FACULTY ACCOMPLISHMENTS AND PROGRAMS OF EXCELLENCE 2019 -2020 HIGHLIGHTS
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The impact of DePaul College of Law is especially reflected in its six Programs of Excellence. These programs build on the traditional strengths of the law school and are deeply integrated with the City of Chicago. They facilitate collaborations across DePaul University and provide myriad opportunities for our students in growing fields of practice, including: - Business Law & Tax Law - Family Law - Health Law - Immigration Law & Human Rights Law - Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology Law - Public Interest Law & Public Service And through scholarship, legal reform and public engagement, our faculty members inspire student learning and make an impact in the global legal community. At DePaul College of Law, our guiding principle is, Here, We Do. This ethos pervades our scholarly activities, our marquee events and our Programs of Excellence. We create generations of students who practice law at the highest level and with heart. All my best,
Jennifer Rosato Perea Dean and Professor of Law 2
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BUSINESS LAW & TAX LAW
PROFESSOR JEROLD FRIEDLAND directs the LLM in International Law concentration in International Business, Commercial & Trade Law and the LLM in Taxation. He specializes in the areas of international business and taxation, and he is a well-known expert on partnerships, limited liability companies and international joint ventures. • Tax Planning for Partners, Partnerships and LLCs (2 vols., Matthew Bender, 1998; Supplements 1998-2020)
DePaul’s business law courses teach the key legal principles and skills that lawyers use when advising businesses of all sizes—on both transactional and litigation matters. Tax law classes range from introductory to advanced courses on personal, corporate and partnership taxation, among other topics.
PROFESSOR EMILY CAUBLE’S areas of expertise include tax law, contracts, corporate taxation, federal income tax and policy, international taxation and partnership taxation. Prior to teaching, she practiced in the tax transactions group at Mayer Brown in Chicago. • Presumptions of Tax Motivation, 105 Iowa L. Rev. • Time for a Tax Return Filing Fee,
CLINICAL PROFESSOR OF LAW JULIE D. LAWTON is the associate dean for experiential learning. Her areas of expertise include real estate, affordable housing, consumer law and clinical legal education. Prior to teaching, she practiced in the financial services group at Morrison & Foerster in Washington, DC, and worked as a financial analyst in the commercial banking group at Bank of America in Atlanta, Georgia.
(forthcoming 2020)
Harvard J. L egislation
• Business Fundamentals for L awyers: Case Studies, Problem Sets and Materials (Carolina Academic Press, forthcoming)
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• Symposium, Unsophisticated Taxpayers, Rules versus Standards, and Form versus Substance, Loyola U. Chicago L.J. (forthcoming)
• Real E state Transactions: Problems, Cases and Materials (6th ed., forthcoming) (with Robin P. Malloy and James C. Smith)
• Symposium, Partnership Tax Provisions of the TCJA as Illustrations of Planning Simplification versus Compliance Simplification Trade-Offs, Pepperdine L. Rev. (forthcoming)
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FAMILY LAW DePaul’s family law curriculum explores the broad range of legal issues affecting families at all stages of life. Coursework and practical training are offered for a variety of topics, including child advocacy, juvenile justice, adolescent health and welfare, partnership, marriage and divorce, domestic violence, disability and elder law. FAMILY LAW FIELD CLINIC LAUNCHED
The year-long Family Law Field Clinic offers study opportunities of the laws of marriage, divorce, invalidity of marriage, legal separation, parentage and adoption. This field clinic centers around the representation of clients at Chicago Volunteer Legal Services (CVLS).
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SCHILLER DUCANTO & FLECK FAMILY LAW CENTER ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM: THE “NEW AMERICAN FAMILY”
Panel discussions explored topics, including the values and culture shifts of the American family, the implications of not marrying, the ethical dilemmas American families face in addressing embryos upon separation, the economics of marriage and separation, the “graying divorce,” how to co-parent effectively post-decree, and mental health concerns. The panels brought together preeminent faculty from around the nation with prominent family law judges and lawyers.
