Security<br />
Reform Debate,” 58 Wash.<br />
& Lee L. Rev. 1369 (2001). ■ “Taking Public<br />
U F L A W 7
8 U F L A W<br />
Rights Private: The Rhetoric and Reality <strong>of</strong><br />
Social Security Privatization,” 41 B. C. L.<br />
Rev. 975 (2000). ■ “Breaking the Glass<br />
Slipper: Reflections on the Self-Employment<br />
Tax,” 54 The Tax <strong>Law</strong>yer 65 (2000).<br />
NANCY E. DOWD<br />
Chesterfield Smith<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Co-Director,<br />
Center on Children and<br />
Families<br />
■ “Race, Gender, and<br />
Work/Family Policy,” 15<br />
Washington Univ. J. <strong>of</strong> L.<br />
& Policy 219 (2004) (Symposium Issue, The<br />
Tenth Anniversary <strong>of</strong> the Family and<br />
Medical Leave Act). ■ Book Review, Sandra<br />
Berns, Women Going Backwards: <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Change in a Family Unfriendly Society,<br />
(2002), 12 Griffith L. Rev. 149 (2003). ■<br />
“<strong>Law</strong>, Culture and Family: The<br />
Transformative Power <strong>of</strong> Culture and the<br />
Limits <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>,” 78 Chicago-Kent L. Rev. 785<br />
(2003). ■ Single Parent Adoption,” Families<br />
by <strong>Law</strong>: Adoption Reader (New York<br />
<strong>University</strong> Press, 2003) (Naomi Cahn and<br />
Joan H. Hollinger eds.). ■ “From Genes,<br />
Marriage and Money to Nurture: Redefining<br />
Fatherhood,” 10 Cardozo Women’s L. J. 132<br />
(2003). ■ “Diversity Matters: Race, Gender,<br />
and Ethnicity in Legal Education,” 15 U.<br />
Fla. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 11 (2002) (with<br />
Kenneth Nunn & Jane Pendergrast). ■<br />
Feminist Legal Theory: An Anti-Essentialist<br />
Reader (ed., NYU Press, 2002) (with<br />
Michelle Jacobs). ■ “In Defense <strong>of</strong> Single-<br />
Parent Families,” Feminist Legal Theory: An<br />
Anti-Essentialist Reader (NYU Press, 2002).<br />
■ “Gender and <strong>Law</strong>,” The Oxford Companion<br />
to American <strong>Law</strong> 325 (Oxford <strong>University</strong><br />
Press 2002) (K. Hall, ed.). ■ “2001 Annual<br />
International Survey <strong>of</strong> Family <strong>Law</strong>: United<br />
States,” 16 Int’l J. L., Society & Family 439<br />
(2002). ■ Redefining Fatherhood (NYU<br />
Press, 2000). ■ “Resisting Essentialism and<br />
Hierarchy: A Critique <strong>of</strong> Work/Family<br />
Policies for Women <strong>Law</strong>yers,” 16 Harv.<br />
Blackletter L. J. 185 (2000). ■ Symposium,<br />
“Unbending Gender: Why Family and Work<br />
Conflict and What to Do About It,” Panel<br />
Two: “Who’s Minding the Baby?,” 49 Amer.<br />
Univ. L. Rev. 901 (2000).<br />
MARK A. FENSTER<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Taking Formalism,<br />
Regulatory Formulas:<br />
Exactions and the<br />
Consequences <strong>of</strong> Clarity,”<br />
92 Cal. L. Rev. (2004).<br />
■ “The Symbols <strong>of</strong><br />
Governance: Thurman Arnold After Legal<br />
Realism,” 51 Buff. L. Rev. 1053 (2003).<br />
JOAN D. FLOCKS<br />
Director, Social Policy<br />
Division, Center for<br />
Governmental<br />
Responsibility; Associate<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “¡Viva Mexico! Mexican<br />
Independence Day Festivals in Central<br />
Florida,” Southern Heritage on Display<br />
(<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Alabama Press, 2003) (with C.<br />
Ray, P. Monaghan, eds.). ■ “Collaborative<br />
Research with Farmworkers in<br />
Environmental Justice,” Practicing<br />
Anthropology 25(1): 6 (2003) (with P.<br />
Monaghan). ■ “Community-Based Social<br />
Marketing: Involvement in Health<br />
Programs,” 33 J. Community Development<br />
Soc’y 1 (2002) (with F. L. Farmer, L. L.<br />
Clarke, C.A. Bryant, C. S. Romund and S.L.<br />
Albrecht).<br />
ALYSON CRAIG<br />
FLOURNOY<br />
Director, Environmental<br />
and Land Use <strong>Law</strong><br />
Program; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Section 404 at Thirty-<br />
Something: A Program in<br />
Search <strong>of</strong> a Policy,” 55<br />
Alabama L. Rev. 607 (2004). ■ “Wetlands<br />
Regulation at 30: A Program in Search <strong>of</strong> a<br />
Policy,” Ala. L. Rev (2004). ■ “Building an<br />
Environmental Ethic from the Ground Up,”<br />
37 U. C. Davis L. Rev. 54 (2003) and 27<br />
Environs Env’tl L. and Policy J. 53 (2003). ■<br />
“Environmental Ethics and Environmental<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Scholarship,” The Jurisdynamics <strong>of</strong><br />
Environmental Protection: Change and the<br />
Pragmatic Voice in Environmental <strong>Law</strong><br />
(2003). ■ “In Search <strong>of</strong> an Environmental<br />
Ethic,” 28 Colum J. Envt’l L. 63 (2002). ■<br />
“Restoration Rx: An Evaluation and<br />
Prescription,” 42 Ariz. L. Rev. 187 (2000).<br />
MICHAEL K. FRIEL<br />
Associate Dean and<br />
Director, Graduate Tax<br />
Program; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individual<br />
Income (LexisNexis, 7th<br />
ed., 2004) (with Martin<br />
Burke). ■ Modern Estate<br />
Planning (LexisNexis 2000-2001, 2nd. ed.,<br />
2002) (with Martin Burke and Elaine<br />
Gagliardi). ■ Understanding Federal Income<br />
Taxation (LexisNexis, 2001) (with Martin<br />
Burke).<br />
MICHAEL W. GORDON<br />
Chesterfield Smith<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ International Business<br />
Transactions: A Problem<br />
Oriented Coursebook, with<br />
Documents Supplement<br />
and Teacher’s Manual, 7th<br />
and 6th eds. (with Folsom & Spanogle,<br />
Westgroup 2004 and 2003). ■ NAFTA: A<br />
Problem-Oriented Coursebook, with<br />
Documents Supplement and Teacher’s<br />
Manual, 2nd ed. (with Folsom, Lopez &<br />
Gantz, Westgroup, forthcoming late 2004/<br />
early 2005). ■ International Civil Dispute<br />
Resolution: A Problem-Oriented<br />
Coursebook, with Documents Supplement<br />
and Teacher’s Manual (Westgroup, 2004)<br />
(with Baldwin, Brand & Epstein. ■<br />
International Business Transactions in a<br />
Nutshell, 7th ed. (with Folsom & Spanogle,<br />
Westgroup, 2004). ■ International Trade &<br />
Investment in a Nutshell, 3rd ed. (West<br />
Group 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle). ■<br />
Concise Hornbook on International Business<br />
(Westgroup, forthcoming early 2005) (with<br />
Folsom & Spanogle). ■ “North American<br />
Integration,” 2004 Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> &<br />
Society: American & Global Perspectives. ■<br />
“Some Observations on Procedural Tactics in<br />
Cross-Border Tort Litigation,” 14 Revista<br />
Mexicana de Derecho Internacional Privado<br />
y Comparado 43 (2003). ■ International<br />
Civil Dispute Resolution: A Problem<br />
Oriented Coursebook, with accompanying<br />
Supplement and Teacher’s Manual<br />
(Westgroup 2003) (with Baldwin, Brand &<br />
Epstein). ■ “A Civil Justice Reform in the<br />
Americas: Lessons from Spain, Brazil,<br />
Guatemala and Mexico,” 16 Fla. J. Int’l L. 1<br />
(2003). ■ “Thinking About Cuba: Post-<br />
Castro Cuba Began a Decade Ago,” 15 Fla.<br />
J. Int’l L. 311 (2003). ■ Panel Discussion<br />
“Money Laundering, Cybercrime and<br />
Currency Manipulation,” 11 United States-<br />
Mexico L. J. 220 (2003). ■ “Legal Cultures<br />
<strong>of</strong> Latin America and the United States:<br />
Conflict or Merger,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 115<br />
(2003). ■ International Business<br />
Transactions: Cases and Materials<br />
(Westgroup, 5th ed., 2002) (with Ralph H.<br />
Folsom & John A Spanogle). ■ “Common<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” Legal Systems <strong>of</strong> the World (ABC-<br />
CLIO 2002, Herbert M. Krtizer ed.). ■<br />
“Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Pedro Buys a Book: Mexico, the<br />
United States and E-Commerce” (panel<br />
discussion), 10 U.S.-Mexico L. J. (2002). ■<br />
International Business Transactions<br />
Hornbook (Westgroup, 2d. ed., 2001) (with<br />
Ralph H. Folsom & John A. Spanogle). ■<br />
“Review <strong>of</strong> Jorges Vargas, Mexican <strong>Law</strong>: A<br />
Treatise for Legal Practitioners and<br />
International Investors,” 32 U. Miami Inter-<br />
Am. L. Rev. 361 (2001). ■ Panel Discussion:
“Mexican <strong>Law</strong>yers Going North and U.S.<br />
<strong>Law</strong>yers Going South: Interstate Legal<br />
Practice, NAFTA and U.S. State Bar<br />
Regulations” 9 U.S.-Mexico L. J. 189 (2001).<br />
■ “Corporation <strong>Law</strong>,” Introduction to the<br />
<strong>Law</strong> in the United States (Kluwer, 2nd ed.,<br />
2001) (David S. Clark & Tugrul Ansay eds.).<br />
■ International Business Transactions in a<br />
Nutshell (Westgroup, 6th ed., 2000) (with<br />
Ralph F. Folsom & John A. Spanogle) (translated<br />
into Russian, Serbian, Bosnian and<br />
Croatian). ■ International Trade and<br />
Investment in a Nutshell (Westgroup, 2nd ed.,<br />
2000) (with Ralph F. Folsom and John A.<br />
Spanogle). ■ “NAFTA Dispute Resolution as<br />
a Method <strong>of</strong> Avoiding National Courts,”<br />
Symposium Edition, 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 16<br />
(2000). ■ NAFTA: A Problem-Oriented<br />
Casebook (Westgroup, 2000) (with Ralph H.<br />
Folsom & David Lopez). ■ Handbook <strong>of</strong><br />
NAFTA Dispute Resolution (Two volumes,<br />
Transnational Publishers, 2000) (with Ralph<br />
H. Folsom & John A. Spanogle). ■ “NAFTA<br />
and Financial Dispute Resolution,” Non-<br />
Judicial Dispute Settlement in International<br />
Financial Transactions (Kluwer, 2000)<br />
(Norbert Horn & Joseph Norton eds.). ■<br />
Panel Discussion: “Product Liability Claims<br />
on Both Sides <strong>of</strong> the Border,” 8 U.S.-Mexico<br />
L. J. 123 (2000). ■ “Forms <strong>of</strong> Dispute<br />
Resolution in the North American Free Trade<br />
Agreement,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 16 (2000).<br />
WAYNE O. HANEWICZ<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “When Silence is Golden:<br />
Why the Business<br />
Judgment Rule Should<br />
Apply to No-Shops in<br />
Stock-For-Stock Merger<br />
Agreements,” 28 J. Corp.<br />
L. 205 (2003).<br />
BERTA ESPERANZA<br />
HERNÁNDEZ-TRUYOL<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong><br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “<strong>Law</strong> and Culture: A<br />
Cross-Constitutive<br />
Paradigm,” Albany L. Rev. (forthcoming<br />
2004). ■ “Las Olvidadas: Gendered in<br />
Justice/Gendered Injustice — Latinas,<br />
Fronteras, and the <strong>Law</strong>,” A Reader on Race,<br />
Civil Rights, and American <strong>Law</strong>: A<br />
Multiracial Approach 612 (Timothy Davis,<br />
Kevin Johnson, and George Martinez, eds.,<br />
Carolina Academic Press 2001) (with<br />
excerpts from 1 J. <strong>of</strong> Gender, Race and<br />
Justice 353 [1998]). ■ “Latina<br />
Multidimensionality and LatCrit<br />
Possibilities: Culture, Gender, and Sex,” A<br />
Reader on Race, Civil Rights, and American<br />
<strong>Law</strong>: A Multiracial Approach 689 (Timothy<br />
Davis, Kevin Johnson, and George Martinez,<br />
eds., Carolina Academic Press 2001) (with<br />
excerpts from 53 U. Miami L. Rev. 811<br />
[1999]). ■ “Traveling the Boundaries <strong>of</strong><br />
Statelessness: Global Passports and<br />
Citizenship,” Cleveland State L. Rev. (forthcoming<br />
2004) (with Matthew Hawk). ■<br />
“Globalized Citizenship: Sovereignty,<br />
Security, and Soul,” <strong>Law</strong> and Globalization<br />
From Below (Boaventura de Sousa Santos &<br />
Cesar Rodriguez eds., 2004). ■ “Cuban<br />
Democracy Act <strong>of</strong> 1992,” Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong><br />
Latinos and Latinas in the United States<br />
(2004). ■ “Platt Amendment,” Encyclopedia<br />
<strong>of</strong> Latinos and Latinas in the United States<br />
(2004). ■ “The Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and Human<br />
Rights,” Fla. J. Int’l L. (2004). ■ “Familias<br />
Sin Fronteras: Mujeres Unidas por su<br />
Historia,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 321 (2003).<br />
■ “Building Bridges V — Cubans Without<br />
Borders: Mujeres Unidas por su Historia,” 55<br />
Fla. L. Rev. 225 (2003). ■ “Glocalizing<br />
Terror,” 81 Or. L. R. 941 (2002). ■ “Cuban<br />
Economic Relations, Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Third Annual Legal & Policy Issues in the<br />
Americas Conference,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 94<br />
(2002). ■ Moral Imperialism: A Critical<br />
Anthology (ed., NYU Press 2002). ■ “Both<br />
Work and Violence: Prostitution and Human<br />
Rights,” Moral Imperialism: A Critical<br />
Anthology 183 (ed., NYU Press, 2002) (with<br />
Jane Larson). ■ “Human Rights,<br />
Globalization, and Culture: Centering<br />
Personhood in International Narrative,”<br />
Moral Imperialism: A Critical Anthology 353<br />
(ed., NYU Press 2002). ■ “Latinas —<br />
