Faculty Scholarship 2010-2013

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Faculty Scholarship 2010 to 2013 S UNY B UF FA L O L AW S C H O O L T HE S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y O F N E W Y O R K



A leader in legal thought for more than 125 years

Dear Colleague:

Below is a list of 10 events and movements that have made a difference — in the Western New York legal community, but also increasingly, as the Law School has gained in regional, national and global reputation, in ways that reached far beyond Buffalo and Amherst.

We are pleased to update you on the scholarship produced since 2010 by our tenured and tenuretrack faculty. SUNY Buffalo Law School faculty enjoy a well-deserved reputation for cuttingedge ideas and has long been associated with interdisciplinary research and critical approaches to the study of law. Many of our colleagues hold doctorates in areas other than law, and the innovative and thoughtful scholarship catalogued here reflects this rich and diverse background. We hope that you enjoy getting to know their work.

Of necessity, the list excludes the past decade or so, in which much intellectual ferment has taken place but for which the judgment of history will have to wait. But it includes many developments that continue to resonate today, including the granddaddy of them all …

E S TA B L I S H M E N T O F T H E B U F F A L O L A W S C H O O L

Speakers have included Irene Khan, C. Edwin Baker, Derrick Bell, Barry Cushman, Carol Gilligan, Elizabeth Holtzman, Stewart Macaulay, Catharine A. MacKinnon, Carrie Menkel-Meadow, Richard Posner and Clyde Summers.

At the time of the school’s founding in 1887, law was very much a craft that aspiring attorneys learned by apprenticing themselves to a practicing member of the bar. The system worked well enough for its time. But a handful of visionaries, seeing the limitations of law office training and acknowledging the presence of rigorous law schools in other cities, set out to change the landscape for legal education in Western New York. A dozen members of the bench and bar are credited as the founders of the Buffalo Law School — and among them, only three had themselves graduated from a law school. In a break with the tradition of the all-male bar, the Class of 1899 included two female graduates.

F O U N D I N G O F T H E B U F FA L O L AW R E V I E W

The student-edited Law Review published its first issue in the 1950-51 academic year, assembled by five members of the Class of ’51. It featured 18 student case notes and an article by former Dean Louis L. Jaffe titled “Res Ipsa Loquitur Vindicated.” Today the Law Review staff publishes five issues each year, providing a forum for significant scholarship and affording its student editors valuable learning experiences in legal scholarship.

DEAN FRANCIS M. SHEA AND HIS H A R VA R D R E C R U I T S C O M E T O B U F F A L O

Yours sincerely,

E S TA B L I S H M E N T O F T H E M U G E L TA X C O M P E T I T I O N

SUNY Buffalo Law School has a long history of excellence in tax law, and the Albert R. Mugel National Tax Moot Court Competition — named for the longtime Law School professor — was one of the first specialized national moot court competitions. Each year, law students from across the nation come to Buffalo to present their written and oral arguments on cutting-edge federal tax law issues in this prestigious competition, now more than 30 years old and one of the cornerstones of the Law School’s rigorous tax law curriculum.

Shea, the Law School’s fifth dean, served from 1936 to 1939, amid the gathering storm of World War II. Shea hired a contemporary of his from Harvard Law School, Louis L. Jaffe, then added two more Harvard graduates, Mark DeWolfe Howe and David Riesman Jr. Some began calling the school “Little Harvard.” This nexus of faculty was familiar with the lessons learned from American Legal Realism — which recognized the sharp moral, political and social conflict that undergirded the creation and administration of the legal system — and the New Deal economics of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Law School continues that emphasis on understanding law in the context of its sociopolitical environment.

Makau W. Mutua Dean

FOUNDING OF THE CLINICAL PROGRAM

E S TA B L I S H M E N T O F T H E M I T C H E L L L E C T U R E

The James McCormick Mitchell Lecture is the signature lecture at SUNY Buffalo Law School. Endowed in 1950 by a major gift from Lavinia A. Mitchell in memory of her husband, Class of 1897, the lecture has been a forum for showcasing nationally important legal scholars and ideas in the Buffalo legal community. 2

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The current emphasis on hands-on learning that produces practice-ready attorneys has a long provenance at SUNY Buffalo Law School, and a special place in that history belongs to the school’s clinical program. One of the first education law clinics in the nation found its home at the Law School, to be followed by other innovative clinics that combined practical education and service to the community. Some of the Law School’s clinics, now numbering more than a dozen, have drawn national and international recognition for their work on, for example, the problem of domestic violence.


Contents LAW AND SOCIETY COMES TO BUFFALO

Isabel Marcus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lynn Mather. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Martha T. McCluskey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Errol E. Meidinger. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tara J. Melish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Teresa A. Miller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Athena D. Mutua . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Makau W. Mutua . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Anthony O’Rourke . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nils Olsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jessica Owley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stephanie L. Phillips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert I. Reis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Henry Schlegel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Steilen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert J. Steinfeld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rick T. Su . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mateo Taussig-Rubbo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . David A.Westbrook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Index by Area of Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Contact Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Dianne Avery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Samantha Barbas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Mark Bartholomew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Anya Bernstein . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Guyora Binder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Michael Boucai . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Irus Braverman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 S. Todd Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Luis E. Chiesa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Kim Diana Connolly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Matthew Dimick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 David M. Engel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Charles Patrick Ewing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Rebecca R. French . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 James A. Gardner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Michael Halberstam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Alfred S. Konefsky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Stuart G. Lazar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Sagit Leviner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Meredith Kolsky Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Anjana Malhotra . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Susan V. Mangold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

The Law and Society movement in legal scholarship studies the place of law in social, political, economic and cultural life. Five current or former faculty members have been president of the international Law and Society Association, and three have served as editor in chief of the Law & Society Review. The movement is a key part of the Law School’s focus on interdisciplinary scholarship that incorporates academic expertise beyond black-letter law. E S TA B L I S H M E N T O F T H E B A L D Y C E N T E R FOR LAW & SOCIAL POLICY

The Baldy Center was created in 1972 with a generous endowment from the estate of Christopher Baldy, a 1910 graduate of the Law School. The Baldy Center is the Law School’s premier vehicle for fostering interdisciplinary scholarship on law, legal institutions and social policy, including research, teaching and curriculum development. More than 150 UB faculty members from numerous departments participate in Baldy Center research, conferences, working groups and publications. The Baldy Center also hosts distinguished scholars from around the world as visitors, speakers and conference participants. BIRTH OF THE BUFFALO MODEL LAW SCHOOL

There’s a continuous tension among those who study legal education over the pedagogical methods that make the best lawyers. The so-called Buffalo Model — home-grown at the Law School — has emerged as an innovative and highly effective approach. The model, which began to take form in the mid-1970s under the deanship of Thomas E. Headrick, moved the Law School’s curriculum in directions that took advantage of the multidisciplinary ethos of the school and focused on the increasing complexities of law practice. CRITICAL LEGAL STUDIES COMES TO BUFFALO

Theorists of the Critical Legal Studies method apply the methods of semiotic deconstruction to law scholarship. The movement emerged in the late 1970s and has spawned offshoots including critical race theory. Buffalo became one of the first centers for CLS scholarship outside of the two law schools with which this important movement in legal thought was associated.

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“Throughout American history, employers have imposed employment policies that are expressly based on sex. Although Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 promised to eliminate sex discrimination in employment, judicial decisions resolving employee challenges to sex-based dress and grooming codes have produced an incoherent body of law. Consequently, employers are generally free to refuse to hire or to fire employees who are unwilling to conform to these sex-based policies. My current research explores the historical role that gender stereotypes have played in constraining effective legal and market challenges to employer prerogatives in this area.”

Dianne Avery

Samantha Barbas

PROFESSOR

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

JD, University at Buffalo Law School MAT, Wesleyan University BA, Duke University

JD, Stanford Law School PhD, University of California at Berkeley BA, Williams College

(716) 645-2074 lawavery@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-6216 sbarbas@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

AREAS OF INTEREST Employment Discrimination

First Amendment

Employment Law

Legal History

Labor Law

Mass Media Law

Women and the Law

“My work examines the interconnections between law, social history and the history of mass communications. Drawing on my earlier research in media history, published as Movie Crazy: Fans, Stars, and the Cult of Celebrity (Palgrave Macmillan, 2001), and The First Lady of Hollywood (University of California Press, 2005), it focuses on the first modern media revolution — the advent of mass-market publishing, radio, film, and television in the early to mid twentieth century.”

BOOKS E mployment Discrimination L aw: C ases and M aterials on E quality in the Workplace (with Maria L. Ontiveros, Roberto L. Corrado, Michael Selmi, and Melissa Hart) (Thomson/West Group, 8th edition, 2010) ARTICLES When Caring is Work: Home, Health, and the Invisible Workforce (Introduction), 2012 James McCormick Mitchell Lecture (with Martha T. McCluskey) Buffalo L aw R eview vol: 61: 253-268 (2013) CHAPTERS Overview of the Law of Harassment and Related Claims (with Catherine L. Fisk) Chapter 1 in L itigating the Workplace H arassment C ase (Marlene Heyser, editor) (American Bar Association, 2010) (1-64)

BOOKS T he L aws of I mage (Stanford University Press, forthcoming) ARTICLES From Privacy to Publicity: The Tort of Appropriation in the Age of Mass Consumption, Buffalo L aw R eview (forthcoming 2013) How the Movies Became Speech, Rutgers L aw R eview vol. 64(3): 665-745 (2012) The Laws of Image, New E ngland L aw R eview vol. 47: 23-91 (2012) Saving Privacy from History, De Paul L aw R eview vol. 61: 1-77 (2012) The Sidis Case and the Origins of Modern Privacy Law, C olumbia Journal of L aw and the A rts vol. 36: 21-77 (2012) Creating the Public Forum, A kron L aw R eview vol. 44: 809-866 (2011) The Death of the Public Disclosure Tort: A Historical Perspective, Yale Journal of L aw & the Humanities vol. 22: 171-215 (2010)

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Mark Bartholomew

Anya Bernstein

Guyora Binder

PROFESSOR

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

VICE DEAN FOR RESEARCH AND FACULTY DEVELOPMENT

JD, Yale Law School BA, Cornell University

PhD, University of Chicago JD, Yale Law School BA, Columbia College

SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR

JD, Yale Law School AB, Princeton University (716) 645-5959

AREAS OF INTEREST Intellectual Property Cyberlaw Legal History Advertising Law

“My current research examines the origins of modern trademark law, comparing understandings of consumer perception at the turn of the century with research into consumer decision making today. Trademark law has failed to adapt to new insights into human cognition. This disconnect has many important ramifications, from preventing much needed adjustments to unfair competition doctrine to calibrating the balance between intellectual property protection and free speech.”

(716) 645-3683

bartholo@buffalo.edu

ARTICLES

“Drawing on insights from anthropology and linguistics, my work asks how unacknowledged understandings of society affect legal processes, institutions, and outcomes. My research on Taiwan revealed how social understandings and political changes created a vibrant democracy in which the law remained not quite legitimate. Turning to U.S. legal cultures, I have asked how courts mediating between individuals and the executive branch understand governmental structure; and I have shown how administrative assumptions about the value and valence of information about individuals leads to dangerous distortions in government decision making and public policy. My current work, part of a larger project on legal and cultural understandings of government in our privatizing age, examines how the Supreme Court imagines the free market in an attempt to ascertain where current doctrine draws the line between the public and private spheres.”