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HEALTH LAW
PROFESSOR MAX HELVESTON is an expert in issues related to insurance, consumer protection and data privacy. Returning to the faculty full-time after serving as the associate dean of academic affairs and strategic initiatives for the past three years, he has started work on several projects related to the commercialization of consumer health data, innovations in health care delivery, and the regulation of health insurance plans offered by large, self-insured employers. Additionally, he has begun working with Professor Wendy Epstein and academics at other institutions on scholarship addressing health equity issues during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Health Law Program at DePaul consistently ranks among the nation’s best. The health law curriculum encompasses theoretical and practical courses identified by practitioners as essentials in the field, and it covers all major areas of health law practice, including social, ethical, corporate, regulatory and policy issues.
• Reining in Commercial Exploitation of Consumer Data, 123 Penn. St. L. Rev. 667 (2019)
PROFESSOR WENDY EPSTEIN directs the Michael and Mary Jaharis Health Law Institute, and her teaching and research interests focus on health care law and policy, contracts and commercial law. She is an expert in the financing and delivery of health care and has written about the dire need to preserve the Affordable Care Act during this pandemic, as well as about the need for states to adopt pandemic guidelines.
PROFESSOR MARK WEBER’S areas of expertise include complex tort litigation, disability rights issues and special education law. He has presented testimony on the implementation of the ADA to the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and is active in community service and legislative initiatives on disability matters.
• Private Law Alternatives to the Individual Mandate, 104 Minn. L. Rev. 1429 (2020)
• Of Immigration, Public Charges, Disability Discrimination, and, of All Things, Hobby Lobby, 52 A rizona State L.J. 245 (2020)
• Disrupting the Market for Ineffective Medical Devices, in The Future of Medical Device Regulation: Innovation A nd Protection (I. Glenn Cohen, Timo Minssen, W. Nicholson Price II, Christopher Robertson, and Carmel Shachar eds., Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2021)
• Endrew F. Clairvoyance, 35 Touro L. Rev. 59 (2019) • Least Restrictive Environment and the Education of Children with Disabilities, in The O xford Handbook of U.S. Education L aw (Kristine L. Bowman ed., Oxford University Press 2019)
• “Pandemic Guidelines, Not Changed Malpractice Rules, are the Right Response to COVID-19,” Harvard Law Bill of Health Blog (May 19, 2020) (with Valerie Gutmann Koch and Govind Persad)
• 2 019 online supplement to Special Education L aw: Cases and Materials (4th ed., Carolina Academic Press 2013) (with Sarah E. Redfield and Ralph D. Mawdsley)
• Commentary, “Without Obamacare, the COVID-19 crisis would be much worse,” Chicago Tribune (April 1, 2020) (with Christopher Robertson)
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HEALTH LAW continued
DIGNITY HEALTH AND JAHARIS HEALTH LAW INSTITUTE LAUNCH NEW HEALTH LAW & COMPLIANCE CERTIFICATE
2019-2020 JAHARIS FACULTY FELLOW VALERIE GUTMANN KOCH is an expert in ventilator allocation policy, having worked on the issue for many years prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. She also writes more generally about crisis standards of care and medical malpractice liability. In Fall 2020, Koch began a tenure-track position at the University of Houston Law Center where she also co-directs the Health Law & Policy Institute. • “Pandemic Guidelines, Not Changed Malpractice Rules, are the Right Response to COVID-19,” Harvard Law Bill of Health Blog (May 19, 2020) (with Wendy Netter Epstein and Govind Persad) • “Physicians Should Not Be Forced to Determine Resource Allocation: Triage Committees May Reduce Physician Trauma,” Health Affairs (May 8, 2020) (with Susie A. Han)
• “How States are Protecting Health Care Providers from Legal Liability in the COVID-19 Pandemic,” Harvard Law Bill of Health Blog (May 5, 2020)
• “Denying Ventilators to COVID-19 Patients with Prior DNR Orders is Unethical,” The Hastings Center (April 21, 2020)
CIVIL LITIGATION & HEALTH LAW CLINIC LAUNCHED
The Civil Litigation & Health Law Clinic represents clients in a variety of litigation and administrative matters, as well as health law matters such as representing patients in disputes with insurance companies and representing clients in accessing benefit matters. The Clinic helps prepare students for a practice in health law advocacy, while equipping them with the knowledge and skills they can use in any litigation environment.