Everywhere Alien: Culture, Gender, and<br />
Sex,” Critical Race Feminism: A Reader<br />
(NYU Press, 2d ed., 2002, Adrienne Wing,<br />
ed.). ■ “Out <strong>of</strong> the Shadows: Traversing the<br />
Imaginary <strong>of</strong> Sameness, Difference, and<br />
Relationalism — A Human Rights Proposal,”<br />
17 Wisc. Women’s L. J. 111 (2002). ■ “Latina<br />
Women <strong>of</strong> the Americas: Race, Gender,<br />
Ethnicity and Interdependent Human Rights,”<br />
Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Human Rights<br />
in the Americas: A New Paradigm for<br />
Activism 85 (American <strong>University</strong> Press<br />
2001, Celina Romany, ed.). ■ “Crossing<br />
Borderlands <strong>of</strong> Inequality with International<br />
Legal Methodologies — The Promise <strong>of</strong><br />
Multiple Feminisms,” 44 German Yearbook<br />
<strong>of</strong> Int’l L. 113 (2001). ■ “Breaking Cycles <strong>of</strong><br />
Inequality: Critical Theory, Human Rights<br />
and Family,” Justice in Critical Race Theory:<br />
Histories, Crossroads, Directions (Temple U.<br />
Press, 2001, Jerome McCristal Culp, Jr.,<br />
Angela P. Harris & Francisco Valdés, eds.).<br />
■ “Building Bridges IV: Of Cultures, Colors,<br />
and Clashes — Capturing the International in<br />
Delgado’s Chronicles,” 4 Harv. Latino L.<br />
Rev. 115 (2001). ■ “On Becoming the Other:<br />
Cubans, Castro and Elian,” 78 Den. U. L.<br />
Rev. 687 (2001). ■ “Latinas, Culture and<br />
Human Rights: A Model for Making Change,<br />
Saving Soul,” 23 Women’s Rts. L. Rep. 21<br />
(2001). ■ “Mujeres De Las Américas —<br />
Race, Gender, Ethnicity and Interdependent<br />
Human Rights,” Women, Race, Ethnicity, and<br />
Int’l Human Rights: Intersection in the<br />
Americas (Ford Foundation, 2001). ■<br />
“Property, Wealth, Inequality and Human<br />
Rights,” 34 Ind. L. J. 1213 (2001). ■<br />
Afterword: “Back to the Future — <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Status in the 21st Century: Straightness as<br />
Property,” 12 U. Fla. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 71<br />
(2001) (with Shelbi D. Day). ■ “<strong>Law</strong>,<br />
Culture, and Equality: Human Rights’<br />
Influence on Domestic Norms: The Case <strong>of</strong><br />
Women in the Americas,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L.<br />
33 (2000). ■ “Foreword: Culture, Nationhood,<br />
and the Human Rights Ideal” (with<br />
Sharon Elizabeth Rush), 33 U. Mich. J. L.<br />
Reform 233 (2000), 5 Mich. J. Race & L. 817<br />
(2000). ■ “Nativism, Terrorism, and Human<br />
Rights — The Global Wrongs <strong>of</strong> Reno V.<br />
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination<br />
Committee,” 31 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev.<br />
521 (2000). ■ Book Review: “Gender<br />
Politics in Global Governance,” (Mary K.<br />
Meyer and Elisabeth Prügl eds.), 94 Am. J.<br />
Int’l L. 209 (2000). ■ “Latindia II —<br />
Latinas/Os, Natives, and Mestizajes: A<br />
Latcrit Navigation <strong>of</strong> Nuevos Mundos,<br />
Nuevas Fronteras, and Nuevas Teories,” 33<br />
U. C. Davis L. Rev. 851 (2000). ■<br />
“Feminismes Sans Frontières: The Cuban<br />
Challenge — Women, Equality, and Culture,”<br />
Global Feminism (NYU Press, 2000, A.<br />
Wing, ed.).<br />
RICHARD H. HIERS<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor,<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Religion<br />
■ “Institutional Academic<br />
Freedom: A Constitutional<br />
Misconception. Did Grutter<br />
v. Bollinger Perpetuate the<br />
Confusion,” 30 J. <strong>of</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />
& Univ. L. 531 (2004). ■ “The Death Penalty<br />
and Due Process in Biblical <strong>Law</strong>,” Detroit<br />
Mercy L. Rev. (forthcoming 2004). ■<br />
“Biblical Social Welfare Legislation,” 17 J.<br />
<strong>of</strong> L. and Religion 49 (2002). ■ Book<br />
Review, “The Spirit <strong>of</strong> Biblical <strong>Law</strong>,” 1<br />
Wash. U. Global Studies L. Rev. 537 (2002).<br />
■ “Institutional Academic Freedom vs.<br />
Faculty Academic Freedom in Public<br />
<strong>College</strong>s and Universities: A Dubious<br />
Dichotomy,” 29 J. <strong>College</strong> & Univ. L. 35<br />
(2002). ■ “Reverence for Life and<br />
Environmental Ethics in Biblical <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Covenant,” Forum on Religion and Ecology<br />
(2001). ■ The Trinity Guide to the Bible<br />
(Trinity Press International, 2001).<br />
9 U F L A W
1 0 U F L A W<br />
THOMAS R. HURST<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor, Samuel T. Dell<br />
Research Scholar<br />
■ “Coaches’ Liability for<br />
Athletes Injuries and<br />
Deaths,” 13 Seton Hall U.<br />
J. Sport L. 27 (2003) (with<br />
James Knight). ■ Cases<br />
and Materials on Unincorporated Business<br />
Associations (Westgroup, 2nd ed., 2002)<br />
(with William A. Gregory). ■ “Securities<br />
Fraud and the Internet: Adopting Existing<br />
Regulatory Schemes to Regulation in<br />
Cyberspace,” 8 J. Financial Crime 226<br />
(2001). ■ “Payment <strong>of</strong> Student Athletes:<br />
Legal and Practical Obstacles,” 7 Vill. Sports<br />
& Ent’t L. J. 55 (2000). ■ “Teaching Limited<br />
Liability Companies in the Basic Business<br />
Associations Course,” 34 Ga. L. Rev. 773<br />
(2000).<br />
JEROLD H. ISRAEL<br />
Ed Rood Eminent<br />
Scholar in Trial Advocacy<br />
and Procedure<br />
■ White Collar Crime in a<br />
Nutshell, 3rd ed.<br />
(Westgroup, 2004) (with<br />
Podgor). ■ Principles <strong>of</strong><br />
Criminal Procedure: Investigation<br />
(Westgroup, 2004) (with Wayne LaFave &<br />
Nancy King). ■ Principles <strong>of</strong> Criminal<br />
Procedure: Post-Investigation (Westgroup,<br />
2004) (with Wayne LaFave and Nancy<br />
King). ■ “Seven Habits <strong>of</strong> a Highly Effective<br />
Scholar,” 102 Mich. L. Rev. (No. 8, 2004). ■<br />
Criminal Procedure and the Constitution,<br />
2004 ed. (Westgroup, 1999-2004 eds.) (with<br />
Yale Kamisar & Wayne LaFave). ■ Criminal<br />
Procedure Hornbook (Westgroup, 4th & 3d.<br />
eds., 2004 & 2000) (with Wayne Lafave &<br />
Nancy King). ■ White Collar Crime: <strong>Law</strong><br />
and Practice, 2nd ed. (Westgroup, 2003)<br />
(with Borman, Henning & Podgor). ■<br />
Statutory and Documentary Supplement to<br />
White Collar Crime (Westgroup, 2003) (with<br />
Borman, Henning & Podgor). ■ Modern<br />
Criminal Procedure (Westgroup, 10th & 9th<br />
eds., 2002 & 1999) (with Yale Kamisar,<br />
Wayne LaFave and Nancy King). ■ “Grand<br />
Jury,” 2 Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Crime and Justice<br />
737 (Westgroup, 2002, Joshua Dressler, ed).<br />
■ “Free-Standing Due Process and Criminal<br />
Procedure: The Supreme Court’s Search for<br />
Interpretive Guidelines,” 45 St. Louis U. L. J.<br />
303 (2001). ■ Criminal Procedure in a<br />
Nutshell: Constitutional Limitations<br />
(Westgroup, 6th ed., 2001) (with Wayne<br />
Lafave). ■ Criminal Procedure Treatise<br />
(Westgroup, 2d ed., 2000) (with Wayne<br />
Lafave & Nancy King).<br />
MICHELLE S. JACOBS<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Book review, “Piercing<br />
the Prison Uniform <strong>of</strong><br />
Divisibility for Black<br />
Female Inmates,” 94 J.<br />
Crime & Criminology 101<br />
(forthcoming 2004). ■<br />
Feminist Legal Theory: An Anti-Essentialist<br />
Reader (NYU Press, 2002) (ed., with Nancy<br />
E. Dowd). ■ “Requiring Battered Women<br />
Die: Murder Liability for Mothers Under<br />
Failure to Protect Statutes,” Feminist Legal<br />
Theory: An Anti-Essentialist Reader (NYU<br />
Press, 2002). ■ “Full Legal Representation<br />
for the Poor: The Clash Between <strong>Law</strong>yer<br />
Values and Client Worthiness,” 44 How. L. J.<br />
257 (2001).<br />
ROBERT H. JERRY, II<br />
Dean; <strong>Levin</strong> Mabie and<br />
<strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “A Brief Exploration <strong>of</strong><br />
Space: Some Observations<br />
on <strong>Law</strong> School<br />
Architecture,” Univ. <strong>of</strong><br />
Toledo L. Rev. (forthcoming<br />
2004). ■ Book Chapter, “Life and Disability<br />
Insurance,” Family Wealth Transfer (forthcoming<br />
2005) (Grayson M. McCouch &<br />
William J. Turnier, eds.). ■ “The Insurance<br />
Aspects <strong>of</strong> Damages,” 2004 J. <strong>of</strong> Dispute<br />
Resolution 107 (with Douglas R. Richmond).<br />
■ “Antitrust Implications <strong>of</strong> Insurers’<br />
Collaborative Standard Setting,” Genetics<br />
and Life Insurance: Medical Underwriting<br />
and Social Policy, 195 (Mark A. Rothstein,<br />
ed., MIT Press 2004). ■ “The Antitrust<br />
Implications <strong>of</strong> Collaborative Standard<br />
Setting by Insurers Regarding the Use <strong>of</strong><br />
Genetic Information in Life Insurance<br />
Underwriting,” 9 Connecticut Insurance. L.<br />
J. 397 (2003). ■ Understanding Insurance<br />
<strong>Law</strong> XXXI, 1171 (3rd. ed.) (Lexis<br />
Publishing, Inc., 2002). ■ Insurance <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
Cases and Materials, 3rd. ed. (Lexis<br />
Publishing, Inc., 2001) (with Roger C.<br />
Henderson). ■ “Insurance,” Oxford<br />
Companion to American <strong>Law</strong> (New York:<br />
Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002) (Kermit L.<br />
Hall et al., eds.). ■ “Insurance, Terrorism<br />
and 9/11: Reflections on Three Threshold<br />
Questions,” 9 Connecticut Insurance L. J. 95<br />
(2002). ■ “May Harvey Rest in Peace: Lakin<br />
v. Postal Life & Casualty Insurance<br />
Company,” 2 Nevada L. J. 292 (2002). ■<br />
“Insurance, Terrorism, and 9/11,” TortSource<br />
1, 6 (Vol. 5, No. 2, Winter 2003). ■<br />
“Cybercoverage for Cyber-Risks: Overview<br />
<strong>of</strong> Insurers’ Responses to the Perils <strong>of</strong> E-<br />
Commerce,” 8 Connecticut Insurance L. J. 7<br />
(2001) (with Michele L. Mekel). ■ “Teaching<br />
Torts Without Insurance: A Second-Best<br />
Solution,” 45 St. Louis Univ. L. Rev. 857<br />
(2001) (with David A. Fischer). ■ “The<br />
Insurer’s Right to Reimbursement <strong>of</strong> Defense<br />
Costs,” 42 Arizona L. Rev. 13 (2000)<br />
(reprinted at 50 Defense L. J. 699 (2001).<br />
CLIFFORD A. JONES<br />
Visiting Lecturer, Center<br />
for Governmental<br />
Responsibility<br />
■ Book review, C. Harding<br />
and J. Joshua, Regulating<br />
Cartels in Europe: A Study<br />
<strong>of</strong> Legal Control <strong>of</strong><br />
Corporate Delinquency (Oxford Press,<br />
2003), “Sleeping With the Enemy: Tales <strong>of</strong><br />
Yankee Power, Globalization, and the<br />
Transformation <strong>of</strong> Economy by Cartel in the<br />
European Union,” 36 Geo. Washington Univ.<br />
Int’l L. Rev. (in press, 2004). ■ “Foreign<br />
Plaintiffs, Vitamins, and the Sherman<br />
Antitrust Act After Empagran,” (7/8) Eur. L.<br />
Reporter 270 (2004). ■ Competition Policy in<br />
the Global Trading System (M. Matsushita,<br />
eds., The Hague: Kluwer International 2002).<br />
■ “Private Competition <strong>Law</strong> Enforcement in<br />
Europe: A Growth Market,” (C. Baudenbacher,<br />
ed.) Neueste Entwicklungen Im<br />
Europäischen Und Internationalen<br />
Kartellrecht — Elftes St. Galler<br />
Internationales Kartellrechtsforum 2004.<br />
(Newest Developments In European And<br />
International Competition <strong>Law</strong> — Eleventh<br />
St. Gallen International Competition <strong>Law</strong><br />
Forum (2004.) ■ “The New U.S. Campaign<br />
Regulations and Political Advertising,” J. <strong>of</strong><br />
Political Marketing, 3 (3) (2004) (with L.L.<br />
Kaid). ■ “Regulating Political Advertising in<br />
the EU and USA: A Human Rights<br />
Perspective,” 4 (3) J. Public Affairs 244<br />
(2004). ■ “Exporting Antitrust Courtrooms to<br />
the World: Private Enforcement in a Global<br />
Antitrust Environment,” 16 Loyola Consumer<br />
L. Rev., 409 (2004). ■ “After McConnell:<br />
Candidate Advertising and Campaign<br />
Reform,” Political Communication Report,”<br />
14 (Spring, 2004), 1 (with L.L. Kaid). ■<br />
“Private Antitrust Enforcement in Europe: A<br />
Policy Analysis and Reality Check,” 27 (1)<br />
World Competition L. & Economics Rev. 13<br />
(2004). ■ “Transfrontier Media, <strong>Law</strong>, and<br />
Cultural Policy in the European Union,” New<br />
Frontiers In International Communication<br />
Theory 157 (M. Semati, ed.) (Lanham, MD:<br />
Rowman & Littlefield 2004). ■ “Media and<br />
Election Regulation in the United States <strong>of</strong><br />
America,” Media And Elections, 25<br />
(Mahwah, N.J.: <strong>Law</strong>rence Erlbaum &<br />
Associates, 2004, B. Lange & D. Ward, eds.)<br />
(with L. Kaid). ■ “Micros<strong>of</strong>t: Federalism and<br />
Internationalism in Antitrust,” The Future Of<br />
Transnational Antitrust — From<br />
Comparative To Common Competition <strong>Law</strong><br />
259 (Berne: Staempfli Publishers, Ltd and<br />
The Hague: Kluwer International, 2003) (J.
