2014-17 Faculty Scholarship Brochure

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Faculty Scholarship 2014 to 2017 UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO SCHOOL OF LAW


Message from the Dean

Dear Colleagues, We are pleased to update you on the scholarship produced by our faculty since 2014. Situated on the flagship campus of a premier, researchintensive public university, University at Buffalo School of Law has long been associated with innovative, interdisciplinary research and critical approaches to the study of law. Many of our faculty members hold doctorates in areas other than law, and the thoughtful scholarship catalogued here reflects this rich and diverse background. We hope you enjoy getting to know their work. Yours sincerely,

Aviva Abramovsky Dean

law.buffalo.edu/faculty


Contents

Aviva Abramovsky. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Errol E. Meidinger. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Samantha Barbas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Tara J. Melish. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

Christine P. Bartholomew. . . . . . . . . . . 4

James G. Milles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

Mark Bartholomew. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

Athena D. Mutua. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

Anya Bernstein. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Makau W. Mutua . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

Guyora Binder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Anthony O’Rourke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

Michael Boucai . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Jessica Owley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Irus Braverman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Stephen J. Paskey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

S. Todd Brown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

Stephanie L. Phillips. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

Luis E. Chiesa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

John Henry Schlegel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

Kim Diana Connolly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Matthew Steilen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

Matthew Dimick. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Robert J. Steinfeld. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

David M. Engel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Rick Su. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

Charles Patrick Ewing. . . . . . . . . . . . . 18

Mateo Taussig-Rubbo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Lucinda M. Finley. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

David A. Westbrook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

Rebecca R. French . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

James A. Wooten. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

James A. Gardner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Baldy Center Fellows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

Stuart G. Lazar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Areas of Interest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46

Meredith Kolsky Lewis. . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Contact Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

Isabel Marcus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Martha T. McCluskey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

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Aviva Abramovsky DEAN AND PROFESSOR JD, University of Pennsylvania BA, Cornell University

(716) 645-2052

My research is focused on insurance law with emphasis on re-insurance. I am particularly interested in global insurance products and disaster and catastrophe liability. Insurance is a

aabramov@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

INSURANCE LAW

Justice for Sale: Contemplations on

COMMERCIAL LAW

the “Impartial” Judge in a Citizens

REGULATION OF FINANCIAL ENTITIES

United World, Michigan State Law

LEGAL ETHICS

Review vol. 2012 (2): 713-734 (2014)

BOOKS

CHAPTERS

Uniform Commercial Code,

Insurance Online: Regulation and

West’s McKinney’s Forms for New

Consumer Protection in a Cyber World

York (Thomson Reuters, 2016)

in The “Dematerialized” Insurance: Distance Selling and Cyber Risks

gatekeeper for all corporate

from an International Perspective

behavior and as such the

(with Peter Kochenburger) (Pierpaolo

industry’s laws and policies

Marano, Iōannēs Rokas, Peter

are relevant to every aspect

Kochenburger, editors)

of the world’s economy.”

(Springer, 2016) (117-142)

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Samantha Barbas PROFESSOR JD, Stanford Law School PhD, University of California at Berkeley BA, Williams College (716) 645-6216

sbarbas@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

FIRST AMENDMENT

Privacy and the Right to One’s Image:

LEGAL HISTORY

A Cultural and Legal History in Injury

MASS MEDIA LAW

and Injustice: The Cultural Politics

My work examines the

of Harm and Redress (Cambridge BOOKS

interconnections between law,

University Press, forthcoming)

social history and the history

Confidential (Chicago Review Press, forthcoming 2018)

of mass communications.

Gossip Law in When Private Talk

Drawing on my earlier research

Goes Public: Gossip in United Newsworthy: The Supreme

States History (Kathleen A.

Court’s Battle Over Privacy

Feeley and Jennifer Frost, editors)

and Freedom of the Press

(Palgrave Macmillan, 2014) (123-138)

in media history, published as Movie Crazy: Fans, Stars, and the Cult of Celebrity (Palgrave Macmillan, 2001),

(Stanford University Press, 2017)

and The First Lady of Hollywood (University of

Laws of Image: Privacy and

California Press, 2005), it

Publicity in America (Stanford

focuses on the first modern

University Press, 2015)

media revolution — the advent of mass-market publishing,

ARTICLES

radio, film and television in the

Richard Nixon at the Supreme

early to mid-20th century.”