AMERICAN HEALTH LAW ASSOCIATION (AHLA) COVID-19 HEALTH LAW DISRUPTION VIDEO SERIES
The Jaharis Health Law Institute, in partnership with the American Health Law Association (AHLA) and dBase Media, produced a series of public service announcement videos to heighten awareness of the ever-shifting legal landscape in light of COVID-19. The series features Jaharis faculty discussing how health law has rapidly changed in response to the pandemic. Together, these videos offer a deep dive into pressing topics such as the current and future impact of new waivers; how rural and other providers are facing challenges with limited resources, supplies, staffing and capacity issues; and how long-term care facilities can minimize risk to patients and staff. 10
Co-developed with one of the largest health systems in the U.S.—Dignity Health—the Health Law & Compliance Certificate Program familiarizes health care professionals with the most significant and applicable concepts and principles in health law and policy. Participants learn to identify and apply legal rules relating to American health care, enabling them to navigate a complicated and shifting legal and regulatory environment.
SYMPOSIA & CONFERENCES JAHARIS HEALTH CARE COMPLIANCE PROGRAM
The second annual CCB Health Care Compliance Conference addressed the key requirements for an effective compliance program and some of the challenges compliance professionals face when conducting education and training, responding to compliance violations, auditing and monitoring, implementing HIPAA protections, and communicating and reporting. The conference specifically addressed telehealth, preparedness, and the use of new technology for the delivery of health care in the current environment. Speakers examined the changes required in response to the recent pandemic, compliance in the current landscape, and how to transition to the anticipated new norm.
JAHARIS SYMPOSIUM ON HEALTH LAW AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: GENETIC JUSTICE: DATA, PRIVACY, AND CRIME
This interdisciplinary symposium addressed issues of distributive and procedural justice in genetics and genomics as these issues relate to scientific innovation, intellectual property, human subjects research, and the criminal justice system.
26TH ANNUAL CLIFFORD SYMPOSIUM ON TORT LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY: THE OPIOID CRISIS: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
At the 26th Annual Clifford Symposium, some of America’s leading experts considered the legal and public health implications of the opioid crisis and our responses to it. The symposium considered the procedural mechanism that has framed our primary response to the crisis—multi-district litigation. Symposium faculty considered some of the substantive legal tools being used or considered to address the problem and those who caused it, most particularly tort claims and criminal sanctions. It also examined a range of public health initiatives to assist in the nation’s recovery.
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IMMIGRATION LAW & HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
PROFESSOR ALBERTO COLL teaches in the areas of international law, international human rights, U.S. foreign relations, terrorism, international trade and Latin America. Prior to joining DePaul, he was principal deputy assistant secretary of defense and also served as dean of the Center for Naval Warfare Studies, the U.S. Navy’s foremost strategic research center. Most recently, Professor Coll was named editor-in-chief of Open Military Studies, and he was invited to join the editorial boards of Peruvian legal journal Cambio Social and University of Havana legal journal Mundi Migratios. He studied the mechanics of running free, fair and transparent democratic elections by working with international election observers from the Organization of American States and the European Union, along with human rights NGOs such as the Carter Center, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.