Drexl, ed.) Munich Series on European and<br />
International Antitrust <strong>Law</strong>, No. 1. (with M.<br />
Jamison). ■ “A New Dawn for Private<br />
Competition <strong>Law</strong> Remedies in Europe?<br />
Reflections from the USA,” European<br />
Competition <strong>Law</strong> Annual 2001: Effective<br />
Private Enforcement Of EC Antitrust <strong>Law</strong> 95<br />
(Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2003) (Claus<br />
Dieter Ehlermann & Isabela Atanasiu, eds.).<br />
■ “Voting from the Bench: Media Analysis<br />
<strong>of</strong> Legal Issues in the 2000 Post-Election<br />
Campaign,” 46 American Behavioral<br />
Scientist 642 (2003). ■ “Global Antitrust in<br />
the Millennium Round: The Ways Forward,”<br />
Competition Policy In The Global Trading<br />
System 397, (The Hague: Kluwer<br />
International 2002, C. Jones and M.<br />
Matsushita, eds.) (with M. Matsushita).<br />
■ “Trilateralism in Private Antitrust<br />
Enforcement: Japan, the U.S.A., and the<br />
European Union,” Competition Policy In The<br />
Global Trading System 211 (C. Jones and M.<br />
Matsushita, eds., The Hague: Kluwer<br />
International 2002). ■ “Come the<br />
Millennium (Round) — Competing Visions<br />
<strong>of</strong> International Antitrust Policy in The<br />
European Union and The United States,”<br />
2000 Fordham. Corp. L. Inst. 31 (B. Hawk,<br />
ed., 2001). ■ “Television Without Frontiers,”<br />
19 Yearbook Of European <strong>Law</strong> 299 (P.<br />
Eeckhout and T. Tridimas, eds.) (Oxford:<br />
Dawson Named Associate Dean<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor George Dawson (right) began his appointment<br />
in August 2004 as associate dean for academic affairs, a<br />
post he previously held 1996-2000. He replaced Graduate<br />
Tax Program Associate Dean and Director Michael Friel, who<br />
stepped down from the position to return his attention full<br />
time to the college’s top-ranked Graduate Tax Program.<br />
Oxford U. Press 2000). ■ “Toward Global<br />
Competition Policy — The Expanding<br />
Dialogue on Multilateralism,” 23 World<br />
Competition L. & Econ. Rev. 95 (2000). ■<br />
“S<strong>of</strong>t Money and Hard Choices: The<br />
Influence <strong>of</strong> Finance Rules on Campaign<br />
Communication Strategy,” Political<br />
Communication Ethics 179 (R. Denton, ed.)<br />
(Westport, CT: Praeger, 2000). ■ “Media<br />
Concentration and <strong>Law</strong>: New Developments<br />
in Germany and the European Community,”<br />
Handbook <strong>of</strong> Global Legal Policy 313 (S.<br />
Nagel, ed.) (Marcel Dekker, 2000).<br />
CALLY JORDAN<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Capital Market<br />
Integration in the East<br />
African Community (The<br />
World Bank, Financial<br />
Sector Division, Finance,<br />
Private Sector and<br />
Infrastructure, Africa Region, 2002) (with A.<br />
Alawode, Y. Kim and T. Endo). ■ “Financial<br />
Regulatory Harmonization and the<br />
Globalization <strong>of</strong> Finance,” Policy Research<br />
Working Paper 2919 (The World Bank,<br />
Financial Sector Operations and Policy<br />
Department, October 2002) (with G.<br />
Majnoni) (Reprint by African Capital<br />
Markets Forum, Nov. 2003). ■ “How<br />
2004 Faculty Promotions<br />
Earning promotions in 2004 were (from left) Sherrie Russell-Brown<br />
(to associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor), Tracy Rambo (senior lecturer), Iris Burke (senior<br />
lecturer), Mark Fenster (associate pr<strong>of</strong>essor), Peggy Schrieber (senior lecturer),<br />
Alison Gerencser (senior lecturer), Pedro Malavet (pr<strong>of</strong>essor), Danaya Wright<br />
(pr<strong>of</strong>essor) and Leanne Pflaum (senior lecturer). Also promoted, but not<br />
pictured, were Anne Rutledge and Patricia Thomson (senior lecturers).<br />
Effective are Capital Markets in Exerting<br />
Governance on Corporations? Recent<br />
Lessons from Emerging Markets,” Financial<br />
Sector Governance: The Roles <strong>of</strong> the Public<br />
and Private Sectors (Brookings Press, 2002).<br />
■ “Comment on ‘An Alternative Regulatory<br />
Model for Canada’: A View from Afar,”<br />
Queen’s <strong>University</strong> Annual Business <strong>Law</strong><br />
Symposium 2001 (Carswell, 2002).<br />
CHRISTINE A. KLEIN<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “On Integrity: Some<br />
Considerations for Water<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” 56 Alabama L. Rev.<br />
(2005). ■ “Survey <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida Water <strong>Law</strong>,” Waters<br />
and Water Rights (Robert<br />
E. Beck, ed., Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.,<br />
Rev. Vol. 6, forthcoming 2005). ■ Natural<br />
Resources <strong>Law</strong>: A Place-Based Book <strong>of</strong><br />
Problems and Cases (Aspen Publishers,<br />
forthcoming 2005) (with Federico Cheever<br />
and Bret C. Birdsong). ■ “The<br />
Environmental Commerce Clause:<br />
Disguising Pragmatism with Metaphor,” The<br />
Jurisdynamics <strong>of</strong> Environmental Protection:<br />
Change and the Pragmatic Voice in<br />
Environmental <strong>Law</strong> (Environmental <strong>Law</strong><br />
Institute, Jim Chen ed., 2003). ■ “The<br />
Environmental Commerce Clause,” 27<br />
Harvard Environmental L. Rev. 1 (2003).<br />
■ “Protecting Monumental Landscapes<br />
Under the Antiquities Act,” 87 Cornell L.<br />
Rev. 1333 (2002). ■ “A Background History<br />
<strong>of</strong> Directional Drilling in Michigan,” 2002<br />
Michigan State <strong>University</strong> L. Rev. 173<br />
(2002). ■ “Dam Policy: The Emerging<br />
Paradigm <strong>of</strong> Restoration,” 31 Env’tl L.<br />
Reporter 10486 (2001).<br />
LYRISSA BARNETT<br />
LIDSKY<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; UF Research<br />
Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Freedom <strong>of</strong> the Press: A<br />
Reference Guide to the<br />
U.S. Constitution (2004). ■<br />
“Brandenburg and the<br />
United States’ War on Incitement Abroad:<br />
Defending a Double Standard,” 37 Wake<br />
Forest L. Rev. 1009 (2002). ■ “Cybergossip<br />
or Securities Fraud? Some First Amendment<br />
Guidance in Drawing the Line,” 5 wallstreetlawyer.com<br />
15 (2001), reprinted at<br />
www.ucdavis.bizlawjournal.edu (2002) (with<br />
Michael Pike). ■ “Silencing John Doe:<br />
Defamation and Discourse in Cyberspace,”<br />
49 Duke 855 (2000). ■ Book Review, “The<br />
Reasonable Woman and the ‘Warrior Code,’”<br />
Jurist: Books-on-<strong>Law</strong> (2000).<br />
U F L A W 1 1
Specialty Areas<br />
CENTERS, INSTITUTES & CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS<br />
Florida’s comprehensive J.D. curriculum prepares students from<br />
around the world for a broad range <strong>of</strong> traditional and non-traditional<br />
legal careers. After completing first-year requirements, students tailor<br />
studies to specific interests and career plans through advanced courses,<br />
seminars, certificate programs, joint degrees and study abroad<br />
opportunities. More than 100 courses and 30 seminars are <strong>of</strong>fered each<br />
year in a variety <strong>of</strong> practice areas, including Children’s <strong>Law</strong>, Corporate<br />
<strong>Law</strong>, Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong>, Estates and Trusts Practice,<br />
Family <strong>Law</strong>, Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong>, International and Comparative<br />
<strong>Law</strong>, Litigation, Media <strong>Law</strong> and Tax <strong>Law</strong>. Through the following<br />
Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Program faculty include (from left) Michael<br />
Allan Wolf, Mary Jane Angelo, Jeffrey Wade, Steve Powell, Richard Hamman,<br />
Director Alyson Flournoy, Mark Fenster, Tom Ankerson and Joan Flocks.<br />
(James Nicholas, Christine Klein and Danaya Wright not pictured.)<br />
Environmental & Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Faculty<br />
Boost Program Into Top 20<br />
UF law’s Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Program has<br />
accelerated into the nation’s top 20 based largely on strong<br />
research and scholarship by program faculty. Director Alyson<br />
Flournoy and Associate Director James Nicholas head this distinctive<br />
program, which <strong>of</strong>fers one <strong>of</strong> the richest law curricula in the<br />
Southeast and an outstanding array <strong>of</strong> extra-curricular opportunities<br />
and special programs. The addition in recent years <strong>of</strong> faculty<br />
Michael Allan Wolf, Christine Klein, Mary Jane Angelo, Mark Fenster<br />
and Sherrie Russell-Brown has further deepened and expanded its<br />
curricular <strong>of</strong>ferings and research areas.<br />
Michael Allan Wolf's commentary on regulatory takings was<br />
selected as one <strong>of</strong> the top ten articles on land use and environmental<br />
law in 2003, for example, and Christine Klein is finishing<br />
a natural resources casebook. Richard Hamann has testified on<br />
wetlands legislation before Congress and spoken extensively on<br />
the Florida Everglades; Mark Fenster’s abstract on takings last<br />
year was one <strong>of</strong> the articles most <strong>of</strong>ten looked at on SSRN; and<br />
Tom Ankersen helped found an environmental law clinic at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Costa Rica. Danaya Wright’s testimony and expert<br />
witness testimony has been impressive, and her scholarship<br />
cited by courts.<br />
About 10 students each semester earn a Certificate in<br />
Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong>. Students also gain hands-on<br />
experience through summer externships, the Conservation Clinic —<br />
in Florida and Costa Rica — and participation in the annual<br />
Richard E. Nelson Symposium on Local Government <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Environmental/International Environmental Moot Court Teams.<br />
Students in the Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Society produce<br />
an annual public interest environmental conference featuring top<br />
speakers/panelists. Their 2004 conference featured best-selling<br />
novelist/columnist Carl Hiassen and 400-plus participants. ❒<br />
1 2 U F L A W<br />
programs, centers and institutes, faculty complement and enrich the<br />
curriculum and legal scholarship by concentrating in specific fields and<br />
practice areas:<br />
Center for Estate & Elder <strong>Law</strong> Planning<br />
The Center for Estate and Elder <strong>Law</strong> Planning, directed by<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor C. Douglas Miller <strong>of</strong> the Graduate Tax faculty, integrates<br />
teaching, training, research, scholarship and public service, and<br />
advances estate planning and elder law knowledge, pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism,<br />
skills and policy by educating and training students and lawyers. As<br />
the newest UF law center, its goals are to sponsor institutes and symposia,<br />
develop an estate planning and elder law library and s<strong>of</strong>tware<br />
collection, and provide community service though judicial externship<br />
programs. It works closely with the Graduate Tax Program and UF<br />
Center for Gerontological Studies.<br />
The center also administers the highly successful Certificate<br />
Program in Estates and Trusts Practice, which prepares students to<br />
counsel clients on complex issues related to aging and the preservation<br />
and efficient disposition <strong>of</strong> assets. The curriculum covers elder law,<br />
estates and trusts, estate planning, probate and taxation <strong>of</strong> individual<br />
income, and gratuitious transfers <strong>of</strong> property.<br />
Center for Governmental Responsibility<br />
The Center for Governmental Responsibility (CGR) — Florida’s<br />
senior legal and public policy research institute — was founded in<br />
1972 and is directed by UF law Dean Emeritus Jon Mills, former speaker<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Florida House <strong>of</strong> Representatives. Faculty and students conduct<br />
grant and contract-funded research — <strong>of</strong>ten interdisciplinary in<br />
nature — on issues relating to public policy development and implementation<br />
at the local, state, federal and international level.<br />
CGR faculty teach and research on topics including environmental<br />
law, water law, land use, ecosystem management, sustainable development,<br />
environmental justice, health law and policy, bioethics, poverty<br />
law, family law, state and federal constitutional issues, emerging<br />
democracies, historic preservation, conflict resolution, comparative<br />
law, European community law, international trade law, and election<br />
and campaign finance law. Faculty also direct externships in the public<br />
policy arena, including at the Florida Supreme Court, and administer<br />
fellowships funded through The Florida Bar.<br />
CGR’s specialized programs include the Conservation Clinic, Costa<br />
Rica Summer Program, Center for American <strong>Law</strong> Studies at Warsaw<br />
<strong>University</strong> in Poland, Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> in the Americas Program — which<br />
<strong>of</strong>fers the annual Conference on Legal & Policy Issues in the Americas<br />
Working to fulfill the Center for Governmental Responsibility’s public<br />
service mission are faculty and staff (from left, back) Thomas Ankersen,<br />
Barbara Noah, Jeffrey Wade, Ewa Gmurzynska, Richard Hamman, Director<br />
Jon Mills, Joan Flocks, Stephen Powell, Clifford Jones and (seated) Laura<br />
Coates, JoAnn Klein, Barbara Sieger, Linda Baldwin, Lenny Kennedy and<br />
Timothy McLendon.
Center on Children & Families<br />
The Center on Children and Families (CCF) promotes quality advocacy, teaching and<br />
scholarship in children’s law and policy, and has been identified as one <strong>of</strong> the top five<br />
such centers in the country. Director Barbara Bennett Woodhouse is joined by a team<br />
<strong>of</strong> UF faculty with expertise in criminal law, juvenile justice, psychology, conflict<br />
resolution and human rights (see picture at right).<br />
The center also administers the Certificate in Family <strong>Law</strong> — with more than double<br />
the participants <strong>of</strong> any other program (20 students earned the new certificate in 2003,<br />
and another 50 enrolled) — and provides opportunities for students to work with<br />
systems for protecting children from abuse and neglect in the CCF Child Welfare Clinic,<br />
family law externships, and/or as children’s fellows, where they work on Friend <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Court briefs and research papers, assist with CCF’s annual interdisciplinary conference<br />
and help build a library <strong>of</strong> children’s legal resources. CCF is active in international<br />
human rights work, works collaboratively with government and the judiciary on law<br />
reform and pr<strong>of</strong>essional education, and helps educate children regarding their rights<br />
and responsibilities in a free society by hosting youth summits and other activities.<br />
During the past year, CCF faculty and student fellows contributed in numerous<br />
ways to improve advocacy policy and law and deliver legal services to underserved<br />
populations. At the local level, Monique Haughton Worrell and her clinical students<br />
developed and presented a pilot program to provide legal resources to Florida’s<br />
regional Child Protective Teams; faculty worked with the local Child Advocacy Center<br />
educating child welfare pr<strong>of</strong>essionals on children’s rights; Alison Gerencser and her<br />
students taught conflict resolution to incarcerated youth; and Joan Flocks served on<br />
Senator Gary Sipland’s Lake Apopka and Lake Jewell Commission on Health Issues,<br />
protecting children and families from environmental risks.<br />
— and International Trade <strong>Law</strong> Program, which, under the direction <strong>of</strong><br />
Steve Powell, a long-time federal trade negotiator and chief counsel, is<br />
developing legal services for translation into global business strategies,<br />
creating courses to complement the international curriculum, and<br />
providing seminars and presentations on related topics.<br />
Center for International Financial Crimes Studies<br />
Directed by Chesterfield Smith Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Fletcher N. Baldwin, Jr.,<br />
the Center for International Financial Crime Studies provides global<br />
studies, consultation, training and education in anti-money laundering<br />
strategies, hosts leading experts as classroom lecturers, and coordinates<br />
national and international conferences, held to date in New<br />
York, Washington, D.C., Miami, San Francisco, Aruba and Curacao. The<br />
center also is actively involved with the annual International<br />
Symposium on Economic Crime at Cambridge <strong>University</strong>, England, and<br />
Center on Children and Families faculty (from left)<br />
Berta Hernández-Truyol, Sharon Rush, Alison Gerencser,<br />
Director Barbara Bennett Woodhouse, Kenneth Nunn,<br />
Program Assistant Debbie Kelley, Mark Fondacaro, Co-<br />
Director Iris Burke, Christopher Slobogin, Co-Director<br />
Nancy Dowd and Claudia Wright help deepen understanding<br />
<strong>of</strong> this meaningful practice area. (Associate<br />
Directors Mae Clark, Joan Flocks, Jeffrey Grater, Karen<br />
Kerouck, Monique Haughton Worrell, Don Peters,<br />
Sherrie Russell-Brown, Peggy Schrieber, Walter<br />
Weyrauch and Steve Willis not pictured.)<br />
At the state level, Claudia Wright and her students participated with the Steering Committee on Children and Families in the Courts, created<br />
by the Florida Supreme Court and Office <strong>of</strong> State Court Administrator to assist Florida’s judicial circuits with implementation <strong>of</strong> the Unified<br />
Family Court. Wright also served on the Florida Bar Juvenile Rules Committee and Legal Needs <strong>of</strong> Children Committee. Christopher Slobogin<br />
chaired and Mark Fondacaro was a member <strong>of</strong> the ABA Death Penalty Moratorium Project for Florida, which is assessing operation <strong>of</strong> the juvenile<br />
death penalty as part <strong>of</strong> a comprehensive assessment <strong>of</strong> the death penalty in Florida; and CCF continues to work with the Florida Supreme Court<br />
and Eighth Circuit to provide education and training for the transition to a unified family court model.<br />
At the national level, Woodhouse was vice chair <strong>of</strong> the ABA Subcommittee on the Rights <strong>of</strong> the Child and on the Policy Advisory Board <strong>of</strong> First<br />
Star — both <strong>of</strong> which are engaged in law reform and policy research — and testified at the Bi-Partisan Congressional Roundtable on Children and<br />
to the Children’s Bureau in Washington, D.C., while Sharon Rush was invited by several school boards and teachers’ groups to share her work on<br />