Trademark Morality, William & M ary L aw R eview vol. 55 (forthcoming 2013) An Intersystemic View of Intellectual Property and Free Speech (with John Tehranian) George Washington L aw R eview vol. 81: 1-91 (2013) Causing Infringement (with Patrick McArdle) Vanderbilt Law Review vol. 64: 675-746 (2011) A Right is Born: Celebrity, Property, and Postmodern Lawmaking, C onnecticut L aw R eview vol. 44: 301-368 (2011) Advertising and Social Identity, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 58: 931-976 (2010) Foreword: Advertising and the Law, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 58: 717-720 (2010)

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(716) 645-2673

anyabern@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Administrative Law Asian Legal Cultures Federal Jurisdiction Law and Society Law and the Sociology of Knowledge

ARTICLES Catch-all Doctrinalism and Judicial Desire, University of Pennsylvania Law R eview Online vol. 161: 221-230 (2013) (invited response to Carlos M. Vázquez & Stephen I. Vladeck, State Law, the Westfall Act, and the Nature of the Bivens Question, University of Pennsylvania L aw R eview vol. 161: 510-583 (2013)) The Hidden Costs of Terrorist Watch Lists, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 61: 461-535 (2013) Congressional Will and the Role of the Executive in Bivens Actions: What is Special About Special Factors, Indiana Law Review vol. 45: 719-766 (2012) Semiotic Technologies, Temporal Reckoning, and the Portability of Meaning (with Paul Kockelman), Anthropological Theory vol. 12: 320-348 (2012) Introduction: Bureaucracy: Ethnography of the State in Everyday Life (with Elizabeth Mertz) PoLAR: Political & L egal A nthropology R eview vol. 34: 6-10 (2011)

“My recent book defends one of the most criticized features of American criminal law, the felony murder doctrine. I show that, contrary to what lawyers have been taught, the doctrine’s origins are modern, American and legislative rather than medieval, English and judicial; and that its current limits inhered in its original concept. I trace criticisms of the felony murder doctrine to overly cognitive conceptions of criminal culpability and urge that we reconceive culpability as a kind of meaning expressed by acts of wrongdoing. This theory of culpability justifies punishing not only felony murder, but also other crimes of motive such as genocide and terrorism.”

gbinder@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

Criminal Law

BOOKS

Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon: Bentham’s Principles of Morals and Legislation in Foundational T exts of C riminal L aw (Marcus Dubber, editor) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming)

Oxford I ntroductions to U.S. L aw: C riminal L aw (Oxford University Press, forthcoming)

Homicide in H andbook of C riminal L aw (Marcus Dubber & Tatjana Hörnle, editors) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming)

C riminal L aw: C ases and M aterials (with John Kaplan and Robert Weisberg) (Wolters-Kluwer, 7th edition, 2012)

Law and Literature in C ontemporary L iterary and C ultural T heory: T he Johns Hopkins Guide (Michael Groden & Martin Kreiswirth, editors)(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012) (288-294)

Jurisprudence Law and Literature

C riminal L aw: T eacher’s M anual (with Robert Weisberg) (Wolters-Kluwer, 7th edition, 2012) F elony Murder (Stanford University Press, 2012)

Critical Legal Studies in A C ompanion to P hilosophy of L aw and L egal T heory (D. Patterson, editor) (Blackwell Publishing, 2nd edition, 2010)

ARTICLES The Authority to Punish International Crimes, University of Toronto L aw Journal vol. 63: 278-309 (2013) Making the Best of Felony Murder, B oston University L aw R eview vol. 91(2): 403-559 (March 2011)

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“My research focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality and intimate relationships. By what techniques does American law favor, tolerate, or disfavor particular expressions of sexuality and forms of intimacy, and how does this treatment relate to prevailing moral, social, and political ideologies? My explorations of these questions tend to take a historical perspective. Current projects treat the first same-sex marriage cases of the early 1970s, Anita Bryant’s pivotal 1977 campaign against gay rights, and the complicated legacy of Oscar Wilde and his trials.”

Michael Boucai

Irus Braverman

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

MPhil, University of Cambridge JD, Georgetown University Law Center BA, Yale University

SJD, University of Toronto Faculty of Law MA, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem LLB, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

(716) 645-1743 mboucai@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3030

AREAS OF INTEREST

“I first came to realize the importance of the physical environment for legal practices when conducting an ethnographic study of translators in Jerusalem’s criminal court. Since then, my research has focused on the relationship between law and the physical and natural environment. I have explored Israel’s house demolitions in East Jerusalem, the changes that have occurred in checkpoints on the Israeli/Palestinian border, the war over tree landscapes in this region, and the regulation of public washrooms and animals in North American cities. My study of animals has culminated in my recently published Zooland: The Institution of Captivity (IPPY Award Winner). Currently, I am writing about the relationship between captive and wild animal population management.”

Criminal Law Family Law Law and Sexuality Legal History

ARTICLES Sexual Liberty and Same-Sex Marriage: An Argument from Bisexuality, San Diego L aw R eview vol. 49(2): 415-486 (2012) Sexual Epistemology and Bisexual Exclusion: A Response to Professor Russell Robinson’s “Masculinity as Prison: Race, Sexual Identity, and Incarceration,” C alifornia L aw R eview C ircuit vol. 2: 104-110 (2011) BOOK REVIEWS Journal of S ocial H istory vol. 47(4) (forthcoming 2014) (reviewing Vicki Eaklor, Queer A merica : A P eople ’s H istory of the United S tates (2011))

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irusb@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Law and Geography Legal Ethnography Animal Studies Law and Society Science and Technology Studies

BOOKS T he E xpanding Spaces of L aw: A T imely L egal Geography (with Nicholas Blomley, David Delaney and Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, editors) (Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2014) Z ooland : T he I nstitution of C aptivity (Stanford University Press, 2012) ARTICLES Arithmetic Panopticism: Population Management Models in the Anthropocene, Surveillance and S ociety (forthcoming 2014) Conservation without Nature: The Trouble with In Situ versus Ex Situ Conservation, Geoforum (forthcoming 2014) Animal Frontiers: A Tale of Three Zoos in Israel/Palestine, C ultural C ritique vol. 85: 122-162 (2013)

Animal Mobilegalities: The Regulation of Animal Movement in the American City, Humanimalia vol. 5(1): 104-135 (2013) Passing the Sniff Test: Police Dogs as Biotechnology, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 61: 81-168 (2013) Checkpoint Watch: Reflections on Israel’s Border Administration in the West Bank, S ocial & L egal Studies vol. 21: 297-320 (2012) A Tale of Two Zoos, Environment and P lanning A vol. 44: 2535-2541 (2012) Zooveillance: Foucault Goes to the Zoo, Surveillance & S ociety vol. 10(2): 119-133 (2012) Civilized Borders: A Study of Israel’s New Crossing Administration, A ntipode : A R adical Journal of Geography vol. 43(2): 264-295 (2011) Hidden in Plain View: Legal Geography from a Visual Perspective, Journal of L aw, C ulture , and the Humanities vol. 7(2): 173-186 (2011) Looking at Zoos, C ultural Studies vol. 25(6): 809-842 (2011) States of Exemption: The Legal and Animal Geographies of American Zoos,

E nvironment and P lanning A vol. 43(7): 1693-1706 (2011) Governing with Clean Hands: Automated Public Toilets and Sanitary Surveillance, Surveillance & Society vol. 8(1): 1-27 (2010) Zoo Registers: A Bewildering Bureaucracy, Duke E nvironmental L aw and Policy Forum vol. 21(1): 165-206 (2010) CHAPTERS Good Night, Zoo: Human-Animal-City Relations in Children’s Books in Virtual and I deal Worlds Part II (Ulrich Gehmann and Martin Reiche, editors) (Columbia University Press, forthcoming 2014) More-than-Human Legalities in The Wiley H andbook of L aw and Society (Patrick Ewick and Austin Sarat, editors) (Wiley Press, forthcoming 2014) Order and Disorder in the Urban Forest in Urban Forests, Trees, and Green Space : A Political Ecology Perspective (Anders Sandberg, Adrina Bardekjian and Sadia Butt, editors) (Routledge, forthcoming 2014) Who’s Afraid of Methodology? Advocating a Reflective Turn in Legal Geography in The Expanding Spaces of Law: A Timely Legal Geography (with Nicholas Blomley,

David Delaney and Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, editors) (Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2014) Captive for Life: Conserving Extinct Species through Ex Situ Breeding in The Ethics of Captivity (Lori Gruen, editor) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2013) Legal Tails: Policing American Cities through Animals in Urban Policing, Securitization, and R egulation (Randy K. Lippert and Kevin Walby, editors) (Routledge, forthcoming 2013) A Study of Animals and Law in the American City in L aw’s I dea of Nature (Keith H. Hirokawa, editor) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2013) Zootopia: Utopia and Dystopia in the Zoological Garden in E arth P erfect ? Utopia , Nature , and T he G arden (Annette Giesecke and Naomi Jacobs, editors) (Black Dog Press, 2012) (242-257) Potty Training: Nonhuman Inspection in the Public Washroom in Toilet : P ublic R estrooms and the Politics of Sharing (Harvey Molotch and Laura Noren, editors) (New York University, 2010) (65-86)

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Casual visitors to North American zoos know little of the complex web in which accredited zoos operate. Irus Braverman’s Zooland: The Institution of Captivity (Stanford University Press) opens up this insular world and lays bare its regulatory structure. Drawing on more than 70 interviews, Braverman shows how in the past 50 years, accredited zoos have come to redefine their mission from primarily one of entertainment to one of care and stewardship. She also describes how these zoos work cooperatively to manage their animals. “Although zoos are exempt from many state and federal laws, they nonetheless operate under a tight net of industry standards and guidelines, which are no less legal than federal laws,” Braverman says. These norms, enforced by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, regulate everything from the width of the moats for tiger enclosures to the number of holes in the container in which a gorilla is transported from one facility to another. “I was trying to understand and relay the complexity of this system,” the author says, “to show that no matter how you felt about zoos, you had to admit that they’ve developed a highly sophisticated administrative system based on incredible cooperation.”


“My research currently focuses on the intersection of corporate bankruptcy, bankruptcy trusts, and mass tort litigation. Recent articles include a study outlining the performance of 32 bankruptcy trusts and the implications for future asbestos personal injury victims, an analysis of individual plaintiffs’ roles in multidistrict mass tort litigation, and the practices that underlie specious claim patterns in comprehensive settlements and the use of stratified and targeted sampling to address these practices. My next article discusses the use of the debtor’s settlement history in the bankruptcy estimation process in asbestosrelated bankruptcies.”

S. Todd Brown

Luis E. Chiesa

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

DIRECTOR OF THE BUFFALO CRIMINAL LAW CENTER

JD, Columbia University School of Law BA, Loyola University of New Orleans

JSD, Columbia University School of Law LLM, Columbia University School of Law JD, University of Puerto Rico School of Law BBA, University of Puerto Rico

(716) 645-6213

(716) 645-3152 lechiesa@buffalo.edu

stbrown2@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

“My research lies at the intersection of criminal law, philosophy and comparative law. Drawing from my experience teaching and lecturing about criminal law in the United States, Canada, Latin America, Europe and Asia, my work aims to understand and critique domestic criminal law doctrines by looking at how other countries approach basic concepts of criminal theory.”

Bankruptcy Mass Tort and Business Law

ARTICLES Plaintiff Control in Multidistrict Mass Torts, C leveland State L aw R eview (forthcoming 2013) How Long is Forever This Time? The Broken Promise of Bankruptcy Trusts, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 61: 537-605 (2013) Constitutional Gaps in Bankruptcy, A merican Bankruptcy I nstitute L aw R eview vol. 20: 179-234 (2012)

AREAS OF INTEREST Animal Cruelty Laws Criminal Law Criminal Procedure Torts Jurisprudence

BOOKS Substantive C riminal L aw: C ases , C omments A nd C omparative M aterials (Carolina Academic Press, forthcoming 2014) In Spanish Derecho P enal Sustantivo (JTS Publishers, 2nd edition, 2013)

Specious Claims and Global Settlements, University of M emphis L aw R eview vol. 42: 559-628 (2012)

Punishing Without Free Will, Utah L aw R eview vol. 4: 1403-1460 (2011) When an Offense is Not an Offense: Rethinking the Supreme Court’s Beyond a Reasonable Doubt Jurisprudence, C reighton L aw R eview vol. 44: 647-703 (2011) In Spanish Derecho Penal Sustantivo: Término 2010-2011, University of P uerto R ico L aw R eview vol. 81: 342-372 (2012) Autores y Cooperadores, University of P uerto R ico L aw R eview vol. 79: 1163-1188 (2010) CHAPTERS

ARTICLES Actmissions, West Virginia L aw R eview vol. 116 (forthcoming 2013) Beyond War: Targeted Killings in Law and Morality (with Alexander K.A. Greenawalt) Washington & L ee L aw R eview vol. 69: 1371-1470 (2012) Consent is Not a Defense to Battery: A Reply to Professor Bergelson, Ohio State Journal of C riminal L aw vol. 9: 195-208 (2011) 12

Comparative Criminal Law in Oxford H andbook of C riminal L aw (Markus Dubber and Tatjana Hornle, editors) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2014)

Self-Defense and the Psychotic Aggressor (with George P. Fletcher) in C riminal L aw C onversations (Paul Robinson, Kim Ferzan and Stephen Garvey, editors) (Oxford University Press, 2010) (365-383)

2013 marked the publication of the second edition of Professor Luis Chiesa’s 300-page hornbook on substantive criminal law, Derecho Penal Sustantivo (JTS Publishers), written in Spanish for readers in the author’s native Puerto Rico.