DePaul’s well-known Immigration Law Program includes experienced faculty, the Asylum & Refugee Law Clinic and the Immigration Law Clinic, which has trained a generation of immigration lawyers since 1999. The Legal Resources Project for Immigrant Service Providers assists 25 immigrant-serving, community-based organizations by providing legal services, staff resources and assistance with the development of legal service capacity. This project has received broad financial support from foundations to continue its innovative work expanding access to justice in immigration and asylum issues across the region.
• Op-ed, “Candidates Need to Articulate Russia Policies Now,” The Hill (February 20, 2020) • “British Turmoil After Brexit,” Federalist Society Teleforum (May 27, 2020) (with John McGinnis and Maimon Schwarzschild)
Globally, through the International Human Rights Law Practicum and the Advanced International Human Rights Law Practicum, students work directly to promote international human rights. This work includes investigating and documenting human rights violations, creating legal and policy recommendations, and utilizing international human rights law mechanisms.
PROFESSOR ALLISON TIRRES currently serves as associate dean for academic affairs and strategic initiatives, having previously served as associate dean for academic affairs 2014 to 2017. She was the first Cleary, Gottlieb, Hamilton & Steen fellow at the Harvard Immigration & Refugee Clinic of Greater Boston Legal Services and also worked for the Immigration Project of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law of Texas. Professor Tirres’ research and publications focus on immigration, citizenship and civil rights in both historical and contemporary perspectives.
SIOBAN ALBIOL serves as the Asylum & Immigration Law Clinic instructor and coordinator and as the Legal Resources Project director. Since joining the Clinic in 2001, Professor Albiol has overseen the expansion of the Legal Resources Project from seven to 25 partner agencies. This year, she was honored by Latinos Progresando with 2020 Community Leader Progresando Award, given to a mission-driven individual that makes community service part of his/her daily life.
• Book Review, 37 L aw & Hist. Rev. 651 (May 2019) (reviewing Lucy E. Salyer, Under the Starry Flag: How a Band of Irish A mericans Joined the Fenian Revolt and Sparked a Crisis O ver Citizenship (Harvard University Press 2018)) • Book Review, Taking Away Citizenship: Lessons from the British Advisory Committee, Jotwell (January 15, 2019) (reviewing Patrick Weil and Nicholas Handler, Revocation of Citizenship and the Rule of L aw: How Judicial Review Defeated Britain’s First Denaturalization Regime, 36 L aw & Hist. Rev. 295 (2018))
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IMMIGRATION LAW & HUMAN RIGHTS LAW continued INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW INSTITUTE (IHRLI) EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND DIRECTOR OF GLOBAL INITIATIVES ELISABETH WARD participated in discussions at the U.N. on ending conflict-related sexual violence (October 2019). Because of IHRLI’s work, DePaul University was granted special consultative status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (November 2019).
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY LAW
PROFESSOR MICHAEL GRYNBERG currently serves as associate dean for research and faculty professional development. His research concerns intellectual property and technology law with a focus on trademark law. • AI and the “Death of Trademark,” 108 K entucky L.J. 199 (2019-2020) • Property Law and the Intellectual Property Agenda, in Handbook on Intellectual Property Research (Irene Calboli & Lilla Montagnani et al. eds., Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2020)
DePaul’s Intellectual Property Law & Information Technology (IP/IT) Law Program consistently ranks among the nation’s best. Led by renowned scholars and faculty experts, it offers a unique interdisciplinary and cutting-edge curriculum covering an extensive range of patent, copyright, trademark and information technology issues, as well as specialty areas like internet law, data protection law, and art and museum law.
• The Consumer Duty of Care in Trademark Law, in Trademark L aw and Theory: Reform of Trademark L aw (forthcoming)
PROFESSOR ROBERTA KWALL is an internationally renowned scholar and lecturer and has published over 30 articles on a wide variety of topics including Jewish law and culture, authorship rights and intellectual property. At DePaul, she teaches in the areas of family law, property law, intellectual property law, and family law and the Jewish tradition.