children and racial discrimination. CCF faculty and fellows also authored or co-authored amicus briefs in cases implicating rights <strong>of</strong> children and<br />
youth, including juvenile criminal cases, adoption cases, and custody cases. Nancy Dowd and CCF fellows authored an amicus brief in a complex<br />
adoption case, and Slobogin and Woodhouse co-authored a brief to the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf <strong>of</strong> 50 child advocacy organizations, including<br />
the Child Welfare League <strong>of</strong> America and Children’s Defense Fund, in support <strong>of</strong> the upcoming case challenging the constitutionality <strong>of</strong> the<br />
juvenile death penalty. CCF faculty also helped coordinate interdisciplinary conferences on children, culture and violence in 2003 and children,<br />
race and education in 2004.<br />
At the international level, faculty are actively engaged with NGOs such as the United Nations and International Society <strong>of</strong> Family <strong>Law</strong>, and<br />
work in and with other countries. Sherrie Russell-Brown, for example, trained African workers on their labor and health rights, and Woodhouse<br />
worked in Northern Ireland on an international project to study children in societies in transition and develop policies for protecting them.<br />
The center was recently selected for one <strong>of</strong> three new shared faculty positions by the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida Institute for Child and Adolescent<br />
Research and Evaluation (ICARE), which acts as a hub to link UF faculty working on issues <strong>of</strong> importance to children and youth and stimulate<br />
cross-disciplinary collaboration. A search is underway for a candidate with both a J.D. and a Ph.D. and a record <strong>of</strong> achievement in vulnerable<br />
populations, children in transition and/or early childhood. ❒<br />
is working with the Institute for Advanced Legal Studies at the<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> London — where Baldwin is an Honorary Fellow — to<br />
develop and strengthen knowledge in areas <strong>of</strong> international expertise.<br />
Baldwin also has participated in training law enforcement <strong>of</strong>ficers at<br />
the Federal <strong>Law</strong> Enforcement Training Center’s Financial Fraud<br />
Institute, money laundering countermeasures at the Financial Crimes<br />
Summit in Sydney, Australia, the <strong>Law</strong> Society <strong>of</strong> Scotland’s Conference<br />
on Money Laundering and Terrorism in Glasgow, and money laundering<br />
seminars at Montpellier <strong>University</strong>, France, and was consultant to the<br />
government <strong>of</strong> Indonesia’s Financial Intelligence Unit, Checchi and<br />
Company Consulting, Inc.<br />
Center for the Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations<br />
The Center for the Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations (CSRRR) is an<br />
academic research and resource center whose mission is to create and<br />
U F L A W 1 3
Faculty Join Graduate Tax Program, LL.M. in International Tax Under<br />
UF’s tax faculty is consistently ranked in the nation’s top two by<br />
U.S. News and World Report, which rates law school specialty areas<br />
based on the reputation <strong>of</strong> faculty in that<br />
speciality. Joining the program this fall are<br />
former New York <strong>University</strong> Tax Program<br />
Director Paul R. McDaniel (at right, with<br />
Graduate Tax Program Associate Dean/<br />
Director Michael Friel) and Harvard <strong>Law</strong><br />
School faculty member Diane M. Ring (pictured).<br />
Both have expertise in international<br />
taxation, and are expected to be major players in development —<br />
with Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>Law</strong>rence Lokken, Culverhouse Eminent Scholar in<br />
Taxation — <strong>of</strong> a LL.M. in International Tax <strong>Law</strong> during the coming<br />
year.<br />
According to Friel, the proposed degree reflects the increasing<br />
importance <strong>of</strong> understanding and advising on international tax rules in<br />
a global economy with multinational businesses, rapid capital flows,<br />
U.S. clients with international dealings, and foreign clients with U.S.<br />
investments and businesses.<br />
McDaniel, an expert in U.S. and international tax law and first permanent<br />
holder <strong>of</strong> the James J. Freeland Eminent Scholar Chair in<br />
Taxation, was a visiting pr<strong>of</strong>essor at UF in the 90s. He earned his B.A.<br />
from the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oklahoma; LL.B. (cum laude) from Harvard <strong>Law</strong><br />
School; and Honorary Doctor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>s from Uppsala <strong>University</strong>, Sweden.<br />
He has authored or co-authored more than 50 articles and eight books<br />
on taxation; and has served as acting associate tax legislative counsel<br />
in the Office <strong>of</strong> Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, and director <strong>of</strong> New<br />
York <strong>University</strong>’s Graduate Tax and International Tax Programs. He<br />
helped pioneer the concept <strong>of</strong> tax expenditures with the late Stanley<br />
Surrey <strong>of</strong> Harvard, who explored these issues in Tax Expenditures.<br />
Before working with Surrey, he practiced in Oklahoma, then worked<br />
for the government until the fall <strong>of</strong> 1970, when he joined the Boston<br />
<strong>College</strong> law faculty. He later joined the firm Hill and Barlow, where he<br />
was a partner prior to joining the NYU faculty in 1993.<br />
foster communities <strong>of</strong> dialogue on race and race relations and promote<br />
historically- and empirically-based thinking, talking, research, writing<br />
and teaching on race. The <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> is one <strong>of</strong> only five law<br />
schools in the nation housing a center devoted to the study <strong>of</strong> race.<br />
Under the direction <strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Katheryn Russell-Brown and Assistant<br />
Director Melissa Bamba, CSRRR hosted its fourth annual conference,<br />
“Rhyme, Rhetoric and Race: Exploring the Influence <strong>of</strong> Literature,<br />
Language & Lyrics on Race Relations,” in 2003; co-hosted the conference,<br />
“Beyond Brown, an Interdisciplinary Look at Issues, Impacts &<br />
Challenges <strong>of</strong> Landmark Desegregation Case,” in March 2004; and<br />
launched an innovative Faculty Reading Initiative to encourage<br />
thoughtful discussion <strong>of</strong> race and racial issues in September 2004.<br />
Institute for Dispute Resolution<br />
Under the direction <strong>of</strong> Trustee Research Fellow/Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Don<br />
Peters and Associate Directors Jonathan Cohen and Alison Eckles<br />
Gerenscer, the Institute for Dispute Resolution encourages and<br />
enhances teaching, research and service in mediation, negotiation, collective<br />
bargaining and arbitration/international litigation. IDR trains<br />
students to become mediators through actual proceedings involving<br />
county civil disputes (such as landlord-tenant disputes or consumer<br />
cases), thereby helping to prepare them to resolve issues for future<br />
clients without going to trial. IDR also hosts and co-sponsors an annual<br />
conference with Upchurch Watson & White on high stakes mediation<br />
practice, and has joined with the Florida Dispute Resolution Center to<br />
hold a highly successful transformative mediation symposium. These<br />
well-attended and highly rated events blend theory and practice, and<br />
award continuing legal and mediation education credits.<br />
1 4 U F L A W<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Diane Ring (right), whose<br />
primary interest is international tax law and relations<br />
and taxation <strong>of</strong> financial instruments, was a<br />
Harvard assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> law for several<br />
years, and national reporter for the 2004<br />
Conference on Double Nontaxation for the<br />
International Fiscal Association. Prior to entering<br />
teaching, she was an associate with Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered, in<br />
Washington, D.C., working primarily in international tax and financial<br />
products for planning, audit, legislative and regulatory matters. She<br />
clerked for Judge Jon O. Newman, Federal Court <strong>of</strong> Appeals, Second<br />
Circuit, New York, NY. Ring received her A.B. (anthropology, summa<br />
cum laude, John Harvard Scholar, Harvard <strong>College</strong> Scholar and<br />
Elizabeth Carey Agassiz Scholar) and J.D. (magna cum laude) from<br />
Harvard, where she was an editor on the Harvard <strong>Law</strong> Review.<br />
Graduate Tax Program faculty — Dennis A. Calfee, Patricia E.<br />
Dilley, Michael K. Friel, David M. Hudson, <strong>Law</strong>rence Lokken, Martin J.<br />
McMahon Jr., Paul R. McDaniel, C. Douglas Miller, Michael A. Oberst,<br />
David M. Richardson, Diane M. Ring, and Steven J. Willis — are authors<br />
<strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the most widely used textbooks and treatises, and have<br />
lectured at numerous conferences and institutes in the United States<br />
and abroad, occupied leadership positions in pr<strong>of</strong>essional organizations,<br />
and served as consultants to the Internal Revenue Service, congressional<br />
committees and other major public and private entities.<br />
Graduate Tax students have outstanding academic credentials, and,<br />
in many cases, significant pr<strong>of</strong>essional experience. More than 1,700<br />
students have earned their LL.M. in Tax from UF since the program<br />
began in 1974, and it was first in the nation to <strong>of</strong>fer a Doctor <strong>of</strong><br />
Juridical Science (S.J.D.) specifically in taxation. Roughly two years old,<br />
UF’s S.J.D. program requires innovative research and writing, along<br />
with publication <strong>of</strong> a book or three law review articles.<br />
The Graduate Tax Program also publishes the faculty-edited Florida<br />
Tax Review, one <strong>of</strong> the country’s leading tax journals. ❒<br />
Peters also directs the Virgil Hawkins Civil Clinics — <strong>of</strong>fering the<br />
Pro Se Family <strong>Law</strong> Clinic, Full Representation Clinic, and Gator<br />
Teamchild/Juvenile <strong>Law</strong> Clinic — which provide quality, intensely supervised,<br />
clinical learning experiences in family matters while delivering<br />
competent legal services to those in need.<br />
Institute for Human Rights, Peace & Development<br />
Led by Winston P. Nagan, former board chairman <strong>of</strong> Amnesty<br />
International USA, this institute seeks to enhance understanding <strong>of</strong><br />
governance and human rights in Africa and other countries; facilitate<br />
creation <strong>of</strong> the Human Rights and Peace Centre at Makerere <strong>University</strong><br />
in Uganda, and assist with coordination <strong>of</strong> Southeastern European<br />
peace conferences.<br />
Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
The Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong> Program enables the college to be<br />
one <strong>of</strong> the few in the nation — and only one in the Southeast — to<br />
<strong>of</strong>fer a Certificate in Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong>. More than 30 students<br />
have earned the certificate, and many more take a substantial number<br />
<strong>of</strong> IP courses. UF Research Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor/Program Director<br />
Thomas Cotter also coordinates an annual <strong>Law</strong> and Technology<br />
Conference to share information on this fast-moving subject area with<br />
practitioners. The third annual conference held in Orlando in February<br />
2004 brought more than 60 top practitioners in the field and academic<br />
representatives to focus on issues <strong>of</strong> pressing interest, including corporate,<br />
transactional, licensing and international issues, “music wars,”<br />
and litigation. ❒
JOSEPH W. LITTLE<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Alumni<br />
Research Scholar<br />
■ “Election Disputes and<br />
the Constitutional Right to<br />
Vote,” 13 U. Fla. J. L. &<br />
Pub. Policy 37 (2001). ■<br />
“Recreation Boating <strong>Law</strong>,”<br />
Benedict on Admiralty (Matthew Bender,<br />
2001). ■ “Teaching Torts: Introduction to the<br />
<strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Torts,” 45 St. Louis L. J. 715 (2001).<br />
■ “The Need to Revise the Florida<br />
Constitutional Revision Commission,” 52<br />
Fla. L. Rev. 475 (2000).<br />
LAWRENCE LOKKEN<br />
Hugh F. Culverhouse<br />
Eminent Scholar in<br />
Taxation<br />
■ Federal Taxation <strong>of</strong><br />
Employee Compensation<br />
(Warren Gorham &<br />
Lamont 2004) (with Boris<br />
I. Bittker). ■ Fundamentals <strong>of</strong> International<br />
Taxation (Warren Gorham & Lamont<br />
2004/2005 ed.) (with Boris I. Bittker).<br />
■ “A Tax <strong>Law</strong>yer’s Observations on Scary<br />
Numbers, Politics, and Irresponsibility:<br />
Commentary on Shaviro’s Reckless<br />
Disregard,” 45 Boston <strong>College</strong> L. Rev.<br />
(2004). ■ “Does the U.S. Tax System<br />
Disadvantage U.S. Multinationals in the<br />
World Marketplace?” 4 J. Tax’n Global<br />
Transactions 23 (Summer 2004). ■ Treatise,<br />
Federal Taxation <strong>of</strong> Income, Estates & Gifts,<br />
Vol. 4 (2003) (with Boris I. Bittker). ■ “As<br />
the World <strong>of</strong> Partnership Turns,” 56 S.M.U.<br />
L. Rev. 365 (2003). ■ “Foreign Base<br />
Company Sales and Services Income: An<br />
Overreaching Anachronism or an Essential<br />
Element <strong>of</strong> the Controlled Foreign<br />
Corporations Regime?” Tax’n Global Trans<br />
47 (Spring 2003). ■ Fundamentals <strong>of</strong><br />
International Taxation (Warren, Gorham &<br />
Lamont, 2001). ■ “Marking Up the<br />
Blueprint,” 26 Brooklyn J. Int’l L. 1493<br />
(2001). ■ “Capitalization: Complexity in<br />
Simplicity,” 91 Tax Notes 1357 (2001). ■<br />
Federal Taxation <strong>of</strong> Income, Estates & Gifts<br />
(Warren, Gorham & Lamont, Vol. 1, 2 and 3,<br />
1999, 2000 and 2002).<br />
PAUL J. MAGNARELLA<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Criminology<br />
and <strong>Law</strong>; Affiliate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />
Anthropology, African<br />
Studies, and European<br />
Studies<br />
■ Chapter, “The Consequences <strong>of</strong> the War<br />
Crimes Tribunals and an International<br />
Criminal Court for Human Rights in<br />
Transitioning Societies,” Human Rights and<br />
Societies in Transition 119 (2004, ed.<br />
Horowitz and Schnabel, United Nations<br />
<strong>University</strong> Press). ■ “International Human<br />
Rights: Roots <strong>of</strong> a Progression,” 19 J. Third<br />
World Studies 13 (2002). ■ Justice in Africa:<br />
Rwanda’s Genocide, Its Courts, and the UN<br />
Criminal Tribunal (Ashgate Pub., 2000). ■<br />
Guest editor, special issue <strong>of</strong> Human Rights<br />
and Human Diversity, 13 Global Bioethics<br />
(2000). ■ “Achieving Human Rights in<br />
Africa: The Challenge for the New<br />
Millennium,” 4 African Studies Quarterly<br />
(electronic journal, 2000). ■ “Promoting<br />
Peace, Human Rights and National Security:<br />
Focus on Sub-Saharan Africa,” 1 Social<br />
Justice, Anthropology, Peace and Human<br />
Rights 99 (2000). ■ “Comprehending<br />
Genocide: The Case <strong>of</strong> Rwanda,” 13 Global<br />
Bioethics 23 (2000). ■ “Turkey,” Countries<br />
and Their Cultures (MacMillan, 2001, M.<br />
Ember & C.R. Ember, eds.).<br />
PEDRO A. MALAVET<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Afterword: Outsider<br />
Citizenships and<br />
Multidimensional Borders:<br />
The Power and Danger <strong>of</strong><br />
Not Belonging,” Clev. St.<br />
L. Rev. (2004). ■<br />
“Reparations Theory and Postcolonial Puerto<br />
Rico: Some Preliminary Thoughts,” 13 La<br />
International Programs<br />
Through a number <strong>of</strong> diverse program initiatives and faculty efforts, the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong><br />
has long stretched beyond its immediate geographic borders to impact legal research, education<br />
and policy around the globe. Many <strong>of</strong> the areas listed in the preceding pages — most notably the<br />
Center for Governmental Responsibility, Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Program, Center for<br />
International Financial Crimes Studies, and Institute for Human Rights, Peace and Development —<br />
have <strong>of</strong>fered international activities for three decades, focusing specifically on the “Atlantic Rim,”<br />
an area encompassing North and South America, Europe and Africa. The school is affiliated with 60<br />
foreign countries, and <strong>of</strong>fers initiatives in International Trade <strong>Law</strong>, a pioneering visiting foreign<br />
scholar research program, a history <strong>of</strong> emphasis on legal and policy issues in the Americas, and a<br />
highly diversified faculty and student body. The faculty includes numerous experts in international<br />
legal issues, including Fletcher N. Baldwin, Dennis Calfee, Michael Gordon, Cally Jordan, <strong>Law</strong>rence Lokken, Paul Magnarella,<br />
Paul McDaniel, Jon Mills, Winston Nagan, Walter Weyrauch and Barbara Bennett Woodhouse.<br />
Gerald A. Sohn Research Scholar/Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Stuart Cohn (top, left) —- with assistance from an advisory board <strong>of</strong> leading<br />
international practitioners — coordinates and supervises the International and Comparative <strong>Law</strong> Certificate Program, international<br />
study opportunities for students through universities <strong>of</strong> Leiden (Netherlands), Frankfurt (Germany), Montpellier<br />
(France), Warsaw (Poland) and Monash (Melbourne, Australia), student and faculty exchanges with foreign law schools, and<br />
programs in Mexico, Brazil, Poland and elsewhere. American Bar Association-approved summer academic programs are available<br />
at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Cape Town in South Africa, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Costa Rica, and <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Montpellier, and comparative<br />
enrichment courses are taught at the law school by faculty from around the world. Exchange programs have<br />
been established with Monash, Pontifica Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Leiden, Frankfurt,<br />
and Stellenbosch (South Africa). New programs to strengthen ties with Latin American and Caribbean countries<br />