Spanish Criminal Law (with Carlos Gómez Jara-Díez) in T he H andbook of C omparative C riminal L aw (Kevin Jon Heller, editor) (Stanford University Press, 2010) (488-530)

The book illustrates the general principles of criminal law, such as the issue of the defendant’s mental state and the question of self-defense, based on the Puerto Rican criminal code. It also incorporates insights from comparative law worldwide, including exploring how criminal law is treated in both common law and civil law systems.

In Spanish ADN y Proceso Penal in L os E stados Unidos : C inco P roblemas (Juan Luis Gómez-Colomer, editor) (Tirant Lo Blanch Publishers, forthcoming 2013)

The book, while in wide use by law students in Puerto Rico, is also intended for judges and practitioners, Chiesa says, as it demonstrates and addresses recurrent questions in criminal law theory.

La Mignonette in C asos Que H icieron D octrina en Derecho P enal (Pablo Sanchez Ostiz, editor) (La Ley Publishers, 2011) (95-109)

The second edition was made necessary by changes in the commonwealth’s legal code. The first edition was cited as “Best Legal Book” by the Puerto Rico Bar Association, and it has been cited at least 10 times by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court and 25 times by the Puerto Rico Court of Appeals.

Criminal Participation in the United States in Participation in C rime : D omestic and C omparative P erspectives (Michael Bohlander & Alan Reed, editors) (Ashgate, 2013) (469-487)

13


Kim Diana Connolly

Matthew Dimick

David M. Engel

VICE DEAN FOR LEGAL SKILLS

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

SUNY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE PROFESSOR

PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison JD, Cornell Law School BA, Brigham Young University

JD, University of Michigan Law School MA, University of Michigan AB, Harvard University

(716) 645-7968 mdimick@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2514 dmengel@buffalo.edu

PROFESSOR DIRECTOR OF CLINICAL LEGAL EDUCATION

LLM, George Washington University Law School JD, Georgetown University Law Center AB, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (716) 645-2092 kimconno@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Administrative Law Clinical Legal Education Environmental Law International Law Law and Science Law and Social Science Legal Education Legislation Natural Resources Law

“My substantive research focuses on a number of related areas, including wetlands law and policy as well as other environmental regulatory and related subjects. More recently I have added an interest in how the mass media covers environmental law and policy matters. I also have conducted research on student learning and andragogical issues, including work on experiential and interdisciplinary learning. In all cases I seek to bring serious scholarly study to pressing issues facing people and ecosystems on various levels.”

ARTICLES

AREAS OF INTEREST

Do Good to Get Barred: The New Empire State Pro Bono Requirement’s Potential Impact on Environmental Law Practitioners, T he New York E nvironmental L awyer (Spring-Summer 2013)

Corporations Empirical Legal Studies Employment Law Labor Law Law and Economics

Is It Time for Real Reform (with Mary Lynch) NYSBA Bar Journal (Sept. 2013)

“My research is located at the intersection of the study of labor markets, firms, and states, with a view toward analyzing the distributive fairness and allocative efficiency of the laws, policies, and institutions that inhabit these domains. The central question I am interested in is, ‘Can distributive equity be achieved without undermining, and perhaps while enhancing, economic efficiency?’”

Spinning Sackett: Assessing New and Traditional Media Coverage So Far, National Wetlands Newsletter vol. 34(3): 5-6 (2012) A Decade of Uncertainty: Precon, Leaked Guidance, and Where to Go From Here?, National Wetlands Newsletter vol. 33(3): 5-6 (May-June 2011) Navigating Tricky Ethical Shoals in Environmental Law: Parameters of Counseling and Managing Clients, Wyoming L aw R eview vol. 10(2): 443-460 (2010) CHAPTERS Marine Ecosystem Protection in O cean and C oastal L aw (American Bar Association, 2nd edition, forthcoming 2013) Climate Change in Wetland Ecosystems: Meeting the Needs and Welfare of the People and the Planet in C limate C hange R eader (W. Rodgers & M. Robinson-Dorn, editors) (Carolina Academic Press, 2011)

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ARTICLES Productive Unionism, University of California at Irvine Law R eview vol. 4 (forthcoming 2014) Compensation, Employment Security, and the Economics of Public Sector Labor Law, University of Toledo Law R eview vol. 43: 533-561 (2012) Labor Law, New Governance, and the Ghent System, North Carolina Law R eview, vol. 90(2): 1-55 (2012) Revitalizing Union Democracy: Labor Law, Bureaucracy, and Workplace Association, Denver University Law R eview vol. 88: 1-56 (2010) CHAPTERS A Profession of Its Own: The Rise of Health Information Professionals (with Mark C. Suchman) in A merican H ealthcare in M edical P rofessionalism in the New I nformation Age (D. Rothman and D. Blumenthal, editors) (Rutgers University Press, 2010) (132-164)

“My research across communities and cultures traces the ways in which rights become active, identities are forged, and law is woven into the fabric of day-to-day experiences. One line of work examines the earliest stages of the tort law system, when individuals suffer traumatic physical harms and, in response, turn toward or away from the law. Another line of work explores legal culture and legal consciousness in Southeast Asia, where dramatic social changes have transformed the role of law in everyday life. I am particularly interested in tracing the historical and religious roots of contemporary perceptions of law in Thailand.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Torts Law and Society Asian Legal Cultures Legal Ethnography Rights Consciousness

BOOKS Tort, C ustom, and K arma : Globalization and L egal C onsciousness in T hailand

(with Jaruwan S. Engel) (Stanford University Press, 2010) ARTICLES Perception and Decision at the Threshold of Tort Law: Explaining the Infrequency of Claims, De Paul L aw R eview vol. 62: 293-334 (2013) Vertical and Horizontal Perspectives on Rights Consciousness, I ndiana Journal of Global L egal Studies vol. 20: 423-455 (2012) Uprooted Justice: Transformations of Law and Everyday Life in Northern Thailand, Wisconsin I nternational L aw Journal vol. 29: 343-365 (2012)

Kanbanyaiphiset ruang lokaphiwat lae nitisamnük (Chiang Mai University Law School Commencement Lecture on Globalization and Legal Consciousness) R aphiphattanasak vol. 2554: 115-127 (2011) (in Thai) Lumping as Default in Tort Cases: The Cultural Interpretation of Injury and Causation, L oyola of L os A ngeles L aw R eview vol. 44:33-68 (2010) CHAPTERS The Spirits Were Always Watching: Buddhism, Secular Law, and Social Change in Thailand in A fter Secular L aw (Mateo TaussigRubbo, Winnifred F. Sullivan and Robert A. Yelle, editors) (Stanford University Press, 2011) (242-260) BOOK REVIEWS Southeast Asia R esearch vol. 19: 648-54 (2011) (reviewing David Streckfuss, Truth on T rial in T hailand : Defamation, T reason, and L èse -M ajesté (2010))

15


Charles Patrick Ewing

Rebecca R. French

James A. Gardner

V I CE DE AN FO R A C A D EM I C A F FA I RS

PROFESSOR

SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR

S UN Y DI S T I N G U I SH ED SER VI C E P R O FE S S O R

PhD, Cornell University JD, Harvard Law School BA, Syracuse University (716) 645-2770 cewing@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Forensic Psychology Violent Behavior The Role of Mental Health Professionals in National Security and Safety Professional Ethics

“Most of my research deals with the use of psychological, psychiatric and other scientific expertise in the resolution of legal conflicts. Primarily I am interested in the uses and abuses of psychological/psychiatric expert testimony, which plays a key, and sometimes decisive, role in criminal and civil litigation. I also continue to study the etiology of interpersonal violence, a critical concern in both criminal and civil litigation.”

BRIDGET AND THOMAS BLACK PROFESSOR

PhD, Yale University LLM, Yale Law School JD, University of Washington Law School BA, University of Michigan

DIRECTOR OF THE EDWIN F. JAECKLE CENTER FOR STATE AND LOCAL DEMOCRACY

JD, University of Chicago Law School BA, Yale University

(716) 645-2159 rrfrench@buffalo.edu

BOOKS

“In the course of my investigation of the Tibetan Legal System, I discovered a gaping hole in the substantial discipline of Religious Legal Studies — the study of Buddhist Legal Systems. Incredibly, almost nothing has been written on the legal systems that were influenced by Buddhism, one of the largest world religions with a 2,500-year history and 500 million followers. My project for the last few years has been to write in this area and to organize a wide array of international scholars to talk, think and write about this exciting new subject matter.”

P reventing the Sexual Victimization of C hildren : L egal , Psychological and P ublic Policy P erspectives

(Oxford Press, forthcoming 2014) Justice P erverted : Sex Offender L aw, Psychology, and P ublic Policy (Oxford University Press, 2011) ARTICLES A New Standard for Research on Juvenile Homicide Offenders and Victims, Psyc CRITIQUES vol. 57(15) (2012) CHAPTERS “Above all, do no harm”: The Role of Health and Mental Health Professionals in the Capital Punishment Process (with Steven K. Erickson) in A merica’s E xperiment with C apital P unishment (Carolina Academic Press, 3rd edition, 2013) Legal Contours of Expert Testimony (with Steven Erickson) in H andbook of Psychology (John Wiley & Sons, vol. 11, 2nd edition, 2012)

AREAS OF INTEREST Anthropology of Law

AREAS OF INTEREST Constitutional Structure of Politics

Comparative Law

Law and Democratic Theory

Law and Religion

State Constitutional Law

Property Law and Social Science

BOOKS Buddhism and L aw: A n I ntroduction (with Mark Nathan, editors) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2013) ARTICLES Buddhism and Natural Law (Symposium on Natural Law) Journal of Comparative Law (forthcoming 2013) CHAPTERS The Sakyadhita Movement: Buddhist Law, Feminism and Nuns in Law, Feminism and Religion (M. Failinger, E. Schiltz and S. Stabile, editors) (Ashgate Press 2013) Wisconsin v. Yoder: An Anthropologist Shapes a Supreme Court Decision in L aw and R eligion : C ases in C ontext (L.C. Griffin, editor) (Aspen Publishers, March 10, 2010)

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(716) 645-3607 jgard@buffalo.edu

Federalism

“Americans have long fretted about the disjunction between our high aspirations for the democratic electoral process and the desultory reality of the modern election campaign. My research examines the role of the law in constituting this disjunction. I am interested in how the law regulating campaigns operates in its actual institutional setting; how the findings of empirical social science determine what kinds of campaigns the law might feasibly aspire to institutionalize; and how democratic theory addresses the normative desirability of these institutional options.”