PROFESSOR PATTY GERSTENBLITH’S areas of expertise are cultural heritage law and art and museum law. She is the faculty director of the Center for Art, Museum & Cultural Heritage Law; founding president of the Lawyers Committee for Cultural Heritage Preservation; senior advisor to the ABA’s Art and Cultural Heritage Law Committee; and formerly served as an appointee of President Obama as the chair of the President’s Cultural Property Advisory Committee in the U.S. Department of State. Most recently, she received the Outstanding Public Service award from the Archaeological Institute of America.
• Remix Judaism: Preserving Tradition In A Diverse World (Roman and Littlefield 2020) • Human Rights Laws and Authorship Norms, from her book, The Soul of Creativity: Forging a Moral Rights L aw for the United States (Stanford U. Press 2010) will be reprinted in the Mitchell Hamline Law Review symposium issue dedicated to Intellectual Property and Human Rights (forthcoming)
• Provenience and Provenance Intersecting with International Law in the Market for Antiquities, 45 N.C. J. Int’l L. & Com. Reg. 457 (2020)
• E ssay, “Why Yitz Greenberg’s ‘road’ may lead to a stronger Jewish center,” The Jerusalem Post (August 12, 2020)
• Provenances Real, Fake and Questionable, 26 Int’l J. Cultural Property 285 (2019)
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• Toward a Human-Rights Based Approach as an Element in Post-Conflict Cultural Heritage Reconstruction, in Heritage Destruction, Human Rights and International Law (Joseph Powderly and Amy Strecker eds., Brill Publishers, forthcoming)
• E ssay, “A Remixed Yahrzeit Two Years in a Row,” The Jewish Book Council (July 13, 2020)
• A Case Study of the Looting of Archaeological Artifacts from Iraq and Syria: Hobby Lobby and the Museum of the Bible, in A ntiquities Smuggling: in the Real and Virtual World (Layla Hashemi and Louise Shelley eds., Routledge, forthcoming)
• Op-ed, “Programs Fostering Meaningful Connections to Jewish Tradition Cannot be Side-Lined,” e-Jewish Philanthropy (April 23, 2020)
• Theft and Illicit Excavation: Legal Principles and Responses, in The O xford Handbook of International Cultural Heritage L aw (Francesco Francioni and Ana Vrdoljak eds., Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2020)
• Op-ed, “Disagreement can be the basis of Jewish unity–even during a pandemic,” The Jerusalem Post (April 22, 2020)
• The Disposition of Movable Cultural Heritage, in Intersections in International Cultural Heritage L aw 17-55 (Anne-Marie Carstens and Elizabeth Varner eds., Oxford University Press 2020)
• Op-ed, “Religious Observance Is an Asset, Regardless of the Faith,” Jewish Journal (April 20, 2020)
• Op-ed, “Making Jewish traditions work for you doesn’t have to be an emergency approach,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency (May 4, 2020)
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY LAW continued PROFESSOR MAGGIE LIVINGSTON is the faculty director of the Center for Animal Law and teaches and writes in the areas of intellectual property, commercial law and animal law.
• A Research Framework for Intellectual Property and Environmental Law, in Handbook on Intellectual Property Research (Irene Calboli & Lilla Montagnani et al. eds., Oxford University Press 2020) • Religious and Moral Grounds for Patent-Eligible Subject Matter Exclusions, in Patents on L ife: Religious, Moral, and Social Justice A spects of Biotechnology and Intellectual Propert y, 38-58 (T. Berg, R. Cholij & S. Ravenscroft eds., Cambridge University Press 2019)
• Presidential Immunity from Prosecution: Tolling the Statute of Limitations, 34 BYU J. Pub. L. 101 (2020) • Tenure Revisited, 61 B.C. L. Rev. E. Supp. 1 (2019)
• “ The Right to Repair in a Pandemic,” Northwestern University Law Review Online (NULR of Note) (May 20, 2020)
• Op-ed., “Protecting the most vulnerable: A proposed law to create animal advocates,” The Hill (March 4, 2020) (with Robin P. Malloy and James C. Smith)
• “COVID-19 Highlights Need for Rights to Repair and Produce in Emergencies,” Harvard Law Bill of Health Blog (May 19, 2020)
• Op-ed, “The Criminal Justice System and Trump: He Should be Treated Like Everyone Else,” The Hill (January 1, 2020) • Opinion, “Life After Losing My Father and Sister to Suicide,” Newsweek (January 1, 2020)
SENIOR PROFESSIONAL LECTURER TONY VOLINI’S areas of expertise are legal writing, patent drafting, IP licensing, and cybersecurity and privacy. Prior to joining DePaul, he was an associate at a Chicago intellectual property firm, where he primarily handled patent prosecution and infringement analyses in a variety of technology areas, including extrusion and other mechanical devices, plastics, household products, surgical navigation equipment and insecticides.