are under review, as is an LL.M. in Latin American and Caribbean <strong>Law</strong>.<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor David Hudson (right) directs the LL.M. in Comparative <strong>Law</strong> Program for foreign law graduates<br />
seeking to enhance their understanding <strong>of</strong> the American legal system. Nearly 80 attorneys from countries<br />
including China, France, Germany, Poland, Japan, Italy, Uganda, Brazil, Turkey and the United Kingdom have<br />
earned the degree since 1994. ❒<br />
U F L A W 1 5
1 6 U F L A W<br />
Raza L. J. 387 (2002). ■ “Introduction:<br />
LatCritical Encounters with Culture,” North-<br />
South Frameworks, 51 Fla. L. Rev. 1 (2003).<br />
■ America’s Colony: The Political and<br />
Cultural Conflict between the United States<br />
and Puerto Rico (NYU Press, 2004). ■ “The<br />
Accidental Crit II: Culture and the Looking<br />
Glass <strong>of</strong> Exile,” 78 Den. U. L. Rev. 753<br />
(2001). ■ “Puerto Rico: Cultural Nation,<br />
American Colony,” 6 Mich. J. Race & <strong>Law</strong> 1<br />
(2001). ■ “Literature and Arts as Antisubordination,<br />
Praxis-Latcrit Theory and Cultural<br />
Production: The Confessions <strong>of</strong> an<br />
Accidental Crit,” 33 U. Cal. Davis L. Rev.<br />
1293 (2000).<br />
AMY R. MASHBURN<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Ethical Guidelines for<br />
Settlement Negotiations (as<br />
reporter, 2002, American<br />
Bar Association, Litigation<br />
Section publication). ■<br />
“The Criminal Defense<br />
<strong>Law</strong>yer’s Fiduciary Duty to Clients with<br />
Mental Disability,” 68 Fordham L. Rev. 1581<br />
(2000) (with Christopher Slobogin).<br />
DIANE H. MAZUR<br />
UF Research Foundation<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Is ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t<br />
Tell’ Unconstitutional After<br />
<strong>Law</strong>rence? What It Will<br />
Take to Overturn the<br />
Policy,” 15 Fla. J. L & Pub.<br />
Pol’y 423 (2003). ■ “Why Progressives Lost<br />
the War When They Lost the Draft,” 32<br />
H<strong>of</strong>stra L. Rev. 553 (2004). ■ “Rehnquist’s<br />
Vietnam: Constitutional Separatism and the<br />
Stealth Advance <strong>of</strong> Martial <strong>Law</strong>,” 77 Ind. L.<br />
J. 701 (2002). ■ “Word Games, War Games,”<br />
98 Mich. L. Rev. 1590 (2000). ■ “Sex and<br />
Lies: Rules <strong>of</strong> Ethics, Rules <strong>of</strong> Evidence, and<br />
Our Conflicted Views on the Significance <strong>of</strong><br />
Honesty,” 14 Notre Dame J. L. Ethics & Pub.<br />
Pol’y 679 (2000). ■ Book Review, 26 Armed<br />
Forces & Soc’y 670 (2000) (reviewing Kelly<br />
Flinn, Proud to Be).<br />
PAUL R. MCDANIEL<br />
James J. Freeland<br />
Eminent Scholar in<br />
Taxation, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Federal Income Taxation<br />
(with McMahon, Simmons,<br />
and Abreu) (Foundation<br />
Press: 5th ed., 2004). ■<br />
“Trade Agreements and Income Taxation:<br />
Interactions, Conflicts, and Resolutions, 57<br />
Tax L. Rev. 275 (2004). ■ 2004 Annual<br />
Supplements to Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong><br />
Business Organizations, Federal Income<br />
Taxation <strong>of</strong> Corporations, and Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Partnerships and S<br />
Corporations. ■ Federal Wealth Transfer<br />
Taxation (with Repetti and Caron)<br />
(Foundation Press, 5th ed., 2003). ■ “The<br />
U.S. Tax Treatment <strong>of</strong> Income Earned in<br />
Developing Countries,” 35 George Wash.<br />
Int’l L. Rev. 265 (2003). ■ “The Impact <strong>of</strong><br />
Trade Agreements on Tax Systems,” Staaten<br />
Und Steuren (Heidelberg: C.F. Muller Verlag,<br />
2000) 1105, reprinted in 30 Intertax 166<br />
(2002). ■ “Trade and Taxation,” 26 Brooklyn<br />
J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l <strong>Law</strong> 1621 (2001). ■ “Reflections<br />
on International Tax <strong>Law</strong> for the 21st<br />
Century,” Canadian Tax Foundation, 2000<br />
World Tax Conference Report, 20:1 (2000).<br />
MARTIN J.<br />
MCMAHON, JR.<br />
Clarence J. Teselle<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Recent Developments<br />
in Federal Income<br />
Taxation: The Year 2003,” 6<br />
Fla. Tax Rev. 445 (2004)<br />
(with Ira B. Shepard). ■ Federal Income<br />
Taxation, Cases and Materials, 5th ed., and<br />
accompanying Class Discussion Problems<br />
(with Paul McDaniel, Dan Simmons & Alice<br />
Abreu) (Foundation Press, 2004). ■<br />
Cumulative supplements to Federal Income<br />
Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individuals, 3rd ed. (Warren,<br />
Gorham & Lamont, 2002) (with Boris I.<br />
Bittker & <strong>Law</strong>rence A. Zelenak); Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Partnerships and S<br />
Corporations, 3rd. ed., and accompanying<br />
Study Problems (with Paul McDaniel & Dan<br />
Simmons) (Foundation Press, 1999); Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Corporations, 2nd ed.n,<br />
and accompanying Study Problems (with<br />
Paul McDaniel & Dan Simmons)<br />
(Foundation Press,1999); and Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Business Organizations,<br />
3rd ed., and accompanying Study Problems<br />
and Teacher’s Manual (with Paul McDaniel<br />
& Dan Simmons) (Foundation Press, 1999).<br />
■ Federal Income Taxation, Cases and<br />
Materials, 5th ed. (with P. McDaniel, D.<br />
Simmons & A. Abreu) (Foundation Press,<br />
2004, in press). ■ “Recent Developments in<br />
Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2003,”<br />
Fla. Tax Rev. (2004, in press) (with Ira B.<br />
Shepard). ■ “The Matthew Effect and<br />
Federal Taxation,” Boston <strong>College</strong> L. Rev.<br />
(2004, in press). ■ “Privilege and the Work<br />
Product Doctrine in Tax Cases,” The Tax<br />
<strong>Law</strong>yer (2004, in press) (with Ira B.<br />
Shepard). ■ “Privilege and The Work Product<br />
Doctrine in Tax Cases,” 23 ABA Tax Section<br />
News Quarterly 11 (Winter 2004). ■ 2003-1<br />
Semi-annual Cumulative Supplement and<br />
2003-2 Semi-annual Cumulative Supplement<br />
to Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individuals,<br />
3rd ed. (Warren, Gorham & Lamont, 2002)<br />
(with Boris I. Bittker & <strong>Law</strong>rence A.<br />
Zelenak); semi-annual cumulative supple-<br />
ments since 2003. ■ 2003 Annual Cumulative<br />
Supplement to Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong><br />
Partnerships and S Corporations, 3rd ed.,<br />
and accompanying Study Problems<br />
(Foundation Press, 1999) (with P. McDaniel<br />
& D. Simmons); annual supplements since<br />
2000. ■ 2003 Annual Cumulative<br />
Supplement to Federal Income Taxation <strong>of</strong><br />
Corporations, 2nd. ed., and accompanying<br />
Study Problems (Foundation Press, 1999)<br />
(with P. McDaniel & D. Simmons); annual<br />
supplements since 2000. ■ 2003 Annual<br />
Cumulative Supplement to Federal Income<br />
Taxation <strong>of</strong> Business Organizations, 3rd ed.,<br />
and accompanying Study Problems and<br />
Teacher’s Manual (Foundation Press) (with P.<br />
McDaniel & D. Simmons); annual supplements<br />
since 2000. ■ 2003 Annual Cumulative<br />
Supplement to Federal Income Taxation,<br />
Cases and Materials, 4th ed. (Foundation<br />
Press, 1998) (with P. McDaniel, H. Ault &<br />
D. Simmons); Annual supplements since<br />
1999. ■ “Recent Developments in Federal<br />
Income Taxation: The Year 2002,” 6 Fla. Tax<br />
Rev. 81 (2003) (with Ira B. Shepard). ■<br />
“Beyond a GAAR: Retr<strong>of</strong>itting the Code to<br />
Rein In 21st Century Tax Shelters,” 98 Tax<br />
Notes 1721 (March 17, 2003). ■ Federal<br />
Income Taxation <strong>of</strong> Individuals and accompanying<br />
Instructor’s Manual and Study<br />
Problems (Warren, Gorham & Lamont, 3d<br />
ed., 2002) (with Boris I. Bittker & <strong>Law</strong>rence<br />
A. Zelenak). ■ “Capitalization <strong>of</strong> Benefits<br />
Extending Substantially Beyond the Taxable<br />
Year,” 97 Tax Notes 257 (October 14, 2002)<br />
(with Boris I. Bittker & <strong>Law</strong>rence A.<br />
Zelenak). ■ “Recent Developments in<br />
Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2001,” 6<br />
Fla. Tax Rev. 627 (2002) (with Ira B.<br />
Shepard). ■ “A Whirlwind Tour <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Internal Revenue Code’s At-Risk and Passive<br />
Activity Loss Rules,” 36 Real Property<br />
Probate & Trust J. 673 (2002) (with Boris I.<br />
Bittker & <strong>Law</strong>rence A. Zelenak). ■<br />
“Economic Substance, Purposive Activity,<br />
and Corporate Tax Shelters,” 94 Tax Notes<br />
1017 (February 25, 2002). ■ “Recent<br />
Developments in Federal Income Taxation:<br />
The Year 2000,” 5 Fla. Tax Rev. 47 (2001)<br />
(with Ira B. Shepard). ■ “Simplifying the<br />
Interest Deduction for Individual Taxpayers,”<br />
91 Tax Notes 1371 (2001). ■ “Random<br />
Thoughts on Applying Judicial Doctrines to<br />
Interpret the Internal Revenue Code,” 54<br />
SMU L. Rev. 195 (2001). ■ “Recent<br />
Developments in Business Taxation: With<br />
Emphasis on Oil and Gas Taxation,” 52nd<br />
Annual Inst. on Oil and Gas <strong>Law</strong> & Taxation<br />
(Matthew Bender, 2001) (with Ira B.<br />
Shepard). ■ “Recent Developments in<br />
Business Taxation: With Emphasis on Oil<br />
and Gas Taxation,” 51st Annual Institute on<br />
Oil and Gas <strong>Law</strong> and Taxation 13-1<br />
(Matthew Bender 2000) (with Ira B.<br />
Shepard).
Major Construction/Renovation Project<br />
Expands Library & Classroom Space<br />
Construction is in progress to renovate and expand library<br />
and classroom space at the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, thanks to a<br />
major 2001-03 effort that raised more than $22 million in private<br />
support and state and <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida funds for the project.<br />
By the time construction ends in Summer 2005, the new <strong>Law</strong>ton<br />
Chiles Legal Information Center — named in honor <strong>of</strong> the late<br />
1955 UF law graduate, Florida governor and U.S. Senator — will<br />
have nearly doubled in size to become the largest academic law<br />
library in the Southeast and among the top 20 nationwide.<br />
The law school community also will have access to greatly<br />
expanded and enhanced classroom facilities. Two three-story<br />
education towers — which were completed in time for use this fall —<br />
between and connecting Holland and Bruton-Geer Halls, together with<br />
other new classrooms and existing facilities, will provide seating for<br />
close to the college’s entire current enrollment <strong>of</strong> 1,310. The new towers<br />
(east tower at top right) feature 11 spacious classrooms, including a<br />
Ceremonial Classroom (center photograph), which seats up to 160 for<br />
conferences, receptions and special sessions. All have wireless Internet<br />
access, and most <strong>of</strong>fer desktop outlets for laptops and “smart podia”<br />
for use in presentations.<br />
The LIC <strong>of</strong>fers access to 3.5 million-plus volumes in UF libraries and<br />
43 million titles held by libraries throughout the world, and databases<br />
that provide access to federal and state laws, periodicals, news articles<br />
and background materials. The 30-plus member staff, including a<br />
Technology Services section, is headed by Clarence J. TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>Law</strong> and Associate Dean for Library & Technology Kathleen Price, who<br />
has served as law librarian <strong>of</strong> congress and director <strong>of</strong> law libraries at New<br />
York, Duke and Minnesota universities. As the laboratory and social center <strong>of</strong><br />
the law school, the LIC serves faculty and students, and cooperates with other<br />
state libraries to assist members <strong>of</strong> The Florida Bar and general public. The<br />
expanded 100,000 square-foot library will <strong>of</strong>fer:<br />
• Access to information in all formats located anywhere in the world, with staff<br />
able to deliver it to the desktops <strong>of</strong> faculty and students. The LIC collection <strong>of</strong><br />
more than 600,000 volumes and volume equivalents will be housed on three<br />
levels <strong>of</strong> the building in open stack displays, while an open reserve area will<br />
<strong>of</strong>fer students direct access to exams and study aids.<br />
• Individual study carrels on two floors with ergonomic seating for more than<br />
300, with seating for an additional 300. Units will be equipped for wireless<br />
computer use, with playback carrels available for review <strong>of</strong> taped classes,<br />
negotiations and trial skills.<br />
• Thirteen conference rooms for team study and research.<br />
• Space for small student classes for training in new research databases and other s<strong>of</strong>tware, as well as a student production lab and<br />
faculty instructional technology lab for state-<strong>of</strong>-art media use.<br />
• A paneled rare book room with displays <strong>of</strong> faculty writings and special collections in a controlled environment.<br />
• A meditation/lactation room to meet the personal needs <strong>of</strong> a diverse law school community.<br />
• Renovated and updated faculty <strong>of</strong>fices and classrooms in Holland Hall <strong>Law</strong> Center (named after former Florida Governor and U.S.<br />
Senator Spessard Holland), with <strong>of</strong>fices for visiting scholars on the second floor.<br />
• A new west entrance to the college, with a courtyard (last picture above) that provides entry to the Legal Information Center,<br />
to classrooms surrounding the area, and to Bruton-Geer Hall.<br />
• Enhanced outdoor gathering and circulation areas with two semi-enclosed courtyards and an open green space to the northwest.<br />
Ponikvar & Associates <strong>of</strong> Gainesville, which has specialized in college, university and institutional projects for the past 10 years,<br />
and Tsoi/Kobus & Associates <strong>of</strong> Boston, which recently completed work for Harvard Medical and Business schools, Washington<br />
<strong>University</strong>, Boston <strong>College</strong>, Mount Sinai School <strong>of</strong> Medicine and Suffolk <strong>University</strong> <strong>Law</strong> School, Boston, provided architectural and design<br />
elements for the new facilities. ❒<br />
U F L A W 1 7
JON L. MILLS<br />
Director, Center for<br />
Governmental<br />
Responsibility; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Dean Emeritus<br />
■ “The Rewards <strong>of</strong><br />
Citizenship & Perils <strong>of</strong><br />
Identity: How the <strong>Law</strong><br />
Defines You in the Globalized World,” Vol.<br />
III, No. 2 Warsaw Univ. L. Rev. 95 (2004). ■<br />
“Responding to Terrorism and Achieving<br />
Stability in the Global Financial System:<br />
Rational Policy or Crisis Reaction?” Vol. 11,<br />
No. 4 Cambridge Univ. J. <strong>of</strong> Financial Crime<br />
(Henry Stewart Publications, UK, 2004). ■<br />
“Principles for Constitutions and Institutions<br />
in Promoting the Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> in Latin<br />
America,” 16:1 Univ. Fla. J. <strong>of</strong> Int’l L.<br />
(2003). ■ “Responding to Terrorism and<br />
Achieving Stability in the Global Financial<br />
System: Rational Policy or Crisis Reaction?”<br />
Cambridge Univ. J. <strong>of</strong> Financial Crime<br />
(Henry Stewart Publications, UK). ■ “Florida<br />
on Trial: Federalism in the 2000 Presidential<br />
Election,” 13.1 Stan. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 83<br />
(2002). ■ “Diversity in <strong>Law</strong> Schools: Where<br />
Are We Headed in the Twenty-first Century,”<br />
33 U. Toledo L. Rev. 119 (2001). ■ “Beyond<br />
Election 2000: <strong>Law</strong> & Policy in the New<br />
Millennium,” 13 U. Fla. J. L & Pub. Pol’y 69<br />
(2001). ■ “Legal Standards, Political<br />
Pressures: Redistricting in Florida, 1970-<br />
2000,” Mapping Florida’s Political<br />
Landscape 103 (2001) (with Richard Scher).<br />
■ “Internet Casinos: A Sure Bet for Money<br />
Laundering,” 19 Dickinson J. Int’l L. 77<br />
(2000). ■ “Setting a New Standard for Public<br />
Education: Revision 6 Increases the Duty <strong>of</strong><br />
the State to Make ‘Adequate Provision’ for<br />
Florida Schools, 52 Fla. L. Rev. 329 (2000)<br />
(with Timothy McLendon).<br />
ROBERT C. L. MOFFAT<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Affiliate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Philosophy<br />
■ “Incivility as a Barometer<br />
<strong>of</strong> Societal Decay,” 1 Fla.<br />
Phil. Rev. 46 (2001). ■<br />
“Whining in the Spoiled<br />
Society: Can Semiotics<br />
Help Us Survive Prosperity,” The <strong>Law</strong> vs. the<br />
People (Peter Lang Publishers, 2000)<br />
(William Pencak, J. Ralph Lindgren, Roberta<br />
Kevelson & Charles N. Yood, eds.).<br />
WINSTON P. NAGAN<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Samuel T. Dell<br />
Research Scholar;<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong><br />
Anthropology; Director,<br />
Institute <strong>of</strong> Human Rights<br />
& Peace Development;<br />
Director, Study Abroad<br />
Program with Cape Town<br />
Reviews & Journals Spotlight Legal Scholarship<br />
■ Faculty in the <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>’s Graduate Tax Program edit and publish The Florida Tax Review.<br />
This innovative law review, which has become one <strong>of</strong> the country’s best, publishes articles on a wide<br />
range <strong>of</strong> timely and important tax law and policy issues. Articles are selected and edited by Faculty<br />
Editor Pr<strong>of</strong>essor David Hudson (at right, standing), with assistance from a board <strong>of</strong> editors consisting<br />
<strong>of</strong> UF Graduate Tax Program faculty and tax scholars from other leading law schools. Recent issues<br />
have included pieces on the need for progressivity, estate tax contingencies, bankruptcy tax reform,<br />
the Tax Court’s equitable powers, capital cost recovery, taxation <strong>of</strong> worldwide income, standards <strong>of</strong><br />
tax review and recent developments in income taxation.<br />
<strong>University</strong><br />
■ “The New Bush National Security Doctrine<br />
and the Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>,” 22 Berkeley J. Int’l L.<br />
375 (2004) (with Craig Hammer). ■ “Racism,<br />
Genocide and Mass Murder: Toward a Legal<br />
Theory About Group Deprivations,” Nat’l<br />
Black L. J. (2002). ■ “Conflict Resolution<br />
and Democratic Transformation: Confronting<br />
the Shameful Past — Prescribing a Humane<br />
Future,” 119 South African L. J. 174 (2002).<br />
■ “Rule <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>: L<strong>of</strong>ty Ideal or Harsh<br />
Reality?” 8 J. Fin. Crime 347 (2001). ■ “The<br />
International <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Torture: From Universal<br />
Proscription to Effective Application and<br />
Enforcement,” 14 Harv. Hum. Rts. J. 87<br />
(2001). ■ “<strong>Law</strong>yer Roles, Identity, and<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Responsibility in an Age <strong>of</strong><br />