BOOKS E lection L aw in the A merican Political S ystem (with Guy-Uriel Charles) (Aspen, 2012) New F rontiers of State C onstitutional L aw: Dual E nforcement of Norms (with J. Rossi, editors) (Oxford University Press, 2011)

Sustainable Decentralization: Power, Extraconstitutional Influence, and Subnational Symmetry in the United States and Spain (with A. A. i Ninet), A merican Journal of C omparative L aw vol. 59: 491-527 (2011)

ARTICLES

The Dignity of Voters—A Dissent, University of Miami L aw R eview vol. 64: 435-463 (2010)

The Myth of State Autonomy: Federalism, Political Parties, and the National Colonization of State Politics, Journal of L aw and Politics vol. 29 (forthcoming 2013)

New York’s Inbred Judiciary: Pathologies of Nomination and Appointment of Court of Appeals Judges, Buffalo L aw R eview: The Docket vol. 58: 15-28 (2010)

Election Law as Applied Democratic Theory, St. L ouis University L aw Journal vol. 56: 689-699 (2012)

CHAPTERS

How to Do Things with Boundaries: Redistricting and the Construction of Politics, E lection L aw Journal vol. 11: 399-419 (2012) Anonymity and Democratic Citizenship, William & M ary Bill of R ights Journal vol. 19: 927-957 (2011) Anti-Regulatory Absolutism in the Campaign Speech Arena: Citizens United and the Implied Slippery Slope, C ornell Journal of L aw and P ublic Policy vol. 20: 673-717 (2011)

Dual Enforcement of Constitutional Norms (with Jim Rossi) in New F rontiers of S tate C onstitutional L aw : Dual E nforcement of C onstitutional Norms (with J. Rossi, editors) (Oxford University Press, 2011) BOOK REVIEWS L aw and Politics B ook R eview vol. 22(7): 327-332 (July 2012) (reviewing Michael S. Greve, T he Upside -D own C onstitution (2012))

17

James Gardner’s Election Law in the American Political System (Aspen Publishers), co-written with Guy-Uriel Charles of Duke University School of Law, is an accessible, comprehensive casebook designed for survey courses in the subject. Topping out at over 1,000 pages, the casebook is customizable as well, so that a professor can emphasize certain materials over others or construct an in-depth seminar. The authors cover such topics as the right to vote, redistricting, campaign finance, election administration, the Voting Rights Act and the rights of political parties. They also place the legal doctrine in context by including short background readings in democratic theory, history, policy and political science. In an appendix, the book includes the text of the U.S. Constitution. “Election law as a discipline … bridges the gap between our aspirations for, and the frequently messy reality of, our political lives,” the authors write. “It is the middle term in an equation that specifies whether and to what extent we realize perhaps the most significant dream of contemporary human beings: to live well under a just and lasting democracy.”


AREAS OF INTEREST Civil Litigation Corporations Comparative Corporate Governance and Civil Procedure Law of Democracy Legal Theory Law and Economics

“My research interests are in governance and institutional development in private and public law. My current focus is on how law affects the way in which governments and private organizations make use of knowledge resources and foster innovation.”

Michael Halberstam

Alfred S. Konefsky

Stuart G. Lazar

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PhD, Yale University JD, Stanford Law School BA, CUNY Brooklyn College

JD, Boston College Law School BA, Columbia University

LLM, New York University School of Law JD, University of Michigan Law School AB, University of Michigan

(716) 645-5130 mhalbers@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2392 konefsky@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2749 slazar@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES/VOLUMES Business Lobbying as an Informational Public Good: A Proposal to Tie Tax Deductions for Lobbying Expenses to Substantive Lobbying Disclosure (with Stuart Lazar) E lection L aw Journal (forthcoming 2014)

American Legal and Constitutional History

“My research interests focus primarily on issues in nineteenth century American Legal History, including the ideology and role of legal professional elites and groups in a democratic culture, the relationship between legal doctrine and its social context, and the borderline between legal history and literary history.”

E lection L aw Journal : C ampaign F inance and L obbying (with Paul Gronke & Daniel Tokaji, editors) (forthcoming) Litigation Discovery and Corporate Governance: The Missing Story About “The Genius of Corporate Law” (with Érica Gorga) E mory L aw R eview (forthcoming 2014) E lection L aw Journal : M ajor Developments in R edistricting (with Paul Gronke & Daniel Tokaji, editors) vol. 11(4): 355-548 (December 2012)

ARTICLES In This, the Winter of Our Discontent: Legal Practice, Legal Education, and the Culture of Distrust (with Barry Sullivan) L aw & S ocial I nquiry vol. 38 (forthcoming 2013) Justice Jackson’s 1946 Nuremberg Reflections at Buffalo: An Introduction (with Tara J. Melish) Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 60: 255-282 (2012) Piety and Profession: Simon Greenleaf and the Case of the Stillborn Bowdoin Law School, 1850-1861, New E ngland Quarterly vol. 85: 695-734 (2012) CHAPTERS Simon Greenleaf, Boston Elites, and the Social Meaning and Construction of the Charles River Bridge Case in T ransformations in A merican L egal H istory: E ssays in Honor of Morton J. Horwitz , vol. 2 (A. Brophy & D. Hamilton, editors) (Harvard University Press, 2011) (165-195)

The Party Line: Dimensions of Redistricting (with Daniel P. Tokaji and Paul Gronke), Election Law Journal vol. 11: 355-357 (2012) Process Failure and Transparency Reform in Local Redistricting, E lection L aw Journal vol. 11: 446-471 (2012) The Myth of “Conquered Provinces”: Probing the Extent of the VRA’s Encroachment on State and Local Autonomy, H astings L aw Journal vol. 62 (4): 923-1002 (2011) 18

“My research interest has focused on federal tax law. While it might seem like an oxymoron to use the terms ‘tax law’ and ‘interest’ in the same sentence, understanding the ‘whats’ and ‘whys’ of a text longer than the Bible has proved fascinating. The term ‘tax simplification’ is often discussed in Washington as being a cure for all our economic ills. However, it is quite clear that our nation’s politicians will never stop using the Internal Revenue Code as a mechanism for instituting social and economic policy. In fact, each change to the tax code made over the last couple of years, while championed as ‘simplification,’ makes it even harder for individuals and businesses to navigate their way through the maze of tax rules and regulations by which they are governed. And, no one has reason to believe that additional ‘reforms’ are not just around the corner.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Taxation Corporation Taxation Partnership Taxation Tax Policy

BOOKS M astering Partnership Taxation (Carolina Academic Press, 2013) ARTICLES Business Lobbying as an Informational Public Good: A Proposal to Tie Tax Deductions for Lobbying Expenses to Substantive Lobbying Disclosure (with Michael Halberstam) E lection L aw Journal (forthcoming 2014) Schooling Congress: The Current Landscape of the Tax Treatment of Higher Education Expenses and a Framework for Reform, M ichigan State L aw R eview vol. 2010: 1049-1129 (2011)

The Subsidization of Higher Education Expenses: Business Deductions and Tax Incentives (Part 1 – Ordinary and Necessary Business Expenses) M ertens L aw of F ederal I ncome Taxation : Developments and Highlights (11-20) (January 2010) The Subsidization of Higher Education Expenses: Business Deductions and Tax Incentives (Part 2 – Tax Incentives) M ertens L aw of F ederal I ncome Taxation : Developments and H ighlights (16-23) (February 2010) CHAPTERS Corporate Liquidations in White on New York Business E ntities vol. 1 (LexisNexis, forthcoming Fall 2013) The S Corporation Alternative in White on New York Business Entities vol. 1 (LexisNexis, 2013) (3-1-3-65)

The Unreasonable Case for a Reasonable Compensation Standard in the Public Company Context: Why It Is Unreasonable to Insist on Reasonableness, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 59: 937-1006 (2011)

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“One of the harder areas of tax law to actually master,” as Stuart Lazar says, is demystified in his book Mastering Partnership Taxation (Carolina Academic Press). The book takes readers through the life cycle of a partnership — beginning with partnership formations, covering how earnings and distributions to the partners are taxed, and ending with the tax implications of partnership liquidations and mergers. In the process, Lazar brings clarity to the often confusing implications of Section 1, Subchapter K, of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, which governs the taxation of partnerships. The book is neither casebook nor textbook — it’s a study aid for students seeking to master partnership tax. It is designed for law students, but also can be used by established practitioners looking to become familiar with the field. “I just found the intricacies of the law fascinating,” Lazar says. “To me, the complexities of the statute are like solving a puzzle. So much of tax law is policy and thinking about, how do you use the tax law to shape policy? And so much of it is ‘what do the words mean?’ To me, it’s all very interesting.”


Sagit Leviner

Meredith Kolsky Lewis

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

OVERSEAS AFFILIATED FACULTY, ONO ACADEMIC COLLEGE (ISRAEL)

JD, Georgetown University Law Center MS, Georgetown University BA, Northwestern University

SJD, University of Michigan Law School LLM, University of Michigan Law School LLB, University of Haifa Faculty of Law

(716) 645-1631 mlewis5@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3041 sleviner@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Tax & Globalization Tax Policy Tax Equity

“My research explores the coming together of normative and pragmatic aspects of tax policy design. It is interdisciplinary in orientation and it rests on the premise that developing a solid understanding of our tax system and how to best manage it requires broad understanding of social, economic, and political issues and methods of analysis that reside outside the immediate world of taxation. Such issues and methods not only shape our conception of what items to tax, in what manner, and for what purpose, but they often lie at the very heart of debates over these matters.”

ARTICLES

“My research focuses on international trade law, particularly issues relating to the World Trade Organization, free trade agreements, dispute settlement and trade policy. My scholarship is influenced by my background in international relations and economics. I also have a strong interest in the Asia-Pacific, a result of having lived and worked in New Zealand and Japan. I am currently conducting historical research into the origins of plurilateral trade agreements for an article I am writing that analyzes the implications for the multilateral trading system of modern plurilateral trade agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.”

T he I ntricacies of Tax & Globalization (with Eric Toder) C olumbia Journal of Tax L aw (forthcoming Spring 2014) The Normative Underpinnings of Taxation, Nevada L aw Journal vol. 13(1): 95-133 (2012) (reprinted in B eyond E conomic E fficiency in Tax L aw (Aspen Publishing, 2013)) Paid Preparers as Gatekeepers for Tax Compliance in the United States: An Empirical Investigation with Policy Implications, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 60(4): 1079-1138 (2012) CHAPTERS Contemplating on the Meaning & Attainment of the Three Goals of Taxation in Honoring A rie L apidot (with Tali Nir) (Hebrew University Press, forthcoming 2014) (in Hebrew) International Tax and Developments: National Report on Israel Tax System for the 19th Congress of the International Academy of Comparative Law (Springer Publishing, forthcoming 2014) 20

AREAS OF INTEREST International Economic Law International Trade Law Dispute Settlement Free Trade Agreements World Trade Organization Law

BOOKS T rade Agreements at the C rossroads (with Susy Frankel, editors) (Routledge, forthcoming 2013) I nternational E conomic L aw and National Autonomy (with Susy Frankel, editors) (Cambridge University Press, 2010) ARTICLES Food Miles: Environmental Protection or Disguised Protectionism? (with Andrew Mitchell) Michigan Journal of International L aw vol. 35 (forthcoming 2014) The TPP and the RCEP (ASEAN + 6) as Potential Paths Toward Deeper Asian Economic Integration, A sian Journal of World T rade Organizations and I nternational H ealth L aw and Policy vol. 8 (forthcoming 2013)

Dissent as Dialectic: Horizontal and Vertical Disagreement in WTO Dispute Settlement, Stanford Journal of I nternational L aw vol. 48(1): 1-45 (2012)

C o - operation : A L egal A nalysis of the T rans -Pacific Partnership Agreement (Tania Voon, editor) (Edward Elgar, forthcoming 2013)

The Prisoner’s Dilemma Posed by Free Trade Agreements: Can Open Access Provisions Provide an Escape? Chicago Journal of International Law vol. 11: 631-661 (2011)

The Web of Trade Agreements and Alliances and Impacts on Regulatory Autonomy (with Susy Frankel, Chris Nixon and John Yeabsley) in R ecalibrating Behaviour: Smarter R egulation in a Global World (Susy Frankel and Deborah Ryder, editors) (LexisNexis, 2013) (17-61)

The Trans-Pacific Partnership: New Paradigm or Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing? Boston College International & Comparative Law Review vol. 34: 27-52 (2011) CHAPTERS The Significance of the Trans-Pacific Partnership for the Asia-Pacific in T he T rans -Pacific Partnership Agreement : A C ritical A ssessment (National Autonomous University of Mexico, forthcoming 2014) The ASEAN – Australia / New Zealand FTA in Bilateral and R egional T rade Agreements : C ase Studies (Lorand Bartels, Simon Lester and Bryan Mercurio, editors)(Cambridge University Press, 2nd edition, forthcoming 2013) Development and the TPPA in T rade L iberalisation and I nternational