PROFESSOR JOSHUA SARNOFF is an internationally recognized expert on the intersections of intellectual property law, environmental law, health law, and constitutional, administrative and international law. His current research focuses on innovation policy and technology development; climate change technology and data, climate modification and governance; utility and design patent empirical analyses, history and theory; responses to pandemic diseases; and intellectual property rights in genetic and natural resources, diagnostics and therapeutics. In June 2019, he testified before the Intellectual Property Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee on pending legislation to revise subject matter eligibility doctrine under Section 101 of the Patent Act.
• A Perspective on Technology Education for Law Students, 36 Santa Clara High Tech L.J. 165 (2020) • Op-ed/Expert Analysis, “Justices Should Construe Computer Fraud Law Narrowly,” Law360 (May 27, 2020) (with Karen Heart)
• Correcting Misunderstandings of Literal Infringement Scope Regarding After-Arising Technologies Protected by the Doctrine of Equivalents, A kron L. Rev. (forthcoming 2020) • An Introduction to, Premises of, and Problems with Patent Claim Construction, in Patent Claim Construction in the Federal Circuit (Thomson Reuters 2014-2020) (with Edward D. Manzo)
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PUBLIC INTEREST LAW & PUBLIC SERVICE
OTHER FACULTY ACCOMPLISHMENTS PROFESSOR MONU BEDI teaches Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure. Before entering academia, Professor Bedi clerked for the Honorable Laura Taylor Swain of the Southern District of New York and served as a Navy JAG where he prosecuted sailors accused of crimes ranging from drug possession to attempted murder. He also served as an associate in the government enforcement group at Ropes & Gray in Boston, MA.
DePaul’s Public Interest Law & Public Service Program provides opportunities to explore social justice issues such as civil liberties, voting rights, community economic development, public health, public benefits, asylum and immigration, as well as gain hands-on experience through a variety of public interest experiential learning opportunities. CROAK COMMUNITY LEGAL CLINIC LAUNCHED
The Croak Community Legal Clinic is a rare experiential learning opportunity for those students interested in community organizing, education and empowerment. Due to limited resources, many people are forced to represent themselves when they encounter legal problems. Clinic students promote access to justice by providing clients with education and resources about the legal system, helping them understand their rights and better represent themselves in legal settings.
• Op-ed, “It’s Time for a Uniform Code of Police Justice,” National Review (June 22, 2020) (with Greg Everett) • Op-ed, “We Must Treat Police Officers Like Soldiers,” Newsweek (June 9, 2020) (with Greg Everett)
D E PAUL LAW STUDENTS COMPLETED 3,800 HOURS OF PRO BONO SERVICE
• Op-ed, “Stop-and-frisk is not racist, and we need to stop saying it is,” Chicago Tribune (May 2, 2020)
Through the College’s Pro Bono & Community Service Initiative (PBCSI), students participated in a wide variety of service opportunities, including, among others:
– Preparing advanced directives for low-income seniors
PROFESSOR DAVID FRANKLIN teaches Constitutional Law, Administrative Law and Conflict of Laws. Professor Franklin was a law clerk for Judge Stephen F. Williams of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg of the United States Supreme Court. He was a litigation associate at Covington & Burling in New York, and in 2016, he took a two-year leave from the College of Law to serve as solicitor general of the State of Illinois Office of the Attorney General.