Globalism,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 131 (2001). ■<br />
“Dean Kronman’s Diversity Narrative:<br />
Liberal Educational Ideology Versus Social<br />
Justice,” 52 Fla. L. Rev. 897 (2000). ■<br />
“Sanctions, Black America and Apartheid:<br />
Vindicating the Promise <strong>of</strong> Peaceful<br />
Change,” Foreign Policy and the Black<br />
(Inter) National Interest (Albany State<br />
U.N.Y. Press, 2000) (Charles P. Henry, ed.).<br />
■ “Human Rights and Revolution,” 1 Social<br />
Justice: Anthropology, Peace and Human<br />
Rights 43 (2000).<br />
■ The Florida <strong>Law</strong> Review includes articles by legal scholars expert in various areas <strong>of</strong> the law and<br />
works by students, and is published up to five times a year. In addition, the Review brings one <strong>of</strong><br />
America’s preeminent legal scholars to the law school each spring as part <strong>of</strong> its Dunwody<br />
Distinguished Lecture in <strong>Law</strong> series to speak on a compelling contemporary legal or social issue. The<br />
2004 Dunwody Lecture in <strong>Law</strong> was given by Georgetown Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Viet D. Dinh, who spoke on “Nationalism in the Age <strong>of</strong> Terror.”<br />
■ The Florida Journal <strong>of</strong> International <strong>Law</strong> publishes four issues per year containing scholarly works with global perspectives by<br />
pr<strong>of</strong>essors, practitioners and students on public and private international law topics. The journal also publishes the Annual<br />
Conference on Legal and Policy Issues in the Americas, which brings together practitioners, scholars and government <strong>of</strong>ficials to<br />
discuss issues affecting North, Central and South America, including international trade and the Free Trade Area <strong>of</strong> the Americas,<br />
terrorism, financial crimes, and human rights issues. Recent articles have focused on subjects as varied as International<br />
Commercial and Trade <strong>Law</strong>, Intellectual Property <strong>Law</strong>, Human Rights <strong>Law</strong>, Terrorism, War Crimes Tribunals, International<br />
Environmental <strong>Law</strong>, and Maritime <strong>Law</strong>.<br />
■ The Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> & Public Policy is an interdisciplinary student publication devoted to public policy implications <strong>of</strong> legal issues<br />
and to fostering discourse on judicial decisions, legislation, law reform, and other legal issues facing public policy decision-makers.<br />
Its members — which include <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida law students and joint-degree and other graduate students — publish three<br />
issues a year and sponsor a spring symposium.<br />
■ The Journal <strong>of</strong> Technology <strong>Law</strong> & Policy is a student-edited journal (also online) published twice a year devoted to the discussion<br />
<strong>of</strong> relevant technology issues, including patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, antitrust, and computer law. ❒<br />
1 8 U F L A W
JAMES C. NICHOLAS<br />
Associate Director,<br />
Environmental and Land<br />
Use <strong>Law</strong> Program;<br />
Affiliate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Urban &<br />
Regional Planning<br />
■ “The Ups and Downs <strong>of</strong><br />
Growth Management in Florida,” 12 Fla. J.<br />
L. & Pub. Pol’y (2001). ■ “Growth<br />
Management and Smart Growth in Florida,”<br />
35 Wake Forest L. Rev. 645 (2000) (with<br />
Ruth Steiner).<br />
BARBARA A. NOAH<br />
Research Associate,<br />
Center for Governmental<br />
Responsibility<br />
■ “Politicizing the End <strong>of</strong><br />
Life: Lessons from the<br />
Schiavo Controversy,” 58<br />
U. Miami L. Rev. (forthcoming<br />
2004). ■ “Paradoxes in Dietary<br />
Supplement Risk Regulation,” 31 Am. J. L.<br />
& Med. (symposium, forthcoming 2005).<br />
■ “Bioethical Malpractice: Risk and<br />
Responsibility in Human Research,” 7 J.<br />
Health Care L. & Pol’y 725 (2004). ■ “The<br />
Participation <strong>of</strong> Underrepresented Minorities<br />
in Clinical Research,” 29 Am. J. L. & Med.<br />
221 (2003). ■ “AIDS and Antiretroviral<br />
Drugs in South Africa: Public Health,<br />
Politics, and Individual Suffering,” 31 J. L.<br />
Med. & Ethics 144 (2003) (review). ■ “Life,<br />
Death, and Politics: The Long Good-Bye,” 3<br />
J. Phil. Sci. & L. (2003). ■ <strong>Law</strong>, Medicine,<br />
and Medical Technology: Cases & Materials<br />
(Foundation Press, 2002) (with Lars Noah).<br />
■ “The Invisible Patient,” 2002 U. Ill. L. Rev.<br />
121 (2002). ■ “Adverse Drug Reactions:<br />
Harnessing Experiential Data to Promote<br />
Patient Welfare,” 49 Cath. U. L. Rev. 449<br />
(2000). ■ “Adverse Drug Reactions in<br />
Elderly Patients: Alternative Approaches for<br />
Postmarket Surveillance,” 33 J. Health L.<br />
383 (2000) (with David Brushwood).<br />
LARS NOAH<br />
UF Research<br />
Foundation Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “An Inventory <strong>of</strong><br />
Mathematical Blunders in<br />
Applying the Loss-<strong>of</strong>-a-<br />
Chance Doctrine,” 70 Mo.<br />
L. Rev. (2005). ■ “Medical<br />
Education and Malpractice: What’s the<br />
Connection?,” 15 Health Matrix (2005). ■<br />
“Ambivalent Commitments to Federalism in<br />
Controlling the Practice <strong>of</strong> Medicine,” 53 U.<br />
Kan. L. Rev. (2004). ■ “A Postmodernist<br />
Take on the Human Embryo Research<br />
Debate,” 36 Conn. L. Rev. 1133 (2004). ■<br />
“Deputizing Institutional Review Boards to<br />
Police (Audit?) Biomedical Research,” 25 J.<br />
Legal Med. 267 (2004). ■ “Trends in<br />
Assisted Reproductive Technology,” 351 New<br />
Eng. J. Med. 398 (2004). ■ “Supervising<br />
Research with Human Subjects,” 29 Admin.<br />
& Reg. L. News (Summer 2004). ■ “Assisted<br />
Reproductive Technologies and the Pitfalls <strong>of</strong><br />
Unregulated Biomedical Innovation,” 55 Fla.<br />
L. Rev. 603 (2003). ■ “Challenges in the<br />
Federal Regulation <strong>of</strong> Pain Management<br />
Technologies,” 31 J. L. Med. & Ethics 55<br />
(2003). ■ “Triage in the Nation’s Medicine<br />
Cabinet: The Puzzling Scarcity <strong>of</strong> Vaccines<br />
and Other Drugs,” 54 S. C. L. Rev. 741<br />
(2003). ■ “Pharmacogenetics,” 348 New Eng.<br />
J. Med. 2042 (2003). ■ <strong>Law</strong>, Medicine, and<br />
Medical Technology: Cases and Materials<br />
(Foundation Press 2002) (with Barbara A.<br />
Noah). ■ “Medicine’s Epistemology:<br />
Mapping the Haphazard Diffusion <strong>of</strong><br />
Knowledge in the Biomedical Community,”<br />
44 Ariz. L. Rev. 373 (2002). ■ “The Coming<br />
Pharmacogenomics Revolution: Tailoring<br />
Drugs to Fit Patients’ Genetic Pr<strong>of</strong>iles,” 43<br />
Jurimetrics J. 1 (2002). ■ “Informed Consent<br />
and the Elusive Dichotomy Between<br />
Standard and Experimental Therapy,” 28 Am.<br />
J. L. & Med. 361 (2002). ■ “Attorney<br />
General’s Intrusion Into Clinical Practice,”<br />
346 New Eng. J. Med. 1918 (2002). ■<br />
“Standards for Medical Expert Testimony,”<br />
288 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2971 (2002). ■ “Civil<br />
Jury Nullification,” 86 Iowa L. Rev. 1601<br />
(2001). ■ “A Miscarriage in the Drug<br />
Approval Process?: Mifepristone Embroils<br />
the FDA in Abortion Politics,” 36 Wake<br />
Forest L. Rev. 571 (2001). ■ “Rewarding<br />
Regulatory Compliance: The Pursuit <strong>of</strong><br />
Symmetry in Products Liability,” 88 Geo. L.<br />
J. 2147 (2000). ■ “Divining Regulatory<br />
Intent: The Place for a ‘Legislative History’<br />
<strong>of</strong> Agency Rules,” 51 Hastings L. J. 255<br />
(2000). ■ “Interpreting Agency Enabling<br />
Acts: Misplaced Metaphors in Administrative<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” 41 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1463 (2000).<br />
■ “Scientific ‘Republicanism’: Expert Peer<br />
Review and the Quest for Regulatory<br />
Deliberation,” 49 Emory L. J. 1033 (2000).<br />
■ “What’s Wrong with ‘Constitutionalizing<br />
Food and Drug <strong>Law</strong>?,’” 75 Tul. L. Rev. 137<br />
(2000). ■ “Regulatory Improvement<br />
Legislation: Risk Assessment, Cost-Benefit<br />
Analysis, and Judicial Review,” 11 Duke<br />
Env’l. L. & Pol’y For. 89 (2000) (with coauthors).<br />
■ “Peer Review and Regulatory<br />
Reform,” 30 Envl. L. Rep. 10,606 (2000).<br />
■ “One Decade <strong>of</strong> Food and Drug <strong>Law</strong><br />
Scholarship,” 55 Food & Drug L. J. 641<br />
(2000).<br />
KENNETH B. NUNN<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “Minority Groups,”<br />
World Book Encyclopedia<br />
(2003). ■ “Diversity<br />
Matters: Race, Gender &<br />
Ethnicity in Legal Education,” U. Fla. J. L.<br />
& Pub. Pol’y 11 (2003) (with Nancy Dowd<br />
& Jane Pendergrast). ■ “Race Crime and the<br />
Pool <strong>of</strong> Surplus Criminality: Or Why the War<br />
on Drugs was a War on Blacks,” 6 J. Gender,<br />
Race & Just. 381 (2002). ■ “Stereotyping,”<br />
World Book Encyclopedia (World Book Pub.<br />
Co., 2002). ■ “Racial Pr<strong>of</strong>iling,” World Book<br />
Encyclopedia (World Book Pub. Co. 2002).<br />
■ “The Child as ‘Other’: Race and<br />
Differential Treatment in the Juvenile Justice<br />
System,” 51 DePaul L. Rev. 679 (2002). ■<br />
“Rights Held Hostage: Race, Ideology and<br />
the Peremptory Challenge,” A Reader on<br />
Race, Civil Rights, and American <strong>Law</strong>: A<br />
Multiracial Approach (Carolina Academic<br />
Press, 2001, republication) (Timothy Davis<br />
et al. eds.). ■ “Racism,” World Book<br />
Encyclopedia (2001). ■ “The ‘Darden<br />
Dilemma’: Should African Americans<br />
Prosecute Crimes?,” 68 Fordham L. Rev.<br />
1473 (2000). ■ “<strong>Law</strong> as a Eurocentric<br />
Enterprise,” Critical Race Theory: The<br />
Cutting Edge 429 (Temple U. Press, 2d ed.,<br />
2000, republication) (Richard Delgado &<br />
Jean Stefancic eds.). ■ “The Trial as Text:<br />
Allegory, Myth and Symbol in the<br />
Adversarial Criminal Process — A Critique<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Role <strong>of</strong> the Public Defender and a<br />
Proposal for Reform,” Order Under <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
Readings in Criminal Justice (Robert G.<br />
Culbertson & Ralph Weisheit, 2001).<br />
WILLIAM H. PAGE<br />
Associate Dean for<br />
Faculty Development;<br />
Marshall M. Criser<br />
Eminent Scholar in<br />
Electronic<br />
Communications and<br />
Administrative <strong>Law</strong><br />
■ “Economic Authority and the Limits <strong>of</strong><br />
Expertise in Antitrust Cases,” 90 Cornell L.<br />
Rev. (forthcoming 2005) (with John<br />
Lopatka). ■ Kintner’s Federal Antitrust <strong>Law</strong>,<br />
11 vols., 2004 supplements (forthcoming<br />
2005) (with John Lopatka and Joseph<br />
Bauer). ■ “Indirect Purchaser Class Actions<br />
and the Consumer Interest,” 48 Antitrust<br />
Bulletin 531 (2003) (with John Lopatka). ■<br />
“State Action and the Meaning <strong>of</strong> Agreement<br />
Under the Sherman Act: An Approach to<br />
Hybrid Restraints,” 20 Yale J. on Reg. 269<br />
(2003) (with John Lopatka). ■ “Thurman<br />
Arnold’s International Antitrust Legacy,” The<br />
Antitrust Source, www.antitrustsource.com<br />
U F L A W 1 9
2 0 U F L A W<br />
(July 2003) (review <strong>of</strong> Wyatt Wells, Antitrust<br />
and the Formation <strong>of</strong> the Postwar World,<br />
2002). ■ 2 Kintner’s Federal Antitrust <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
Practices Prohibited by the Sherman Act (2d<br />
ed., 2002) (with Joseph P. Bauer). ■<br />
“Brunswick at 25: Antitrust Injury and the<br />
Evolution <strong>of</strong> Antitrust <strong>Law</strong>,” Antitrust (Fall<br />
2002) (with John Lopatka). ■ “The Price <strong>of</strong><br />
Unanimity: The D.C. Circuit’s Incoherent<br />
Opinion in Micros<strong>of</strong>t,” Micros<strong>of</strong>t, Antitrust<br />
and the New Economy: Selected Essays<br />
(Kluwer Acad. Press, 2002) (David S. Evans,<br />
ed.) (with John Lopatka). ■ “‘Obvious’<br />
Consumer Harm in Antitrust Policy: The<br />
Chicago School, the Post-Chicago School,<br />
and the Courts,” Post-Chicago Developments<br />
in Antitrust <strong>Law</strong> (Edward Elgar Pub. Co.<br />
2002) (Antonio Cucinotta, et al., eds.). ■<br />
“AT&T Litigation,” Oxford Companion to<br />
American <strong>Law</strong> (Oxford Press 2002) (Kermit<br />
L. Hall, ed.). ■ “Who Suffered Antitrust<br />
Injury in the Micros<strong>of</strong>t Case?” 69 Geo. Wash.<br />
L. Rev. 829 (2001) (with John Lopatka). ■<br />
“Monopolization, Innovation, and Consumer<br />
Welfare,” 69 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 367 (2001)<br />
(with John Lopatka). ■ “Devising a Micros<strong>of</strong>t<br />
Remedy That Serves Consumers, 9 Geo.<br />
Mason L. Rev. 691 (2001) (with John<br />
Lopatka). ■ “Internet Regulation and<br />
Consumer Welfare: Innovation, Speculation,<br />
and Cable Bundling,” 52 Hastings L. J. 891<br />
(2001) (with John Lopatka). ■ “Antitrust and<br />
Trade Regulation,” Developments in<br />
Administrative <strong>Law</strong> and Regulatory Practice<br />
1999-2000 (ABA Publications, 2001, Jeffrey<br />
S. Lubbers, ed.) (with John Lopatka, Steven<br />
Vieux & Thomas Arthur). ■ “Antitrust and<br />
Trade Regulation,” Developments in<br />
Administrative <strong>Law</strong> and Regulatory Practice<br />
1998-99 (ABA Publications, 2000, Jeffrey S.<br />
Lubbers ed.) (with John Lopatka, Michael<br />
Brockmeyer & Thomas Arthur). ■ “Network<br />
Externalities,” Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Economics, Vol. I (Boudwijn Bouckaert &<br />
Gerrit De Geest eds., 2000) (with John<br />
Lopatka).<br />
JUAN FRANCISCO<br />
PEREA<br />
Cone Wagner Nugent<br />
Johnson Hazouri & Roth<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Race and Races: Cases<br />
and Resources for a<br />
Diverse America (2nd ed.,<br />
forthcoming 2005) (with Richard Delgado,<br />
Angela Harris, Jean Stefancic and Stephanie<br />
Wildman). ■ “Buscando America: Why Equal<br />
Protection Fails to Protect Latinos,” 117<br />
Harvard L. Rev. (2004). ■ “A Brief History<br />
<strong>of</strong> Race and the U.S.-Mexican Border:<br />
Tracing the Trajectories <strong>of</strong> Conquest,” 51<br />
UCLA L. Rev. 283 (2003). ■ “Killing Me<br />
S<strong>of</strong>tly with His Song: Anglocentrism and<br />
Celebrating Nouveaux Latinas/os,” 55 Fla. L.<br />
Rev. 441 (2003). ■ Book Review: “Thinking<br />
About Race and Races: Reflections and<br />
Responses,” 89 Cal. L. Rev. 1653 (2001)<br />
(with Richard Delgado, Angela Harris and<br />
Stephanie Wildman). ■ “The New American<br />
Spanish War: How the Courts and the<br />
Legislatures Are Aiding the Suppression <strong>of</strong><br />
Languages Other Than English,” Language<br />
Ideologies: Critical Perspectives on the<br />
Official English Movement (NCTE, 2001)<br />
(Roseann Duenas Gonzalez & Ildiko Melis,<br />
eds.). ■ “Fulfilling Manifest Destiny:<br />
Conquest, Race, and the Insular Cases,”<br />
Foreign in a Domestic Sense: Puerto Rico,<br />
American Expansion and the Constitution<br />
(Duke Univ. Press, 2001) (Christina Burnett<br />
& Burke Marshall, eds.). ■ Book review,<br />
“Language, Policy and Identity Politics in the<br />
United States,” (), 21 J. Am. Ethnic History<br />
125 (2001). ■ “The Black/White Binary<br />
Paradigm <strong>of</strong> Race,” Critical Race Theory:<br />
The Cutting Edge (Temple U. Press, 2d ed.,<br />
2000) (R. Delgado and J. Stefancic, eds.) ■<br />
“Appreciating Richard Delgado and<br />
Rodrigo,” 4 Harv. Latino. L. Rev. 37 (2000).<br />
■ Race and Races: Cases and Resources for<br />
a Diverse America (Westgroup, 2000) (with<br />
Richard Delgado, Angela Harris & Stephanie<br />
Wildman).<br />
DON C. PETERS<br />
Director, Institute for<br />
Dispute Resolution;<br />
Director, Virgil Hawkins<br />
Civil Clinics; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Trustee Research Fellow;<br />
Associate Director, Center<br />
on Children and Families<br />
■ Paper-chasing Types: The Myers-Briggs<br />
and <strong>Law</strong> Study (forthcoming 2005). ■ “It Felt<br />
Like He Was Inside My Skin: Intercultural<br />
Learning About Mediation in Haiti,” Rutgers<br />
Conflict Resolution J. (2004).<br />
CHRISTOPHER L.<br />
PETERSON<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Taming the Sharks:<br />
Towards a Cure for the<br />
High Cost Credit Market<br />
(Univ. <strong>of</strong> Akron Press,<br />
2004). ■ “Truth,<br />
Understanding, and High Cost Consumer<br />
Credit: The Historical Context <strong>of</strong> the Truth in<br />
Lending Act,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 807 (2003).<br />
STEPHEN J. POWELL<br />
Director, International<br />
Trade <strong>Law</strong> Program<br />
■ “WTO and NAFTA<br />
Dispute Settlement for<br />
North American<br />
Agricultural Trade,”<br />
International Agricultural<br />
Trade Disputes: Case Studies in North<br />
America 219 (forthcoming Calgary Press<br />
2004). ■ “The Place <strong>of</strong> Human Rights in<br />
World Trade Organization Rules,” 16 Fla. J.<br />
Int’l L. 1 (2003).<br />
LEANNE J. PFLAUM<br />
Senior Legal Skills<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Legal Writing By Design:<br />
A Guide to Great Briefs<br />
and Memos (Carolina<br />
Academic Press, 2001)<br />
(with Teresa Rambo).<br />
M. KATHLEEN PRICE<br />
Associate Dean, Library<br />
& Technology; Clarence<br />
J. TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Finding U.S. <strong>Law</strong> on the<br />
Internet,” 40 (English); 40<br />
(Chinese), Roaming the<br />
Virtual <strong>Law</strong> Library: A<br />
Guide to Online Sources for Legal<br />
Researchers (Liu and Yu ed. 2004). ■ Julius<br />
Marke: In Memoriam,” 96 L. Lib’y J. 9<br />
(2004). ■ “The Search for Meaning in ‘<strong>Law</strong><br />
and Language,’” Language and the <strong>Law</strong>;<br />
Proceedings <strong>of</strong> a Conference, Tarleton <strong>Law</strong><br />
Library, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Texas School <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>,<br />
Dec. 6-8, 2001 (Robinson ed., 2003).<br />
TERESA J. RAMBO<br />
Senior Legal Skills<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Judicial Opinion Writing<br />
(Florida <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Advanced Judicial Studies,<br />
2002). ■ Legal Writing By<br />
Design: A Guide to Great<br />
Briefs and Memos (Carolina Academic Press,<br />
2001) (with Leanne J. Pflaum).<br />
DAVID M.<br />
RICHARDSON<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Textbook, Federal Tax<br />
Procedure (forthcoming<br />
Summer 2005, Matthew<br />
Bender Graduate Tax<br />
Series) (with Jerome<br />
Borison and Steve Johnson). ■ “Audit<br />
Avoidance Through Temporary Taxpayer<br />
Intent Modification — Is Fred Corneel on to<br />
Something...Or Not?,” 92 Tax Notes 277<br />
(2001). ■ “Statement <strong>of</strong> Standards <strong>of</strong> Tax<br />
Practice: Letter to a Former Student,” 87 Tax<br />
Notes 1143 (2000).