What to Do When Disagreement Strikes? The Complexity of Dispute Settlement under Trade Agreements (with Peter L.H. Van den Bossche) in T rade Agreements at the C rossroads (with Susy Frankel, editors) (Routledge, 2013) (9-25) Achieving a Free Trade Agreement of the Asia-Pacific: Does the TPP Present the Most Attractive Path? in The Trans-Pacific Partnership: A Quest For A TwentyFirst-Century Trade Agreement (C.L. Lim, D. Elms and P. Low, editors) (Cambridge University Press, 2012) (223-241) Open Accession Provisions in FTAs: A Bridge Between Regionalism and Multilateralism? in Multilateralism and R egionalism in Global E conomic G overnance :

T rade , I nvestment and F inance (Junji Nakagawa editor) (Routledge, 2011) (82-90) The Politics and Indirect Effects of Asymmetrical Bargaining Power in Free Trade Agreements in T he Politics of I nternational E conomic L aw (Tomer Broude, Marc Busch and Ameila Porges, editors) (Cambridge University Press, 2011) (19-39) Trade Agreements and Regulatory Autonomy: The Effect on National Interests (with Susy Frankel) in Learning From the Past, Adapting for the Future : R egulatory R eform in New Zealand (Susy Frankel, editor) (LexisNexis, 2011) (411-444) Safety Standards and Indigenous Products: What Role for Traditional Knowledge? in International Economic Law and National Autonomy (with Susy Frankel, editors) (Cambridge University Press, 2010) (169-192) BOOK REVIEWS World T rade R eview vol. 11: 346-348 (2012) (reviewing T he P rospects of I nternational T rade R egulation : F rom F ragmentation to C oherence (Thomas Cottier and Panagiotis Delimatsis, editors) (Cambridge, 2011))

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Anjana Malhotra

Susan V. Mangold

Isabel Marcus

Lynn Mather

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

JD, New York University School of Law BA, Duke University

CO-DIRECTOR OF THE PROGRAM FOR EXCELLENCE IN FAMILY LAW

JD, Harvard Law School AB, Harvard University

PhD, University of California, Berkeley JD, University of California, Berkeley School of Law MA, University of California, Berkeley BA, Barnard College

SUNY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE PROFESSOR

(716) 645-2428 svm@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2108 imarcus@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3696 anjanama@buffalo.edu

“My research explores immigration law and policy, constitutional law, and international human rights, with a particular focus on substantive theories of equality and access to justice. I link these areas by exploring the manner in which legal doctrine, procedures and institutional arrangements can optimally interact to promote equality and fundamental rights. In asking these questions, I am particularly interested in how legal institutions, legislation and doctrine both regulate and are affected by larger issues of race, ethnicity, citizenship, social and economic class and other markers of identity and membership.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Immigration Law Constitutional Law International Human Rights Equality and Access to Justice

ARTICLES Miranda and The Immigrant, S outhern M ethodist University L aw R eview (forthcoming) Ironbound Underground: Wage Theft & Workplace Violations Among Day Laborers in Newark’s East Ward, Seton H all R eport : 1-24 (July 2010)

22

“My current research project examines how the source (federal/state/local) and type (flexible/dedicated) of funding impact the health outcomes for children in foster care. I am the lead academic researcher on the project that is funded by the Public Health Law Research Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and am working closely with community based partners in Ohio and with a data analysis team at University of Rochester. Our preliminary findings show a strong correlation between local flexible funding and better outcomes for children in care but we are digging deeper into leadership styles, relationships with other agencies and other factors that could impact the findings. Our study has implications for funding and policy development and we are working with the decision-makers every step of the way to translate our research into improvements for the child welfare system in Ohio and nationally.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Family Law Juvenile Law Child Protection Law

BOOKS C hildren and T he L aw: D octrine , Policy and P ractice (with Abrams and Ramsey) (West Publishing, 5th edition, forthcoming 2014) ARTICLES Using Community Based Participatory Research to Study the Relationship between Sources and Types of Funding and Mental Health Outcomes for Children Served by the Child Welfare System in Ohio (with Catherine Cerulli, Gregory Kapcar, Crystal Ward Allen, Hua He and Kim Kaukeinen) Journal of L aw & Policy vol. 21: 113-139 (2012) CHAPTERS Child Welfare Law in Oxford Bibliographies in C hildhood Studies (Heather Montgomery, editor) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2013)

“For the past twenty years I have devoted my scholarly, activist and pedagogical attention to human rights issues with particular emphasis on women’s human rights. Much of my lecturing and training and provision of scholarships has been to NGO lawyers focusing on women’s rights in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. More specifically, I have worked with them on violence against women in post-socialist societies. My concerns extend to legal, political and social theory and practice regarding gender, nationalism, civil society, and efforts to develop and implement a rule of law. To supplement my domestic teaching, I teach at universities and consult with NGOs in post-socialist countries on a regular ongoing basis.”

PhD, University of California, Irvine BA, University of California, Los Angeles

(716) 645-5541 lmather@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

AREAS OF INTEREST Family Law

Law and Society

Domestic Violence

The Legal Profession

International Human Rights

Legal Ethics

International Women’s Human Rights

Courts and Public Policy

Remedies

Statutory Interpretation

“Legal ethics has traditionally been explored through philosophical arguments, the wording of professional rules, or individual cases of lawyer misconduct. What is missing from these perspectives is attention to the context of lawyers’ work. Through a focus on context and using empirical methods of inquiry, we gain enormous insight into the ethical decision making of lawyers. We can see, as my recent research shows, the importance of economic, social, and organizational features of lawyers’ practice for how lawyers perceive and resolve ethical dilemmas in their work.”

ARTICLES Women’s Rights are Human Rights: A Call for Educational Reform in Law Faculties in Post-Socialist States (forthcoming) CHAPTERS Wife Beating: Ideology and Practice under Socialism in Hungary, Poland and Romania in Gender A nd E veryday L ife Under State S ocialism in E ast and C entral Europe (J. Massino and S. Penn, editors) (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)

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BOOKS L awyers in P ractice : Ethical Decision M aking in C ontext (with Leslie C. Levin, editors) (University of Chicago Press, 2012) ARTICLES Lawyer Fidelity: An Ethical and Empirical Critique, NOMOS vol. LIV: 106-135 (2013) CHAPTERS Client Grievances and Lawyer Conduct: The Challenges of Divorce Practice (with C.A. McEwen) in L awyers in Practice : Ethical Decision Making in Context (with Leslie C. Levin, editors) (University of Chicago Press, 2012) (63-86) Scientists at Bar: The Professional World of Patent Lawyers (with J.M. Conley) in L awyers in Practice : Ethical Decision Making in Context (with Leslie C. Levin, editors) (University of Chicago Press, 2012) (245-268) Why Context Matters (with Leslie C. Levin) in L awyers in Practice : Ethical Decision Making in Context (with Leslie C. Levin, editors) (University of Chicago Press, 2012) (3-24) How and Why Do Lawyers Misbehave? Lawyers, Discipline and Collegial Control in The Paradox of Professionalism : L awyers and the Possibility of Justice (S.L. Cummings, editor) (Cambridge University Press, 2011) (109-131)


“My interest is in exploring questions of economic policy and regulation from outside the conventional boundaries of ‘private’ law and neo-classical economics. I am interested in how law and politics shape markets and in how economic policies reflect and reproduce ideas about citizenship and social status. I draw on critical perspectives of legal theory to examine the relationships between questions of economics and questions of race, gender, class, sexuality and disability status. My work challenges the divide between economic and moral or social regulation.”

Martha T. McCluskey

Errol E. Meidinger

WILLIAM J. MAGAVERN FACULTY SCHOLAR AND PROFESSOR

MARGARET W. WONG PROFESSOR

JSD, Columbia University School of Law LLM, Columbia University School of Law JD, Yale Law School BA, Colby College

HONORARY PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG, GERMANY

(716) 645-2326 mcclusk@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-6692 eemeid@buffalo.edu

DIRECTOR OF THE BALDY CENTER FOR LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY

PhD, Northwestern University JD, Northwestern University School of Law

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

CHAPTERS

Law and Economics

Reforming Insurance to Support Workers’ Rights to Compensation, A merican Journal of I ndustrial M edicine vol. 55: 545-559 (2012)

How Money for Legal Theory Disadvantages Feminism in Issues in L egal S cholarship (K. Abrams, editor) (forthcoming)

Welfare Law Gender and Law Critical Legal Studies Health Law Employment Law Family Law Disability Law Civil Rights Law Race and the Law Insurance and the Law Regulated Industries Energy Law

How Money for Legal Theory Disadvantages Feminism, T he Berkeley L aw Journal of I ssues in L egal S cholarship vol. 9(2) (The Berkeley Electronic Press, 2011) How the “Unintended Consequences” Story Promotes Unjust Intent and Impact, Berkeley L a R aza L aw Journal (L at C rit XV S ymposium Issue) vol. 22: 22-51 (2011) Taxing Family Work: Aid for Affluent Husband Care, C olumbia Journal of Gender and L aw vol. 20: 109-219 (2011) How the Biological/Social Divide Limits Disability and Equality, Washington University Journal of L aw & Policy vol. 33: 1-36 (2010)

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Defending and Developing Critical Feminist Theory as Law Leans Rightward in T ranscending the B oundaries of L aw (M. A. Fineman, editor) (Routledge, 2010) (352-366) From the Welfare State to the Militarized Market: Losing Choices, Controlling Losers in Accumulating I nsecurity, Securing Accumulation (S. Feldman, C. Geisler, and G. Menon, editors) (Georgia University Press, 2010) (27-48)

“My current research focuses on how non-governmental actors establish and maintain transnational regulatory programs in fields where governments have typically been the main regulators — e.g., environmental protection and food safety. I am studying how effective, fair, and democratic nongovernmental programs are, and particularly how competition among them affects the overall regulatory system. It is important to understand these processes because the nation states have had great difficulty in creating effective international environmental and social regulatory programs. As non-governmental programs become more important we may also need to revise some of our main assumptions about what counts as law and how law is made and implemented.”

MA, Northwestern University BA, University of North Dakota

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

Administrative Law

Importing Democracy: Promoting Participatory Decision Making in Russian Forest Communities (with Maria Tysiachniouk) in E nvironmental Democracy: Facing Uncertainty (C. Claeys & M. Jacqué, editors) (Peter Lang Publishers, London and Brussels, 2011)

Environmental and Natural Resources Law Indigenous Peoples’ Law International Environmental Law International Trade and Environment Legal Theory Property Sociology of Law

ARTICLES Are Import-State Timber Legality Requirements Catalyzing a New Global Forest Law?, Forest Policy and E conomics (forthcoming 2013)

Protect, Respect, Remedy and Participate: ‘New Governance’ for the Ruggie Framework (with Tara J. Melish) in Business and Human R ights at a C rossroads : the L egacy of John Ruggie (R. Mares, editor) (Martinus Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, 2011) (1-34)

Transnational Business Governance Interactions: Conceptualizing a Terrain (with Kenneth W. Abbott, Julia Black, Burkard Eberlein, and Stepan Wood) R egulation and G overnance (forthcoming 2013) Forest Certification and Democracy, European Journal of Forest R esearch vol. 130(3): 407-419 (2010)

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Tara J. Melish

Teresa A. Miller

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

DIRECTOR OF THE BUFFALO HUMAN RIGHTS CENTER

“My current scholarship trains a comparative lens on the types, numbers and use patterns of the institutional spaces recognized by national and sub-national communities for deepening domestic engagement with human rights and human rights treaty norms. A mapping of these institutional spaces, particularly with respect to their quality, quantity and accessibility to disaggregated population groups, provides a more accurate and reliable picture of human rights treaty compliance, I contend, than other measures typically espoused in the empirical literature. In particular, my work seeks to describe how these spaces are used by distinct groups to set in motion broader processes of participatory engagement to advance dignitary interests.”