– V irtually providing legal help to low income individuals without attorneys through Illinois Free Legal Answers
• “ The Roberts Court Only Protects Certain Types of People from First Amendment Compulsion,” Slate (July 1, 2020)
– A ssisting the homeless with expunging and sealing of criminal records and obtaining crucial state IDs through DePaul’s Neighborhood Legal Assistance Project (NLAP)
– Helping victims of domestic violence obtain emergency orders of protection – A ssisting immigrants with petitions for asylum and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
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OTHER FACULTY ACCOMPLISHMENTS continued PROFESSOR BARRY KELLMAN’S teaching focuses on international criminal law, environmental law, international law of peace and security, international environmental justice and the law of antiterrorism. He works on the law of weapons and international security, focusing for 25 years on the control and eradication of chemical, biological, nuclear and conventional weapons. In July 2020, he spoke at the Bioterrorism and High Consequence Biological Threats Conference, convened by the Global Counter-Terrorism Council in New Delhi, India.
PROFESSOR MARK MOLLER teaches in the areas of civil procedure, complex litigation, conflict of laws and legal ethics. Prior to joining DePaul, Professor Moller was an associate in the appellate and class action groups at Gibson Dunn & Crutcher in Washington, DC. Following private practice, he was a senior fellow at the Cato Institute’s Center for Constitutional Studies in Washington, DC, where he served as the editor-inchief of the Cato Supreme Court Review and appeared frequently as a legal commentator in print and on television and radio.
• Op-ed, “‘National Security’ is too Crude to Protect Us from Pandemics. It’s Time to Shift to Human Security Instead.” Newsweek (March 17, 2020) (with Jonathan Granoff, President, Global Security Institute)
• The Elements of L itigation Strategy (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming) (with Andrew J. Trask)
PROFESSOR GREGORY MARK is a noted legal historian with extensive experience in academia, administration and the professional world. Prior to his academic career, he served as associate counsel for the office of Independent Counsel in the Iran-Contra affair. In that role, he helped develop a case against Duane Clarridge, a former highranking official of the CIA, who later received a presidential pardon. Professor Mark’s scholarship focuses on the areas of corporate finance, corporate governance and American legal history.
DISTINGUISHED VISITING PROFESSOR OF LAW WARREN WOLFSON brings a wealth of expertise garnered through a legal career that includes 33 years on the bench and extensive teaching experience. He was appointed to the Circuit Court of Cook County in 1975, elected to a full term in 1976, and was retained in that position for five consecutive terms. In 1994, he was assigned to the Illinois Appellate Court, 1st District, where he served until joining DePaul. Prior to his career on the bench, he spent 18 years in criminal defense practice.
• Liberal Democracy’s Hungarian Canary, 69 DePaul L. Rev. 961 (2020) (reviewing Andras L. Pap, Democratic Decline in Hungary: Law and Society in an Illiberal Democracy (2018))
• Trial Evidence (7th ed., Wolters Kluwer 2020) (with Thomas A. Mauet)
• Corporations and the Original Meaning of “Citizens” in Article III, (forthcoming) (with Lawrence B. Solum)
Hastings L.J.
• Review, 74 The Ec. His. Rev. 1508 (October 2019) (reviewing Naomi R. Lamoreaux and John Joseph Wallis, eds., Organizations, Civil Society and the Roots of Development (University of Chicago Press & National Bureau of Economic Research 2017)) • Dartmouth College, in Leading Supreme Court Decisions (forthcoming)(with Mark McGarvie) • Dartmouth College’s Economic Theory, in Studies in Constitutional Heritage (Justin Wert, ed., forthcoming)
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