DIANE M. RING<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Federal Income Taxation<br />
<strong>of</strong> Corporate Enterprise<br />
(casebook, Foundation<br />
Press, forthcoming) (with<br />
Bernard Wolfman). ■<br />
Comment on Griffith,<br />
“Taxing Happiness,” B.C. L. Rev. (forthcoming<br />
2004). ■ U.S. National Report on Double<br />
Nontaxation — prepared for International<br />
Fiscal Association 2004 Conference (forthcoming<br />
in Cahiers de Droit Fiscal<br />
International, Vol. LXXXIX 2004). ■ Book<br />
Review, “Solid Foundations for Tax Theory,<br />
Policy,” 31 Tax Notes Int’l 961 (Sept. 15,<br />
2003). ■ “One Nation Among Many: Policy<br />
Implications <strong>of</strong> Cross-Border Tax Arbitrage,”<br />
44 B.C. L. Rev. 79 (2002). ■ “Prospects for A<br />
Multilateral Tax Treaty,” 26 Brooklyn J. Int’l<br />
L. 1699 (2001). ■ “On the Frontier <strong>of</strong><br />
Procedural Innovation: Advance Pricing<br />
Agreements and the Struggle to Allocate<br />
Income for Cross Border Taxation,” 21 Mich.<br />
J. Int’l L. 143 (2000).<br />
SHARON E. RUSH<br />
Irving Cypen Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and<br />
Families<br />
■ The Challenges <strong>of</strong><br />
Teaching Race: Huck and<br />
the Color Line (Rowman<br />
and Littlefield) (2005). ■ “Toto, I have a feeling<br />
we are still in Kansas,” Voices <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Brown Generation: Memories and<br />
Reflections <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essors (M.W.<br />
Robinson & R.J. Bonnie, eds.) (2005). ■<br />
“Teaching Race Relations ‘Know-How,’”<br />
Southern Christian Leadership Magazine<br />
(2004). ■ “Lessons From and for Disabled<br />
Students,” 8 J. Gender, Race & Justice 75<br />
(2004). ■ “Emotional Segregation: Huck<br />
Finn in the Modern Classroom,” 36 U. Mich.<br />
J. L. Reform 305 (2003). ■ “The<br />
Anticanonical Lesson <strong>of</strong> Huckleberry Finn,”<br />
11 Cornell J. L. & Pub. Policy 101 (2002). ■<br />
“Identity Matters: Introduction to LatCrit VI<br />
Conference,” 54 Rutgers L. Rev. 101 (2002).<br />
■ “International and Interracial Adoptions:<br />
Heroes, Villains or Loving Parents,” Moral<br />
Imperialism: A Critical Anthology (N.Y.U<br />
Press, 2002) (Berta Hernandez-Truyol, ed.).<br />
■ “The Heart <strong>of</strong> Equal Protection: Education<br />
and Race,” A Reader on Race, Civil Rights<br />
and American <strong>Law</strong>: A Multiracial Approach<br />
(NYU Press, 2001) (Davis, K. Johnson, G.<br />
Martinez, eds.). ■ Loving Across the Color<br />
Line: A White Adoptive Mother Learns About<br />
Race (Rowman & Littlefield) (2000). ■<br />
Foreword: “Culture, Nationhood, and the<br />
Human Rights Ideal,” 33 Mich. J. L. Ref. 233<br />
(2000) (with Berta Hernanedez-Truyol). ■<br />
“Doing Anti-Racism: Making an Egalitarian<br />
Future,” 29 Contemp. Sociology 95 (2000)<br />
(with Joe R. Feagin & Jacqueline Johnson).<br />
KA<strong>THE</strong>RYN RUSSELL-<br />
BROWN<br />
Director, Center for the<br />
Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race<br />
Relations; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Underground Codes:<br />
Race, Crime and Related<br />
Fires (New York <strong>University</strong><br />
Press, 2004).<br />
SHERRIE LYNN<br />
RUSSELL-BROWN<br />
Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and<br />
Families<br />
■ “The Last Line <strong>of</strong><br />
Defense: The Doctrine <strong>of</strong> Command<br />
Responsibility and Gender Crimes in Armed<br />
Conflict,” Wisconsin Int’l L. J. (forthcoming<br />
2004). ■ “Bridging the ‘Divide’ Between<br />
Feminism and Child Protection Using the<br />
Discourse <strong>of</strong> International Human Rights, 13<br />
S. Cal. Rev. L. and Women’s Stud. (2003). ■<br />
“Out <strong>of</strong> the Crooked Timber <strong>of</strong> Humanity:<br />
The Conflict Between South Africa’s Truth<br />
and Reconciliation Commission and<br />
International Human Rights Norms<br />
Regarding ‘Effective Remedies,’” 26<br />
Hastings Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 227 (2003).<br />
■ “Labor Rights as Human Rights: The<br />
Situation <strong>of</strong> Women Workers in Jamaica’s<br />
Export Free Zones,” 24 Berkeley J. Emp. &<br />
Lab. L. 179 (2003). ■ “Poisoned Chalice?<br />
The Rights <strong>of</strong> Criminal Defendants Under<br />
International <strong>Law</strong>, During the Pre-Trial<br />
Phase,” 8 UCLA J. Int’l & Foreign Aff. 127<br />
(2003). ■ “A U.N. Solution to a Problem<br />
from Hell,” Review, Samantha Power, “A<br />
Problem from Hell: America and the Age <strong>of</strong><br />
Genocide,” 2 Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev.<br />
427 (2003). ■ “Rape as an Act <strong>of</strong> Genocide,”<br />
21 Berkeley J. Int’l L. 350 (2003).<br />
VALERIE A. SANCHEZ<br />
Assistant Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Back to the Future <strong>of</strong><br />
ADR: Negotiating Justice<br />
and Human Needs,” 18<br />
Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol.<br />
669 (2003). ■ Equal<br />
Treatment for People with<br />
Mental Retardation: Having and Raising<br />
Children (Harv. Univ. Press, 2000) (with<br />
Martha Field).<br />
GAIL E. SASNETT<br />
Associate Dean for<br />
Students, Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism<br />
& Community Relations<br />
■ “A Drug by Any Other<br />
Name is Still a Drug: Why<br />
the Florida Judiciary<br />
Should Start Treating A<br />
DUI as Any Other Drug Offense,” 13 J. L. &<br />
Public Policy 299 (2001).<br />
MICHAEL L. SEIGEL<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ Improbable Events<br />
(novel, forthcoming 2005).<br />
■ “On Collegiality,” 54 J.<br />
Legal Educ. 406 (2004).<br />
CHRISTOPHER<br />
SLOBOGIN<br />
Stephen C. O’Connell<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Affiliate<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Psychiatry;<br />
Adjunct Pr<strong>of</strong>essor,<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> South<br />
Florida Mental Health<br />
Institute; Associate Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “The Civilization <strong>of</strong> the Criminal <strong>Law</strong>,”<br />
Vanderbilt L. Rev. (forthcoming 2005). ■ <strong>Law</strong><br />
and the Mental Health System: Civil and<br />
Criminal Aspects (4th ed., 2004) (with<br />
Reisner & Rai). ■ “Is Atkins the Antithesis or<br />
the Apotheosis <strong>of</strong> Anti-Discrimination<br />
Principles?: Sorting Out the Groupwide<br />
Effects <strong>of</strong> Exempting People With Mental<br />
Retardation From the Death Penalty,” 55 Ala.<br />
L. Rev. 1101 (2004) (symposium on<br />
Disability Rights). ■ “The Integrationist<br />
Alternative to the Insanity Defense:<br />
Reflections on the Exculpatory Scope <strong>of</strong><br />
Mental Illness in the Wake <strong>of</strong> the Andrea<br />
Yates Case,” 30 Am. J. Crim. L. 315 (2004).<br />
■ “Teaching a Course on Regulation <strong>of</strong> the<br />
Police (with a Special Focus on the Sixth<br />
Amendment),” 42 Brandeis L. J. 389 (2003-<br />
04) (symposium). ■ “Rethinking Legally<br />
Relevant Mental Illness,” 29 Ohio Northern<br />
Univ. L. Rev. 497 (2004) (symposium). ■ “A<br />
Jurisprudence <strong>of</strong> Dangerousness,” 98 Nw. U.<br />
L. Rev. 1 (2003). ■ “The Structure <strong>of</strong><br />
Expertise in Criminal Cases,” 34 Seton Hall<br />
L. Rev. 105 (2003) (symposium). ■ “Toward<br />
Taping,” 1 Ohio State J. Crim. L. 309 (2003).<br />
■ “What Atkins Could Mean for People with<br />
Mental Illness,” 33 New Mexico L. Rev. 293<br />
(2003) (symposium). ■ “The Poverty<br />
Exception to the Fourth Amendment,” 55<br />
Fla. L. Rev. 391 (2003) (symposium issue for<br />
LatCritVI Conference). ■ “Pragmatic<br />
Forensic Psychology: A Means <strong>of</strong><br />
‘Scientizing’ Testimony from Mental Health<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essionals?,” 9 Psychology, Pub. Pol. & L.<br />
U F L A W 2 1
2 2 U F L A W<br />
275 (2003) (symposium). ■ “An Empirically<br />
Based Comparison <strong>of</strong> American and<br />
European Police Investigative Techniques,”<br />
Adversarial v. Inquisitorial Techniques:<br />
Psychological Perspectives on Criminal<br />
Justice Systems 27 (Kluwer, 2003, republication)<br />
(Peter J. Koppel & Stephen D. Penrod,<br />
eds.). ■ “Technology’s Challenge: ABA<br />
Creates Standards for Electronic and Physical<br />
Surveillance,” 18 ABA Criminal Justice<br />
Magazine 5 (2003) (with Martin Marcus). ■<br />
Criminal Procedure — Regulation <strong>of</strong> Police<br />
Investigation: Legal, Historical, Empirical<br />
and Comparative Materials (Reed<br />
Elsevier/Michie Co., 3rd ed., 2002). ■<br />
“Public Privacy: Camera Surveillance and the<br />
Right to Anonymity,” 72 Miss. L. J. 213<br />
(2002) (symposium). ■ “Peeping Techno-<br />
Toms and the Fourth Amendment: Seeing<br />
Through Kyllo’s Rules Governing<br />
Technological Surveillance,” 86 Minn. L.<br />
Rev. 1393 (2002) (symposium). ■ “The<br />
Hartman Hotz Lecture — Race-Based<br />
Defenses: The Insights <strong>of</strong> Traditional<br />
Analysis,” 54 Ark. L. Rev. 739 (2002). ■<br />
“Police Procedures,” The Oxford Companion<br />
to American <strong>Law</strong> 614 (Oxford Press, 2002,<br />
Kermit Hall, ed.) ■ “Eyewitness<br />
Identification,” The Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> Crime<br />
and Justice 661 (Westgroup, 2002) (Joshua<br />
Dressler, ed.). ■ “Insanity and Diminished<br />
Capacity,” Scientific Evidence Manual 237<br />
(Westgroup, 2d ed., 2001) (D. Faigman et al.,<br />
eds.) (with Norman Poythress & Kirk<br />
Heilbrun). ■ “An Empirically-Based<br />
Comparison <strong>of</strong> American and European<br />
Regulatory Approaches to Police<br />
Investigation,” 22 Mich. J. Int’l L. 423<br />
(2001). ■ “Psychiatric Evidence in Criminal<br />
Trials: A Twenty-Five Year Retrospective,”<br />
Mental Health <strong>Law</strong> in Evolution 245 (APA<br />
Press, 2001) (Linda Frost & Richard Bonnie,<br />
eds.). ■ “Directions for Future Research on<br />
the Juvenile Justice System,” 25 L. & Hum.<br />
Beh. 13 (2001) (with Jennifer Woolard &<br />
Mark Fondacaro). ■ “New Wisdom About<br />
Old Crimes,” Review <strong>of</strong> D. Shuman & A.<br />
Smith, “Justice and the Prosecution <strong>of</strong> Old<br />
Crimes: Balancing Legal, Psychological, and<br />
Moral Concerns,” Jurist (http://jurist.<br />
law.pitt.edu) (March, 2001). ■ Criminal<br />
Procedure: An Analysis <strong>of</strong> Cases and<br />
Concepts (Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2000)<br />
(with Charles Whitebread). ■ “An End to<br />
Insanity: Recasting the Role <strong>of</strong> Mental<br />
Illness in Criminal Cases,” 86 Va. L. Rev.<br />
1199 (2000). ■ “The Criminal Defense<br />
<strong>Law</strong>yer’s Fiduciary Duty to Clients with<br />
Mental Disability,” 68 Fordham L. Rev. 1581<br />
(2000) (with Amy Mashburn). ■ “Doubts<br />
About Daubert: Psychiatric Anecdata as a<br />
Case Study,” 57 W. & L. L. Rev. 919 (2000)<br />
(symposium). ■ Foreword: “Is Justice Just<br />
Us? A Symposium on the Use <strong>of</strong> Social<br />
Science to Inform the Substantive Criminal<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” 26 H<strong>of</strong>stra L. Rev. 601 (2000). ■<br />
“Three Models <strong>of</strong> Liberty Deprivation: The<br />
Contributions <strong>of</strong> Ecological Jurisprudence<br />
and Therapeutic Jurisprudence,” 18 Beh. Sci.<br />
& L. 499 (2000) (with Mark Fondacaro)<br />
(symposium). ■ “Mental Illness and the<br />
Death Penalty,” 1 Cal. Crim. L. Rev. Art. 3<br />
(2000); 24 Men. & Phys. Dis. L. Rep. 667<br />
(2000).<br />
BETTY W. TAYLOR<br />
Historian; Clarence J.<br />
TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
Emeritus<br />
■ “A History <strong>of</strong> Race and<br />
Gender at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
Florida <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>Law</strong>, 1909-2001,” 54 Fla.<br />
L. Rev. 495 (2002).<br />
MARY POE<br />
TWITCHELL<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Why We Keep Doing<br />
Business with Doing-<br />
Business Jurisdiction,” U.<br />
Chi. L. Forum 171 (2001).<br />
JEFFREY WADE<br />
Director, Environmental<br />
Division, Center for<br />
Governmental<br />
Responsibility<br />
■ “The Evolution <strong>of</strong> North<br />
American Environmental<br />
<strong>Law</strong>,” 3 Revista do Centro<br />
de Apoio Operacional às Promotorias de<br />
Justiça de Proteção ao Meio Ambiente do<br />
Estado do Paraná 5 (3 J. <strong>of</strong> the Operational<br />
Support Center for Environmental<br />
Prosecutors <strong>of</strong> the State <strong>of</strong> Paraná 5) (2002).<br />
■ “Environmental Crime in the United<br />
States,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 39 (2002). ■ “<strong>Law</strong><br />
and Policy for Water Resources Management<br />
in Florida,” 42 Revista do Curso de Pós-<br />
Graduação em Direito da UFSC 135 (42 J.<br />
<strong>of</strong> the Post-Graduate Course <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>, Federal<br />
<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Santa Catarina 135) (2001).<br />
■ “U.S. Water Pollution Control: Issues and<br />
Responses,” The Future <strong>of</strong> Pollution Control<br />
and Environmental Implementation:<br />
Proceedings <strong>of</strong> the Fifth International<br />
Conference on Environmental <strong>Law</strong><br />
(Benjamin, Sícoli, eds.), São Paulo, Brazil<br />
(2001).<br />
WALTER O.<br />
WEYRAUCH<br />
Distinguished Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Stephen C. O’Connell<br />
Chair; Associate Director,<br />
Center on Children and<br />
Families<br />
■ “Private Legal Systems,”<br />
Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and Society (2004,<br />
Sage Publications, CA). ■ “Gypsies and<br />
Travelers,” Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> and Society<br />
(2004, Sage Publications, CA). ■ “Il Diritto<br />
Degli Zingari,” Giuristi Stranieri di Oggi<br />
(2004, Giuffrè, Milan, Italy) (A. Simoni, ed.).<br />
■ Book Review, “The Romani People: A<br />
Long Surviving and Distinguished Culture at<br />
Risk,” 51 Am. J. Com. L. 679 (2003). ■ Das<br />
Recht der Roma und Sinti: Ein Beispiel<br />
Autonomer Rectsschopfun (Vittorio<br />