JD, Yale Law School BA, Brown University

LLM, University of Wisconsin Law School JD, Harvard Law School BA, Duke University

(716) 645-2257 tmelish@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2391 tmiller@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

Public International Law

An Eye Toward Effective Enforcement: A Technical-Comparative Approach to the Drafting Negotiations in Voices From Within : C ivil S ociety’s I nvolvement in the Drafting of the C onvention on the R ights of P ersons with Disabilities (Sabatello and Schulze, editors) (Penn University Press) (forthcoming 2013)

International Human Rights Law Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Comparative Constitutional Law Comparative Adjudication Standards

ARTICLES Implementing Truth and Reconciliation: Comparative Lessons for the Republic of Korea, Buffalo Human R ights L aw R eview vol. 19: 1-72 (2012) Justice Jackson’s 1946 Nuremberg Reflections at Buffalo: An Introduction (with Alfed S. Konefsky) Buffalo L aw R eview, vol. 60(2): 255-282 (2012) Truth Commission Impact: A ParticipationBased Implementation Agenda, Buffalo Human R ights L aw R eview vol. 19 (2012) Maximum Feasible Participation of the Poor: New Governance, New Accountability, and a 21st Century War on the Sources of Poverty, Yale Human R ights & Development L aw Journal vol. 13: 1-133 (2010)

“Although traditionally viewed as distinct from the criminal justice system, the United States immigration system has adopted many of the techniques and objectives associated with crime control within the War on Drugs. In the wake of the terror attacks of 9/11, the convergence of our civil system of immigration regulation and our failing domestic criminal justice system has intensified. As a scholar, I am committed to documenting the points of convergence between these two systems and underscoring the ironies that cast into doubt the legitimacy of this potent new system of social control.”

The Inter-American Court of Human Rights: Beyond Progressivity in S ocial R ights Jurisprudence : E merging T rends in C omparative and I nternational L aw (M. Langford, editor) (Cambridge University Press) (Spanish Edition, 2011) Protect, Respect, Remedy and Participate: ‘New Governance’ for the Ruggie Framework (with E. Meidinger) in Business and Human R ights at a Crossroads : The Legacy of John Ruggie (R. Mares, editor) (Martinus Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, 2011) (1-34)

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AREAS OF INTEREST Criminal Punishment Theory Immigration Law Prisoner Law Criminal Procedure Law and Documentary Studies

ARTICLES Bright Lines, Black Bodies: The Florence Strip Search Case and its Dire Repercussions, A kron L aw R eview vol. 46: 433-472 (2013) Encountering Attica: Documentary Filmmaking as Pedagogical Tool, Journal of L egal E ducation vol. 62(2): 231-241(2012) Lessons Learned, Lessons Lost: Immigration Enforcement’s Failed Experiment with Penal Severity, Fordham Urban L aw Journal vol. 38: 217-246 (2010)


Athena D. Mutua

Makau W. Mutua

FLOYD H. AND HILDA L. HURST FACULTY SCHOLAR AND PROFESSOR

DEAN SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR

LLM, Harvard Law School MA, American University JD, American University Washington College of Law BA, Earlham College

FLOYD H. AND HILDA L. HURST FACULTY SCHOLAR

SJD, Harvard Law School LLM, Harvard Law School LLM, University of Dar-es-Salaam (Tanzania) LLB, University of Dar-es-Salaam (Tanzania)

(716) 645-2873 admutua@buffalo.edu

“My research examines the role of law in upholding and disrupting the socio-historical ordering of the status quo, particularly as it relates to systems of race, gender, sex, sexuality and class. These systems form mutually reinforcing material conditions and ideologies that structure the institutions and policies that govern human interaction, production, and access to goods, both material and expressive. Exposing how law is used to maintain the unequal distribution of resources is the center of my work. Attempting to develop legal and other approaches that might aid in disrupting these systems provides its challenge and the inspiration.”

AREAS OF INTEREST

(716) 645-2311 mutua@buffalo.edu

CHAPTERS

Civil Rights

Latino Masculinities in T he E ncyclopedia

Corporations

of L atino /a Politics , L aw and S ocial

Critical Race and Feminist

Movements (Oxford University Press) (forthcoming 2013)

Legal Theory

ARTICLES Multidimensionality is to Masculinities what Intersectionality is to Feminism, Nevada L aw Journal vol. 13: 101-129 (2013) Valuing Difference, Exercising Care in Oz: The Shaggy Man’s Welcome, S outhern C alifornia I nterdisciplinary L aw Journal vol. 20: 215-248 (2010)

The Multidimensional Turn: Revisiting Progressive Black Masculinities in Multidimensional M asculinities and L aw: F eminist T heory M eets C ritical R ace T heory (Frank R. Cooper and Anne McGinley, editors) (New York University Press, 2012) (78-95) Law and Critical Race Theory in H andbook on R ace and Ethnic Studies (Patricia Hill Collins and John Solomon, editors) (Sage Publications, 2010) (275-305) Mills v. Board of Education of Anne Arundel County, and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Brown in E ncyclopedia of A frican A merican E ducation (K. Lomotey, editor) (Sage Publications, 2010)

“My scholarship has centered on state legitimacy, postcolonialism, constitutionalism, and the critiques of the human rights idiom. In a world that is increasingly defined by relativism — and the expansion of the meaning and content of freedom — shackles of state power are constantly being loosened. Human rights is the medium of choice for this discourse which has become indispensable in post-colonial societies, by far the overwhelming majority of the earth’s inhabitants. How societies resolve the questions I tackle may very well determine the pace at which the chasm between power and powerlessness shrinks or grows.”

AREAS OF INTEREST

BOOK REVIEWS

Public International Law

A merican Journal of I nternational L aw vol. 104: 532-538 (2010) (reviewing Jeremy I. Levitt (editor), A frica : M apping New Boundaries in I nternational L aw (2008))

Human Rights International Business Transactions Post-Colonialism Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) State Reconstruction Post-Conflict Societies Constitution-Making Transitional Justice

CHAPTERS A Critique of Rights in Transitional Justice: the African Experience in R ethinking Transitions : Equality and Social Justice in S ocieties E merging from C onflict (G. Aguilar and F. Gomez Isa, editors) (Intersentia, 2011) (31-45) Sexual Orientation and Human Rights: Putting Homophobia on Trial in A frican Sexualities (S. Tamale, editor) (Pambazuka Press, 2011) (452-462) Human Rights: Critiques in T he Oxford E ncyclopedia of P eace (Nigel J. Young, editor) (Oxford University Press, 2010) (353-355)

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“Much of my research lies at the intersection of criminal procedure and structural constitutional law. I am currently exploring how political and economic conditions affect the capacity of courts to solve difficult doctrinal problems. Using a methodological approach that integrates doctrinal analysis with legal theory and social science, my work challenges some common assumptions concerning how institutional pressures shape both constitutional and statutory interpretation.”

Anthony O’Rourke

Nils Olsen

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

JD, Columbia Law School BA, University of Michigan

JD, Columbia University School of Law BA, University of Wisconsin

(716) 645-3097 aorourke@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3193 nolsen@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

“My research interests remain centered in areas that I have taught both substantively and clinically. First is the area of federal habeas corpus, alas largely relegated to legal history and threshold defenses today. I remain interested in the differing roles that the concept of prejudice plays in constitutional criminal procedure (from harmless error to an element of substantive constitutional rights) and the relationship between legislative concerns about death penalty post-conviction advocacy and the ultimate evisceration of the writ. In the area of environmental justice, I remain committed to considering issues of rural location and class in governmental facility citing decisions of hazardous and solid waste disposal facilities.”

Criminal Law & Procedure Constitutional Law Legislation Statutory Interpretation Legal Theory

ARTICLES Windsor Beyond Marriage: Due Process, Equality and Undocumented Immigration, William and M ary L aw R eview vol. 103 (forthcoming 2013) Structural Overdelegation in Criminal Procedure, Journal of C riminal L aw and C riminology vol. 103(2): 407-474 (Spring 2013) Theorizing American Freedom, M ichigan L aw R eview vol. 110: 1101-1122 (2012) The Political Economy of Criminal Procedure Litigation, Georgia L aw R eview vol. 44: 721-779 (2011)

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AREAS OF INTEREST Civil Procedure Civil Rights Community Development Environmental Law Post-Conviction Remedies

ARTICLES A Call for Civically Engaged Educational Policy Related Scholarship (with Robert Granfield, Yoshiko Nozaki and Lois Weiss) C omparative and Global Studies in E ducation (forthcoming)


“My research centers on the evolving meaning of property. I am particularly interested in how shifting meanings and interpretations affect environmental values and regulatory schemes. My recent line of inquiry examines the intersection between ‘public’ and ‘private’ land conservation and how that moving line influences property and environmental law. I am intrigued by our relations to land and decisions about conservation at multiple scales. I have been engaging with individual decisions regarding land use and the emergence of conservation easements as a preferred method of conservation. Where private agreements regarding land use form the backbone of our conservation strategies, we elevate the role of the private landowner over community needs and desires.”

Jessica Owley

Stephanie L. Phillips

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

PhD, University of California, Berkeley JD, University of California, Berkeley School of Law MS, University of California, Berkeley MLA, University of California, Berkeley BA, Wellesley College

JD, Harvard Law School BA, University at Buffalo

(716) 645-8182 jol@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2201 slp@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Environmental Law Property Natural Resources Federal Indian Law Legislation and Statutory Interpretation Administrative Law

ARTICLES Cultural Conservation Easements, H eritage & S ociety (forthcoming 2014) Green Siting for Green Energy (with Amy Morris and Emily Capello) Journal of E nergy and E nvironmental L aw vol. 5 (forthcoming 2014) Mitigating the Impacts of the Renewable Energy Gold Rush, Minnesota Journal of Law Science and T echnology vol. 15 (forthcoming 2013) Towards Engaged Scholarship (with John Nolon, Michelle Bryan Mudd, Michael Burger, Kim Connolly, Nestor Davidson, Matthew Festa, Jill I. Gross, Lisa Heinzerling, Keith Hirokawa, Tim Iglesias, Patrick C. Mc Ginley, Sean Nolon, Uma Outka, Kalyani Robbins, Jonathan Rosenbloom and Christopher Serkin) Pace L aw R eview vol. 33 (forthcoming 2013) What Exactly are Exactions? New York E nvironmental L awyer (forthcoming 2013)

From Citizen Suits to Conservation Easements: The Increasing Private Role in Public Permit Enforcement, E nvironmental L aw R eporter News and A nalysis vol. 43: 10486-10491 (June 2013) The Increasing Privatization of Environmental Law, A kron L aw R eview vol. 46: 1091-1131 (2013) Rethinking Sustainability to Meet the Climate Change Challenge (with Michael Burger, Elizabeth Burleson, Rebecca Bratspies, Robin Kundis Craig, Alexander Harrington, Keith Hirokawa, Sarah Karkoff, Katrina Kuh, Stephen Miller, Patrick Parenteau, Melissa Powers, Shannon Roesler and Jonathan Rosenbloom) E nvironmental L aw R eporter News and A nalysis vol. 43: 10342-10357 (May 2013) Exacted Conservation Easements: Emerging Concerns with Enforcement, P robate & P roperty vol. 51 (January/February 2012) Exacting Conservation Easements in California, E nvironmental L aw News vol. 21: 3-9 (Winter 2012) The Future of the Past: Historic Preservation Easements, Z oning L aw and P ractice R eport vol. 35 (10): 1-11 (November 2012)

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Neoliberal Land Conservation and Social Justice, Union for C onservation of Nature Academy of E nvironmental L aw E-Journal vol. 31: 6-17 (2012) Who Should Protect the Forests?: Conservation Easements in the Forest Legacy Program (with Stephen Tulowiecki) Public L and and R esources L aw R eview vol. 33: 47-93 (2012) Changing Property in a Changing World: A Call for the End of Perpetual Conservation Easements, Stanford E nvironmental L aw Journal vol. 30: 121-173 (2011) Conservation Easements at the Climate Change Crossroads, L aw & C ontemporary P roblems vol. 74: 199-228 (2011) Distributed Graduate Seminars: An Interdisciplinary Approach (with Adena Rissman) Pace E nvironmental L aw R eview vol. 28: 88-101 (2011) The Enforceability of Exacted Conservation Easements, Vermont Law Review vol. 36: 261-302 (2011)