Court, San Diego Law Review (forthcoming, Fall 2017) The Most Loved, Most Hated Magazine in America: The Rise and Demise of Confidential Magazine, William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal vol. 25: 121-193 (2016) The Social Origins of the Personality Torts, Rutgers Law Review vol. 67: 393-440 (2015) When Privacy Almost Won: Time, Inc. v. Hill (1967), University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional

Revisiting a Notorious Case TIME INC. V. HILL WAS THE FIRST U.S. SUPREME COURT CASE to strike a balance between privacy and free-press rights. Professor Samantha Barbas’ most recent book, Newsworthy (Stanford University Press), looks at the 1967 case, its sensational beginnings and the broader cultural movements behind it. “It was a very interesting clash of worldviews over the credibility of the media and how much of a pass we should give the press to publish freely,” says Barbas, who has written extensively on libel and privacy laws. The plaintiff was represented by Richard Nixon, and in her research Barbas examined the future president’s voluminous notes, hand-written on yellow legal pads. Newsworthy won a silver medal in the U.S. History category of the Independent Publisher Book Awards.

Law vol. 18(2): 1-86 (2015)

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Christine P. Bartholomew A S S O C I ATE P R O F E S S O R JD, University at California at Davis BA, San Francisco State University

(716) 645-7399

cpb6@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Twiqbal in Context, Journal of Legal

CIVIL PROCEDURE

Education vol. 65: 744-771 (2016)

ANTITRUST

My research is in civil procedure, specifically the tension between class actions’ enforcement potential and heightened procedural and evidentiary rules. On the one hand, judicial resources are

EVIDENCE

Redefining Prey and Predator in Class

CONSUMER PROTECTION

Actions, Brooklyn Law Review

REMEDIES

vol. 80: 743-806 (2015)

ARTICLES

Saving Charitable Settlements,

Exorcising the Clergy Privilege,

Fordham Law Review

Virginia Law Review

vol. 83: 3241-3292 (2015)

(forthcoming, 2017)

far from absolute, and such

Death by Daubert: The Continued

rules can promote judicial efficiency. On the other hand, a raft of new procedural

The Failed Superiority Experiment,

Attack on Antitrust, Cardozo Law

Vanderbilt Law Review

Review vol. 35: 2147-2198 (2014)

vol. 69: 1295-1348 (2016)

hurdles threaten class actions’ potential to regulate corporate behavior. It is now harder to get into court; harder to plead a claim; and harder to certify a class. I analyze how such hurdles impact class actions, and then identify ways to balance efficiency and enforcement goals. Because rule interpretation is primarily left to the judiciary, my work analyzes judicial interpretation and decision making.”

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Mark Bartholomew PROFESSOR JD, Yale Law School BA, Cornell University

(716) 645-5959

bartholo@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

The Political Economy of

CYBERLAW

Celebrity Rights, Whittier Law

LEGAL HISTORY

Review (forthcoming 2018)

My recent work examines

ADVERTISING LAW

the relationship between law,

Intellectual Property’s Lessons for BOOKS

Information Privacy, Nebraska

Adcreep: The Case Against

Law Review vol. 92: 746-798 (2014)

technology and advertising. Through a variety of mechanisms, including

Modern Marketing (Stanford University Press, 2017)

intellectual property law,

CHAPTERS

privacy law, contract law and

From Debbie Does Dallas to The

the First Amendment, the legal

Hangover: The Changing Landscape of

system is struggling to set an

Trademark Law in Tinseltown (with

appropriate balance between

John Tehranian) in Hollywood and

commercial freedom and

the Law (BFI/Palgrave Press, 2015)

consumer protection in the midst of a modern marketing revolution. Figuring out where this balance should be set is a difficult project. My approach is to mine psychology, which tells us how consumers think,

When Marketers Run the World

and history, which tells us how lawmakers approached

IF PIZZA HUT MAKES A DEAL WITH A PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM, your child’s report card might come home with the company’s logo stamped on it. That’s an example of what Professor Mark Bartholomew calls “adcreep” – the insidious intrusion of advertising messages into nearly every corner of the human environment. In Adcreep: The Case Against Modern Marketing (Stanford University Press), Bartholomew describes how pervasive this phenomenon is. He also details the ways in which marketers are probing the human brain – with the biometric scans, automated online spies and facial recognition technologies – to make their messages more persuasive than ever before. “The problem,” Bartholomew says, “is that when advertising is everywhere, we start to lose alternative visions of what the good life is and what citizenship means.”

similar questions in the past, to help assess the costs and benefits of advertising in new forms and new spaces.”

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Anya Bernstein A S S O C I ATE P R O F E S S O R PhD, University of Chicago JD, Yale Law School BA, Columbia College (716) 645-3683

anyabern@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AND COMPARATIVE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

The Songs of Other Birds in Insiders,

We sometimes imagine law as

ADMINISTRATIVE PRACTICE IN DEMOCRACIES

Revisiting the Oven Bird’s Song

moving out from government

LAW AND SOCIETY

into society, where it is changed

ASIAN LEGAL CULTURES

through its lived reality.

JURISDICTION & CIVIL PROCEDURE

My current research moves

Outsiders, Injuries, and Law: (Mary Nell Trautner, editor) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2018) Agency in State Agencies in Distributed Agency: The Sharing of Intention,

in the opposite direction. I’m interested in how legal meaning is affected by the understandings, assumptions,

ARTICLES

Cause, and Accountability (N.J.