Klostermann Pub., 2002). ■ Gypsy <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
Romani Legal Traditions and Culture (Univ.<br />
Calif. Press, 2001). ■ “A Theory <strong>of</strong> Legal<br />
Strategy,” 49 Duke L. J. 1405 (2000) (with<br />
Lynn Lopucki). ■ “Nonrational Sources <strong>of</strong><br />
Scholarship: Remembering David Daube<br />
(1909-1999),” 19 Rechtshistorisches J. 677<br />
(2000).<br />
STEVEN J. WILLIS<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “Family <strong>Law</strong> Economics,<br />
Child Support, and Alimony:<br />
Ruminations on Income,<br />
Part II,” 78 Fla. Bar J. 34<br />
(June 2004). ■ “Family <strong>Law</strong> Economics,<br />
Child Support, and Alimony: Ruminations on<br />
Income, Part I,” 78 Fla. Bar J. 34 (2004). ■<br />
Electronic Teaching Materials for Tax<br />
Exempt Organizations (Thomson West,<br />
2004). ■ The Tax <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Charities and Other<br />
Exempt Organizations: Cases, Materials,<br />
Questions, and Activities and accompanying<br />
Instructor’s Manual (Thomson West, 2003)<br />
(with Darryll K. Jones, David A. Brennen,<br />
and Beverly I. Moran). ■ 2003 Statutory<br />
Supplement to The Tax <strong>Law</strong> <strong>of</strong> Charities and<br />
Other Exempt Organizations (Thomson West,<br />
2003). ■ “It’s Time for Schlude to Go,” 93<br />
Tax Notes 127 (2001). ■ “Show Me the<br />
Numbers, Please,” 93 Tax Notes 1391 (2001).<br />
MICHAEL ALLAN WOLF<br />
Richard E. Nelson Chair<br />
in Local Government<br />
<strong>Law</strong>; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “Yes, Thankfully, Euclid<br />
Lives,” Fordham L. Rev.<br />
(forthcoming) (with<br />
Charles Haar). ■ Powell on<br />
Real Property (general ed., 17 vols.)<br />
(Matthew Bender, 2004). ■ “Charles<br />
Warren,” Yale Biographical Dictionary <strong>of</strong><br />
American <strong>Law</strong> (Yale Univ. Press, forthcoming).<br />
■ “Leo Frank,” “Emma Goldman,”<br />
“Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.,” One Hundred<br />
Americans Making Constitutional History<br />
(Melvin Ur<strong>of</strong>sky ed.) (CQ Press, 2004). ■<br />
“Euclid Lives: The Survival <strong>of</strong> Progressive<br />
Jurisprudence,” 115 Harv. L. Rev. 2158<br />
(2002) (with Charles Haar). Also published<br />
as Chapter 15 in 2003 Zoning and Planning
<strong>Law</strong> Handbook (West 2003) (Patricia E.<br />
Salkin ed.), and in Land Use and<br />
Environment L. Rev. 2003 (Westgroup)<br />
(Stuart L. Deutsch et al. eds.). ■ “Earning<br />
Deference: Reflections on the Merger <strong>of</strong><br />
Environmental and Land-Use <strong>Law</strong>,” 32 Env’l<br />
L. Reporter 11190 (October 2002). Also published<br />
in 20 Pace Environmental L. Rev. 253<br />
(2002), and in New Ground: The Advent <strong>of</strong><br />
Local Environmental <strong>Law</strong> (John R. Nolon<br />
ed.) (Environmental <strong>Law</strong> Institute, 2003). ■<br />
Book Review, “The Lochner Court, Myth and<br />
Reality: Substantive Due Process from the<br />
1890s to the 1930s,” 45 Am. J. Legal Hist.<br />
109 (2001). ■ “A New Chain <strong>of</strong> Title: The<br />
Evolution <strong>of</strong> American Common <strong>Law</strong> in the<br />
Nineteenth Century,” I <strong>Law</strong> in History:<br />
Evolution <strong>of</strong> Judicial <strong>Law</strong> in XIXth Century<br />
(Catholic <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Lublin, 2000)<br />
(Grzegorz Górski ed.). ■ “Taking Regulatory<br />
Takings Personally: The Perils <strong>of</strong><br />
(Mis)Reasoning by Analogy,” 51 Ala. L. Rev.<br />
1355 (2000). ■ “Fifteenth Amendment” and<br />
“Nineteenth Amendment,” Civil Rights in the<br />
United States (MacMillan, 2000) (with<br />
Daniel A. Wolf). ■ “Practice, Policy, and<br />
Pedagogy in a Mandatory Environmental <strong>Law</strong><br />
Course,” 123 Water, Air, & Soil Pollution: An<br />
Int’l J. <strong>of</strong> Environmental Pollution 409 (2000<br />
(with Joel Eisen); (also published in<br />
Environmental Challenges (Kluwer, 2000)<br />
(Shimshon Belkin ed.). ■ “Environmental<br />
Slogans for the New Millennium,” 30 Env’tl<br />
L. Reporter 10283 (April 2000), revised and<br />
republished in 35 Univ. <strong>of</strong> Rich. L. Rev. 91<br />
(2001).<br />
BARBARA BENNETT<br />
WOODHOUSE<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families;<br />
Director, Family <strong>Law</strong><br />
Certificate Program; David<br />
H. <strong>Levin</strong> Chair In Family<br />
<strong>Law</strong>; Co-Director, UF Institute for Child<br />
and Adolescent Research and Evaluation<br />
■ “Re-Visioning Rights for Children,”<br />
Rethinking Childhood (Rutgers <strong>University</strong><br />
Press, 2004) (Peter B. Pufall and Richard P.<br />
Unsworth, eds.). ■ Children’s Rights in Gay<br />
and Lesbian Families: A Child-Centered<br />
Perspective in Child, Family and State<br />
(Nomos XLIV) (NYU Press, 2003) (Stephen<br />
Macedo & Iris Young, eds.). ■ “Enhancing<br />
Children’s Participation in Policy Formation,”<br />
45 Ariz. L. Rev. 751 (2003). ■ “Speaking<br />
Truth to Power: Challenging the Power <strong>of</strong><br />
Parents to Control the Education <strong>of</strong> Their<br />
Own,” 11 Cornell J. L. Pub. Pol. 481 (2002).<br />
■ “Talking About Children’s Rights in<br />
Judicial Custody and Visitation Decision-<br />
Making,” 36 Family L. Quart. 105 (2002). ■<br />
“Making Poor Mothers Fungible: Child<br />
Welfare Reform and the Privatization <strong>of</strong><br />
Foster Care,” Unequal Power, Unequal Care:<br />
Carework for Children and Youth in Diverse<br />
Settings (Routlege Press, 2002). ■ “Youthful<br />
Indiscretions: Culture, Class, Status, and the<br />
Passage to Adulthood,” 51 DePaul L. Rev.<br />
743 (2002). ■ “Horton Looks at the ALI<br />
Principles,” 4 J. L & Family Studies 151<br />
(2002). ■ “Child Abuse, the Constitution and<br />
the Legacy <strong>of</strong> Pierce V. Society <strong>of</strong> Sisters,” 78<br />
Detroit Mercy L. Rev. 479 (2001). ■ “Troxel<br />
V. Granville: Implications for At Risk<br />
Children and the Amicus Curiae Role <strong>of</strong><br />
<strong>University</strong>-Based Centers for Children,” 32<br />
Rutgers-Camden L. J. 857 (2001). ■ “Child-<br />
Centered, Vertically-Integrated, and<br />
Interdisciplinary: An Integrative Approach to<br />
Children’s Policy, Practice and Research,” 40<br />
Fam. Ct. Rev. 116 (2001). ■ “Children’s<br />
Rights,” Youth and the <strong>Law</strong> (Plenum Press,<br />
2001, Susan White, ed.). ■ “Dred Scott’s<br />
Daughters: Nineteenth Century Urban Girls at<br />
the Intersection <strong>of</strong> Race and Patriarchy,” 48<br />
Buff. L. Rev. 669 (2000). ■ “The Status <strong>of</strong><br />
Children: A Story <strong>of</strong> Emerging Rights,”<br />
Cross-Currents: Family <strong>Law</strong> in England and<br />
the United States (Oxford Univ. Press, 2000).<br />
■ “The Adoption and Safe Families Act: A<br />
Major Shift in Child Welfare <strong>Law</strong> and<br />
Policy,” International Survey <strong>of</strong> Family <strong>Law</strong><br />
(Family <strong>Law</strong> Pubs., 2000). ■ Keynote<br />
Address, Symposium on Legal Reform and<br />
Children’s Human Rights, 14 St. John’s J.<br />
Leg. Commentary 331 (2000).<br />
CLAUDIA WRIGHT<br />
Director, Gator<br />
TeamChild /Juvenile <strong>Law</strong><br />
Clinic; Legal Skills<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor; Associate<br />
Director, Center on<br />
Children and Families<br />
■ “Representation <strong>of</strong><br />
Children in a Unified Family Court System in<br />
Florida,” U. Fla. J. L. and Pub. Pol’y (Spring<br />
2003). ■ “The Value <strong>of</strong> High Quality,<br />
Comprehensive Information to Decision-<br />
Fredric G. <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Administration<br />
• Robert H. Jerry, II, Dean; <strong>Levin</strong>, Mabie and <strong>Levin</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• Stuart R. Cohn, Associate Dean for International Studies; Gerald A. Sohn Scholar; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• George L. Dawson, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• Michael K. Friel, Associate Dean & Director, Graduate Tax Program; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• William H. Page, Associate Dean for Faculty Development; Criser Eminent Scholar in<br />
Electronic Communications & Administrative <strong>Law</strong>; Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• M. Kathleen “Kathie” Price, Associate Dean, Library & Technology; TeSelle Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
• Gail E. Sasnett, Associate Dean for Students, Pr<strong>of</strong>essionalism & Community Relations<br />
• J. Patrick Shannon, Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs<br />
• Donald J. Hale, Senior Development Director<br />
• Linda Calvert Hanson, Assistant Dean for Career Services<br />
• Richard L. Ludwick, Assistant Dean for Students<br />
makers in Juvenile Cases,” Fla. B. J. (2003)<br />
(with Thomas Oakland).<br />
DANAYA C. WRIGHT<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />
■ “The Logic and<br />
Experience <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong>:<br />
<strong>Law</strong>rence v. Texas and the<br />
Politics <strong>of</strong> Privacy,” 15 Fl.<br />
J. <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> & Pub. Pol’y 423<br />
(2004). ■ “Untying the<br />
Knot: An Analysis <strong>of</strong> English Divorce and<br />
Matrimonial Causes Court Records,” 1858,<br />
38 Univ. <strong>of</strong> Richmond L. Rev. 903 (2004). ■<br />
“Well-Behaved Women Don’t Make History:<br />
Rethinking Family, <strong>Law</strong>, And History<br />
Through an Analysis <strong>of</strong> the First Nine Years<br />
<strong>of</strong> the English Divorce and Matrimonial<br />
Causes Court (1858-1866),” Wis. Women’s L.<br />
J. (2004). ■ “A New Time For Denominators:<br />
Toward A Dynamic Theory Of Property In<br />
Regulatory Takings’ Relevant Parcel<br />
Analysis,” 34 Environmental L. (2004). ■<br />
“Shaken, Not Stirred: Has Tahoe-Sierra<br />
Settled or Muddied the Regulatory Takings<br />
Waters?” 32 Envt’l L. Reports 11177 (2002)<br />
(with Nissa Laughner). ■ “The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Child<br />
Custody: A History <strong>of</strong> the Birth <strong>of</strong> Family<br />
<strong>Law</strong> in England,” 11 Colum. J. Gender & L.<br />
175 (2002). ■ “Eminent Domain, Exactions,<br />
and Railbanking: Can Recreational Trails<br />
Survive the Court’s Fifth Amendment<br />
Jurisprudence?” 26 Colum. J. Envt’l L. 399<br />
(2001). ■ “Foreword: Toward a Multicultural<br />
Theory <strong>of</strong> Property,” 12 Fla. J. L. & Pub.<br />
Pol’y 1 (2001). ■ “The “Anti-Boomer Effect:<br />
Property Rights, Regulatory Takings, and a<br />
Welfare Model <strong>of</strong> Land Ownership,” 6 Aust.<br />
J. Leg. Hist. 1 (2000). ■ “Pipes, Wires, and<br />
Bicycles: Rails-To-Trails, Utility Licenses,<br />
and the Shifting Scope <strong>of</strong> Railroad Easements<br />
from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First<br />
Centuries,” 27 Eco. L. Q. (2000) (with Jeffrey<br />
M. Hester).<br />
JENNIFER ZEDALIS<br />
Director, Trial Practice;<br />
Legal Skills Pr<strong>of</strong>essor;<br />
Coordinator, Gerald T.<br />
Bennett Prosecutor/Public<br />
Defender CLE Course<br />
■ “Re-thinking Your<br />
Practice Habits — Seven<br />
Ways to be a Better <strong>Law</strong>yer in the Criminal<br />
Courts,” 33 Fla. Crim. L. J. (2003). ❒<br />
• J. Michael Patrick, Assistant Dean for Admissions<br />
• Debra D. Amirin, Director <strong>of</strong> Information & Publications<br />
Please Note:<br />
• This Report From the Faculty is published annually by the <strong>Levin</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> Associate Dean for Faculty Development. Send<br />
updates or corrections to the Office <strong>of</strong> Communications, PO Box<br />
117633, Gainesville, Fl, 32611, or e-mail amirin@law.ufl.edu.<br />
• The <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida is committed to non-discrimination with<br />
respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, gender,<br />
marital status, sexual orientation, national origin, political<br />
opinions or affiliations, and veteran status.<br />
U F L A W 2 3
COMPREHENSIVE, INTERNATIONAL, INNOVATIVE, INTERDISCIPLINARY, EXCELLENT<br />
■ UF LAW ONLINE<br />
Access the latest on UF <strong>Levin</strong> <strong>College</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Law</strong> faculty, programs and events, a variety <strong>of</strong> legal links and more at www.law.ufl.edu.<br />
■ CONFERENCES/SYMPOSIA<br />
Enhance your understanding <strong>of</strong> specialized areas, network and earn CLE credit. Scheduled thus far:<br />
■ Fourth Richard E. Nelson Symposium, Feb. 11, 2005, Hilton <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida Conference Center, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by<br />
Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Michael Allan Wolf, Nelson Chair in Local Government <strong>Law</strong>.<br />
■ Fourth Annual <strong>Law</strong> & Technology Conference, Feb. 24-25, 2005, Sheraton World Resort, Orlando, Fla. Organized by Intellectual Property<br />
<strong>Law</strong> Program.<br />
■ Race and <strong>Law</strong> Curriculum Workshop, Feb. 24-26, 2005, Hilton <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida Conference Center, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by<br />
Center for the Study <strong>of</strong> Race and Race Relations.<br />
■ Public Interest Environmental Conference, Feb. 24-26, 2005, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Florida J. Wayne Reitz Union, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by<br />
Environmental and Land Use <strong>Law</strong> Society.<br />
■ Center on Children & Families Annual Conference, “Multi-disciplinary Collaboration: What Does It Mean and How Does It Work?,”<br />
2005 (Details TBA).<br />
■ Sixth Annual Conference on Legal and Policy Issues in the Americas, Spring 2005, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by Center for<br />
Governmental Responsibility.<br />
To register or for information: Director <strong>of</strong> Conference Planning Barbara DeVoe (352-392-8070 or devoe@law.ufl.edu).<br />
Fredric G. <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. 94