CHAPTERS Preservation as a Flawed Mitigation Strategy in Beyond Jurisdiction: Wetlands Policy for the Next Generation (Kim Connolly, editor) (SUNY Buffalo Press, forthcoming 2013) Property Constructs and Nature’s Challenge to Perpetuity in E nvironmental L aw and C ontrasting I deas of Nature : A C onstructivist A pproach (K. Hirokawa, editor) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2013) Takings in T he Year in R eview 2011 (ABA Section on Environment, Energy, and Resources, 2012) (343-344) Tribes as Conservation Easement Holders: Is a Partial Property Interest Better than None? in T ribes , L and and the E nvironment (Ezra Rosser and Sarah Krakoff, editors) (Ashgate Press, 2012) (171-194)

“My focus is upon the juncture of law, religion, and politics. These intersectors are being rethought and refought in many places on the globe, including Iraq, Kenya, Nigeria, Afghanistan, and the United States. To enrich the interdisciplinary aspect of this work, I am presently pursuing a Master’s degree in Theology at Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Conflict of Laws Law and Religion Critical Race Theory Just War Theory Securities Regulation

ARTICLES Trying a New Way: Barack Obama’s Tolerance of Intolerance, Journal of Gender , S ocial Policy and the L aw vol. 18(3): 803-809 (2010) CHAPTERS ‘Intolerance of Intolerance’ in the Unitarian Controversy: The Theology of Baker v. Fales in A fter Secular L aw (M. Taussig-Rubbo, W. F. Sullivan and R. A. Yelle, editors) (Stanford University Press, 2011) (101-118)

Use of Conservation Easements by Local Governments in Greening L ocal G overnment (Patricia Salkin and Keith Hirokawa, editors) (ABA Publishing, 2012) (237-255) 33


“My primary interests and focus for research involve the implications of technologies that enable the creation, distribution, alteration and communication of content on underlying rights and supportive legal structures. These are exciting and uncertain times, particularly in the movement from an analog to a digital society. This, coupled with globalization, decentralization, the internet, open sourcing and collaborative venturing poses significant challenges for sustainable social, legal and economic regimes.”

Robert I. Reis

John Henry Schlegel

Matthew Steilen

PROFESSOR

FLOYD H. AND HILDA L. HURST FACULTY SCHOLAR AND PROFESSOR

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

LLM, University of Southern California Gould School of Law JD, New York University School of Law BA, Adelphia University

JD, University of Chicago Law School BA, Northwestern University

JD, Stanford Law School PhD, Northwestern University BA, Carleton College

(716) 645-2354 reis@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2746 schlegel@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-7918 mjsteile@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

Intellectual Property

Law Schools under Siege: The Challenge to Enhance Knowledge, Creativity and Skill Training, Ohio Northern University L aw R eview (Symposium Issue : L egal E ducation) vol. XXXVIII: 855-883 (2011-2012)

Law and Technology Law and Science Law and Social Science Real Estate Transactions Local Government

BOOKS Intellectual Property: Private R ights, the P ublic I nterest, and the

R egulation of C reative Activity (with Shubha Ghosh, Richard Gruner, and Jay Kesan) (West, 2nd edition, 2010)

Progress, Innovation and Technology: A Delicate “Google” Balance, Buffalo I ntellectual P roperty L aw Journal vol. 7(2): 1-24 (2012) Smoke and Mirrors: America Invents Act 2011: A Chill in the Air, A kron I ntellectual P roperty L aw Journal vol. 6: 301-335 (Summer 2012) Checks, Balances and Judicial Wizardry: Constitutional Delegation and Congressional Legislation, A kron I ntellectual P roperty L aw Journal vol. 5: 251-278 (Spring 2011)

“I am at work on a book about law and economy in the 1950s. What fascinates about this now long passed time is that its understanding of what makes up a ‘good economy’ is so unlike our own, and yet, that lost understanding structures so much of the debate about today’s economy. Such nostalgia for an unrecoverable past is pathological, but there may be a theme here. Most of my earlier work is directed toward recovering pasts that have been pathologically distorted in our presents.”

AREAS OF INTEREST

“My current research focuses on the common law and the separation of powers. In particular, my work examines how common law institutions shed light on the interactions of the President and the Supreme Court, as well as the nature of judicial and executive power.”

Legal History of the American Economy Corporate Finance Economic Redevelopment of Rust Belt Cities

ARTICLES Together Again, C omparative L aw R eview vol. 3: 1-19 (2012) (online) CHAPTERS Critical Legal Studies in Blackwell C ompanion on A merican L egal H istory (A. Trophy and S. Hadden, editors) (WileyBlackwell, 2013) (524-542)

Separation of Powers The Presidency History of the Common Law Civil Procedure Complex Litigation Due Process

ARTICLES Collaborative Departmentalism, Buffalo L aw R eview vol. 61: 345-411 (2013) The Democratic Common Law, Journal Jurisprudence vol. 10: 437-491 (2011) Minimalism and Deliberative Democracy: A Closer Look at the Virtues of “Shallowness”, Seattle University L aw R eview vol. 33: 391-436 (2010)

On a Possible Instance of the Transmigration of Souls: From American Regal Legalism to American Legal Realism and Back Again in Globalization and the U.S. L aw S chool : C omparative and C ultural P erspectives 1906-2006 (S. Hicks & K. Modéer, editors) (Lund University Press, 2010) (77-92)

BOOK REVIEWS Reason, the Common Law, and the Living Constitution, L egal T heory vol. 17(4): 279-321 (2011) (reviewing David Strauss, T he L iving C onstitution (Oxford University Press, 2010))

BOOK REVIEWS Journal of L egal E ducation vol. 59(2): 305-10 (2010) (reviewing Roger Newman (editor), T he Yale Biographical Dictionary of A merican L aw (Yale University Press, 2009))

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AREAS OF INTEREST

35


Robert J. Steinfeld

Rick T. Su

Mateo Taussig-Rubbo

JOSEPH W. BELLUCK AND LAURA L. ASWAD PROFESSOR OF CIVIL JUSTICE

PROFESSOR

PROFESSOR

JD, Harvard Law School BA, Dartmouth College

PhD, University of Chicago JD, Yale Law School MPhil, Cambridge University BA, University of Chicago

(716) 645-5134 ricksu@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-5992 taussig@buffalo.edu

PhD, Harvard University LLM, Harvard Law School JD, Boston College Law School AM, Harvard University BA, City College of New York (716) 645-2094 steinfel@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST Legal History Constitutional History Property Law

“My current work focuses on the origins of judicial review during the 1780s. There has been a veritable flood of writing on this subject in recent years, but largely because, in my view, no completely convincing account of the subject has thus far appeared. I argue that the origins of judicial review must be sought simultaneously in the constitutional controversies of the 1770s, and in an older set of assumptions about constitutional change through prescription.”

BOOKS

“Immigration has long been viewed as a quintessential national issue. At the same time, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the local dimensions of immigration play a significant role in not only the development of our immigration policies, but also how immigrants are perceived in American society. My research aims to bridge this divide by exposing the intricate and complex relationship between immigration and local government law. I am currently examining how local government law’s systematic organization of space and community serves, in many instances, as a ‘second order’ regulatory component of our immigration regime, and questioning the manner in which legal doctrines frame our conceptualization of cities in the immigration context.”

“To Save the P eople from T hemselves”: T he Problem of Popular S overeignty and the Development of E arly A merican Judicial R eview (forthcoming) CHAPTERS The Early Anti-Majoritarian Rationale for Judicial Review in T ransformations in A merican L egal H istory: E ssays in Honor of P rofessor Morton J. Horwtiz (D. Hamilton and A. Brophy, editors) (Harvard University Press, 2010) BOOK REVIEWS T he Journal of the C ivil War E ra (forthcoming 2013) (reviewing Robert J. Cottrol, T he L ong, L ingering Shadow: Slavery, R ace and L aw in the A merican H emisphere (University of Georgia Press, 2013)) L aw and H istory R eview vol. 28(3): 865-868 (August, 2010) (reviewing Philip Hamburger, L aw and Judicial Duty: T he Origins of Judicial R eview (Harvard University Press, 2008))

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AREAS OF INTEREST Immigration Law Local Government Law

ARTICLES The States of Immigration, William & M ary L aw R eview vol. 54: 1339-1407 (2013) Locating Keith Aoki: Space, Geography, and Local Government Law, University of C alifornia at Davis L aw R eview vol. 45: 1637-1653 (2012) Urban Politics and the Assimilation of Immigrant Voters, William & M ary Bill of R ights Journal vol. 21: 653-689 (2012) Working on Immigration: Three Models of Labor and Employment Regulations, Washburn L aw Journal vol. 51: 311-347 (2012) Police Discretion and Local Immigration Policymaking, University of M issouri-K ansas C ity L aw R eview vol. 79: 901-924 (2011) Immigration as Urban Policy, Fordham Urban L aw R eview vol. 38: 363-391 (2010)

Local Fragmentation as Immigration Regulation, Houston L aw R eview vol. 47: 367-434 (2010) The Overlooked Significance of Arizona’s New Immigration Law (Commentary) M ichigan L aw R eview F irst I mpressions vol. 108: 76-79 (2010) BOOK CHAPTERS The Role of States in the National Conversation on Immigration in I llegals in the Backyard : State and L ocal R egulations of I mmigration Policy (C. Hessick & G. Chen, editors) (NYU Press, forthcoming)

“Interweaving my concerns as a legal scholar with my training in cultural anthropology, my work has focused on a set of legal and theoretical challenges posed by changes in the nature of state sovereignty in an era of privatization and globalization. In two geographical areas, I consider these changes by examining both institutional forms (law and policy) and moral, ethical, and social values. In my United States-focused work and especially my work on the military, I examine what happens when the logic of market exchange collides with sectors of our society organized around such ideas as service, honor, and sacrifice. In more recent work in East Africa, I examine the way that sovereignty is defined through relationships with external actors.”

AREAS OF INTEREST Anthropology of Law Constitutional Law Criminal Law Comparative Law Contracts Social and Political Theory

BOOKS C ontracting Warfare : Sacrifice , L aw and S tate Violence in Neoliberal T imes (Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2014) A fter Secular L aw (with Winnifred Fallers Sullivan and Robert A. Yelle, editors) (Stanford University Press, 2011) ARTICLES From the ‘Stranger King’ to the ‘Stranger Constitution’: Domesticating Sovereignty in Kenya, Constellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory vol. 19(2): 248-266 (2012) The Value of Valor: Money, Medals and Military Labor, North Dakota L aw R eview vol. 88 (2): 283-320 (2012) Pirate Trials, the International Criminal Court and Mob Justice: Reflections on Postcolonial Sovereignty in Kenya, Humanity: 37

A n I nternational Journal of Human R ights , Humanitarianism and Development vol. 2(1): 51-74 (2011) CHAPTERS Introduction (with Winnifred Fallers Sullivan and Robert A. Yelle) in A fter Secular L aw (with Winnifred Fallers Sullivan and Robert A. Yelle, editors) (Stanford University Press, 2011) (1-19) Juicios Piratas, CIJ, y Justicia de Turbas: Formas Postcoloniales de Justicia en Kenia in I nseguridad, Democracia y el Derecho (Buenos Aires: Libraria Ediciones, 2011) (87-119) Sacred Property: Searching for the Value in the Rubble of 9/11 in A fter Secular L aw (with Winnifred Fallers Sullivan and Robert A. Yelle, editors) (Stanford University Press, 2011) (322-340) The Unsacrificable Subject? in Who Deserves to Die ? (Austin Sarat & Karl Shoemaker, editors) (University of Massachusetts Press, 2011) (131-150) BOOK REVIEWS The Political Theology of Freedom and Unfreedom, S ocial S cience R esearch C ouncil Blog, T he I mmanent F rame (blogs.ssrc.org/tif/ political-theology-book-blog) (2011) (reviewing Paul Kahn, Political T heology: Four New C hapters on the C oncept of Sovereignty (Columbia University Press, 2011))


David A.Westbrook LOUIS A. DEL COTTO PROFESSOR DIRECTOR FOR GLOBAL STRATEGIC INITIATIVES

Index by Area of Interest

JD, Harvard Law School BA, Emory University

(716) 645-2490

“Lately I’ve been concerned with the public character of finance in market societies with dematerialized economies, which I think implies a different imaginary of the activity that regulation addresses. In short, social capitalism in economies of money demands custodial regulation. But what might bring about such an imaginative shift, if the global financial crisis has not sufficed?”

Administrative Law — Bernstein (8), Connolly (14), Meidinger (25), Owley (32)

Constitutional Structure of Politics — Gardner (17)

Advertising Law — Bartholomew (8)

Constitution-Making — Mutua, M. (29)

American Legal History — Konefsky (18), Steinfeld (36)

Contracts — Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Animal Cruelty Laws — Chiesa (12)

Corporate Finance —Schlegel (35), Westbrook (38)

Animal Studies — Braverman (10)

Corporate Taxation — Lazar (19)

CHAPTERS

Anthropology of Law — French (16), Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Corporations — Dimick (14), Halberstam (18), Mutua, A. (28), Westbrook (38)

The Culture of Financial Institutions; the Institution of Political Economy in R egulating C ulture : I ntegrity, R isk A nd Accountability in C apital M arkets (Hart Publishing, 2013) (1-33)

Asian Legal Cultures — Bernstein (8), Engel (15)

Courts and Public Policy — Mather (23)

Bankruptcy — Brown (12)

Criminal Law — Binder (9), Boucai (10), Chiesa (12), Ewing (16),

International Law in Oxford E ncyclopedia of Islam and Politics (Oxford University Press, 2012)

Child Protection Law — Mangold (22)

dwestbro@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST International Law and Globalization Corporations and Finance Political Economy and Social Theory

BOOKS Deploying Ourselves : Islamist Violence and the R esponsible P rojection of U.S. Force (Paradigm Publishers, 2010) ARTICLES Neofeudalism, Paraethnography and the Custodial Regulation of Financial Institutions, JASSA: T he F insia Journal of A pplied F inance (forthcoming 2013)

A Shallow Harbor and a Cold Horizon: The Deceptive Promise of Modern Agency Law for the Theory of the Firm, Seattle University L aw R eview vol. 35: 1369-1401(2012) If Not a Commercial Republic? Political Economy in the United States After Citizens United, University of L ouisville L aw R eview vol. 50: 35-85 (2011) Happy Talk and the Stock Market: Why Our Situation is Worse than Many People Think, R eal World E conomics R eview, Issue 53: 43-46 (June 26, 2010) Tragedy, Law, and Rethinking Our Financial Markets, R eal World E conomics R eview, Issue 52: 100-111 (March 10, 2010)

Dinner Parties During “Lost Decades”: On the Difficulties of Rethinking Financial Markets, Fostering Elite Consensus, and Renewing Political Economy, Seattle University L aw R eview vol. 36: 1187-1227 (2013)

Stability, Integration, and Political Modalities: Some American Reflections on the European Project After the Financial Crisis in M aking T ransnational L aw Work in the Global E conomy: E ssays in Honour of Detlev Vagts (Cambridge University Press, 2010) (453-468)

O’Rourke (30), Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Business Law — Brown (12)

Criminal Procedure — Chiesa (12), Miller (27), O’Rourke (30) Criminal Punishment Theory — Miller (27)

Civil Litigation — Halberstam (18)

Critical Legal Studies — McCluskey (24)

Civil Procedure — Olsen (30), Steilen (35)

Critical Race Theory — Mutua, A. (28), Phillips (33)

Civil Rights — McCluskey (24), Mutua, A. (28), Olsen (30)

Cyberlaw — Bartholomew (8)

Clinical Legal Education — Connolly (14)

Democracy, Law of — Halberstam (18)

Common Law, History of — Steilen (35)

Disability Law — McCluskey (24)

Community Development — Olsen (30)

BOOK REVIEWS

Comparative Law — French (16), Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Journal of the Royal A nthropological I nstitute (with James D. Faubion and Tobias Rees) vol. 16: 443-444 (2010) (reviewing Paul Rabinow and George E. Marcus, Designs for an A nthropology of the C ontemporary (Duke University Press, 2008))

Comparative Constitutional Law — Melish (26)

Dispute Settlement — Lewis (20) Domestic Violence — Marcus (23) Due Process — Steilen (35)

Comparative Corporate Governance and Civil Procedure — Halberstam (18)

Economic Redevelopment of Rust Belt Cities — Schlegel (35)

Comparative Adjudication Standards — Melish (26)

Economic Social & Cultural Rights — Melish (26)

Complex Litigation — Steilen (35)

Empirical Legal Studies — Dimick (14)

Conflict of Laws — Phillips (33)

Employment Discrimination — Avery (7)

Constitutional History — Konefsky (18), Steinfeld (36)

Employment Law — Avery (7), Dimick (14), McCluskey (24)

Constitutional Law — Malhotra (22), O’Rourke (30), Taussig-Rubbo (37) 38

39


International Law and Globalization — Connolly (14), Meidinger (25),

Energy Law — McCluskey (24)

Mutua, M. (29), Westbrook (38)

Environmental Law — Connolly (14), Meidinger (25), Olsen (30), Owley (32)

International Trade and Environment — Meidinger (25)

Equality and Access to Justice — Malhotra (22)

International Trade Law — Lewis (20)

Family Law — Boucai (10), Mangold (22), Marcus (23), McCluskey (24)

International Women’s Human Rights — Marcus (23)

Federal Indian Law — Owley (32)

Jurisprudence — Binder (9), Chiesa (12), Meidinger (25)

Federal Jurisdiction — Bernstein (8)

Just War Theory — Phillips (33)

Federalism — Gardner (17)

Juvenile Law — Mangold (22)

Feminist Legal Theory — McCluskey (24), Mutua, A. (28)

Labor Law — Avery (7), Dimick (14)

Finance — Westbrook (38)

Law and Democratic Theory — Gardner (17), Meidinger (25)

First Amendment — Barbas (7)

Law and Documentary Studies — Miller (27)

Forensic Psychology — Ewing (16)

Law and Economics — Dimick (14), Halberstam (18), McCluskey (24)

Free Trade Agreements — Lewis (20)

Law and Geography — Braverman (10)

Gender and Law — Avery (7), Marcus (23), McCluskey (24), Mutua, A. (28)

Law and Literature — Binder (9)

Health Law — McCluskey (24)

Law and Religion — French (16), Phillips (33)

Human Rights — Marcus (23), Mutua, M. (29)

Law and Science — Braverman (10), Connolly (14), Phillips (33)

Immigration Law — Malhotra (22), Miller (27), Su (36)

Law and Sexuality — Boucai (10)

Indigenous Peoples’ Law — Meidinger (25)

Law and Social Science — Braverman (10), Connolly (14), Engel (15), Ewing (16),

Insurance and the Law — McCluskey (24)

French (16), Mather (23), Meidinger (25), Phillips (33), Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Intellectual Property — Bartholomew (8), Phillips (33)

Law and Society — Bernstein (8), Braverman (10), Engel (15), French (16),

International Business Transactions/Economic Law — Meidinger (25), Mutua, M. (29)

Marcus (23), Mather (23), McCluskey (24), Meidinger (25), Taussig-Rubbo (37)

International Economic Law — Lewis (20)

Law and the Sociology of Knowledge — Bernstein (8)

International Environmental Law — Meidinger (25)

Law and Technology — Phillips (33)

International Human Rights — Malhotra (22), Marcus (23), Melish (26), Mutua, M. (29)

Legal Education — Connolly (14)

Legal Ethnography — Braverman (10), Engel (15)

Regulated Industries — McCluskey (24)

Legal History — Barbas (7), Bartholomew (8), Boucai (10), Konefsky (18), Steinfeld (36)

Regulation — Braverman (10), Meidinger (25)

Legal History of the American Economy — Schlegel (35)

Remedies — Marcus (23)

Legal Profession — Mather (23)

Rights Consciousness — Engel (15)

Legal Theory — Binder (9), Halberstam (18), Meidinger (25), O’Rourke (30)

Science and Technology — Braverman (10)

Legislation — Connolly (14), O’Rourke (30), Owley (32)

Securities Regulation — Phillips (33)

Local Government — Phillips (33), Su (36)

Separation of Powers — Steilen (35)

Mass Media Law — Barbas (7)

Social and Political Theory — Taussig-Rubbo (37)

Mass Tort — Brown (12)

Sociology of Law — Meidinger (25)

Mental Health Professionals and National Security and Safety — Ewing (16)

State Constitutional Law — Gardner (17)

Natural Resources Law — Braverman (10), Connolly (14), Meidinger (25), Owley (32)

State Reconstruction — Mutua, M. (29)

Partnership Taxation — Lazar (19)

Statutory Interpretation — Mather (23), O’Rourke (30), Owley (32)

Political Economy and Social Theory — Westbrook (38)

Tax and Globalization — Leviner (20)

Post-Colonialism — Mutua, M. (29)

Tax Equity — Leviner (20)

Post-Conflict Societies — Mutua, M. (29)

Tax Policy — Lazar (19), Leviner (20)

Post-Conviction Remedies — Olsen (30)

Taxation — Connolly (14), Lazar (19), Leviner (20)

Presidency, The — Steilen (35)

Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) — Mutua, M. (29)

Prisoner Law — Miller (27)

Torts — Chiesa (12), Engel (15)

Professional Ethics — Ewing (16)

Transitional Justice — Mutua, M. (29)

Property — Avery (7), Braverman (10), French (16), Meidinger (25), O’Rourke (30),

Violent Behavior — Ewing (16)

Owley (32), Steinfeld (36)

Welfare Law — McCluskey (24)

Public International Law — Melish (26), Mutua, M. (29)

Women and the Law — Avery (7), Marcus (23), McCluskey (24), Mutua, A. (28)

Race and the Law — McCluskey (24)

World Trade Organization Law — Lewis (20)

Real Estate Transactions — Phillips (33)

International Women’s Human Rights — Marcus (23) 40

41


Contact Information Dianne Avery

Matthew Dimick

Susan V. Mangold

Nils Olsen

(716) 645-2074 lawavery@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-7968 mdimick@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2428 svm@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3193 nolsen@buffalo.edu

Samantha Barbas

David M. Engel

Isabel Marcus

Jessica Owley

(716) 645-6216 sbarbas@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2514 dmengel@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2108 imarcus@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-8182 jol@buffalo.edu

Mark Bartholomew

Charles Patrick Ewing

Lynn Mather

Stephanie L. Phillips

(716) 645-5959 bartholo@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2770 cewing@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-5541 lmather@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2201 slp@buffalo.edu

Anya Bernstein

Rebecca R. French

Martha T. McCluskey

Robert I. Reis

(716) 645-3683 anyabern@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2159 rrfrench@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2326 mcclusk@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2354 reis@buffalo.edu

Guyora Binder

James A. Gardner

Errol E. Meidinger

John Henry Schlegel

(716) 645-2673 gbinder@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3607 jgard@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-6692 eemeid@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2746 schlegel@buffalo.edu

Michael Boucai

Michael Halberstam

Tara J. Melish

Matthew Steilen

(716) 645-1743 mboucai@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-5130 mhalbers@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2257 tmelish@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-7918 mjsteile@buffalo.edu

Irus Braverman

Alfred S. Konefsky

Teresa A. Miller

Robert J. Steinfeld

(716) 645-3030 irusb@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2392 konefsky@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2391 tmiller@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2094 steinfel@buffalo.edu

S. Todd Brown

Stuart G. Lazar

Athena D. Mutua

Rick T. Su

(716) 645-6213 stbrown2@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2749 slazar@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2873 admutua@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-5134 ricksu@buffalo.edu

Luis E. Chiesa

Sagit Leviner

Makau W. Mutua

Mateo Taussig-Rubbo

(716) 645-3152 lechiesa@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3041 sleviner@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2311 mutua@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-5992 taussig@buffalo.edu

Kim Diana Connolly

Meredith Kolsky Lewis

Anthony O’Rourke

David A.Westbrook

(716) 645-2092 kimconno@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-1631 mlewis5@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-3097 aorourke@buffalo.edu

(716) 645-2490 dwestbro@buffalo.edu

Anjana Malhotra (716) 645-3696 anjanama@buffalo.edu 42

43


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