Before Interpretation,

Enfield and Paul Kockelman, editors)

University of Chicago Law

(Oxford University Press, 2017)

Review vol. 84: 567-645 (2017)

and practices of the government

BOOK REVIEWS

actors who interpret and implement it—particularly judges and administrators. My recent writing has exposed the infrastructure of judicial statutory

Bureaucratic Speech: Language Choice

Regimes of Expertise and the Law,

and Democratic Identity in the Taipei

PoLAR Online: Political and

Bureaucracy, PoLAR: Political and

Legal Anthropology Review (2016)

Legal Anthropology Review

(Invited review of The Clinic and the

vol. 40: 28-51 (2017)

Court (Ian Harper, Tobias Kelly, and Akshay Khanna editors) (Cambridge

interpretations, helping us evaluate their implicit claims and assumptions. Currently, I am researching how administrators in different democracies give meaning to the laws they implement. I am interviewing administrators in the United States and Taiwan (where I did dissertation research), with plans to expand to Germany.”

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Differentiating Deference,

University Press, 2015) and The Role

Yale Journal on Regulation

of Social Science in Law (Elizabeth

vol. 33: 1-53 (2016)

Mertz editor) (Ashgate, 2008))


Guyora Binder SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR U N I V E R S IT Y AT B U F FA LO D I S TI N G U I S H E D P R O F E S S O R H O D G S O N R U S S F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R V I C E D E A N F O R R E S E A R C H A N D F A C U LT Y D E V E L O P M E N T JD, Yale Law School AB, Princeton University (716) 645-2673

gbinder@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Penal Incapacitation: A Situationist

CRIMINAL LAW

Critique (with Ben Notterman)

JURISPRUDENCE

American Criminal Law

LAW AND LITERATURE

Review vol. 54: 1-56 (2017)

My book, The Oxford

What is Criminal Law About? (with

Introductions to U.S. Law:

Robert Weisberg) Michigan Law

Criminal Law explains the

Review vol. 114: 1173-1205 (2016)

key concepts and persistent

Why Law Matters for Our

controversies in American

BOOKS Criminal Law, The Oxford Introductions to U.S. Law (Oxford University Press, 2016) Criminal Law: Cases and

criminal law in light of its

Obligations, Critical Analysis of Law vol. 2: 268-80 (2015)

history. The English common

CHAPTERS

royal peace by conditioning

The Coptown Case: Inviolable

punishment on unauthorized

Criminal Law: Teacher’s Manual

Status and Desert in Inherent

force and harm to particular

(with Robert Weisberg) (Wolters-

and Instrumental Values:

victims. The story of American

Kluwer, 8th edition, 2016)

Excursions in Value Inquiry (G.

criminal law has been the

John M. Abbarno, editor) (University

emergence of a utilitarian

ARTICLES

Press of America, 2015) (281-296)

conception of criminal

Unusual: The Death Penalty for

Foundations of the Legislative

offending as the imposition of

Materials (with John Kaplan and Robert Weisberg) (WoltersKluwer, 8th edition, 2016)

Inadvertent Murder, Indiana Law Journal vol. 93 (forthcoming 2018)

law of crimes enforced a

risk or the violation of consent,

Panopticon: Bentham’s Principles

combined with culpability. Yet

of Morals and Legislation in

Capital Punishment of Unintentional

Foundational Texts in Modern

Felony Murder (with Brenner Fissell

Criminal Law (Markus Dubber, editor)

and Robert Weisberg) Notre Dame

(Oxford University Press, 2014) (79-101)

Law Review vol. 92: 1141-1214 (2017)

Homicide in The Oxford Handbook

to understand contemporary criminal law, we must also remember the model of offending as trespass against sovereignty out of which it emerged.”

of Criminal Law (Markus Dubber and Tatjana Hörnle, editors) (Oxford University Press, 2014 ) (702-726)

Reforming Felony Murder IN A SPLIT DECISION, MASSACHUSETTS’ HIGHEST COURT abolished felony murder in that state – and both the majority and the minority cited scholarly writing by Professor Guyora Binder in their rationales. Previously, Massachusetts imposed first degree murder liability on participants in certain felonies causing death, regardless of their mental state. In Commonwealth v. Timothy Brown, however,

the court drew on Binder’s historical research in holding that the state’s nineteenth century murder statute did not require this. The majority held that henceforth participants in a felony causing death could not be guilty of murder without a mental state of malice. A minority objected, citing Binder’s arguments that some felons who cause death unintentionally deserve severe punishment. The majority responded that Massachusetts defines malice broadly enough to impose murder liability in such cases. Binder is the author of Felony Murder (Stanford U. Press, 2012) and numerous articles on that topic.

7


Michael Boucai A S S O C I ATE P R O F E S S O R MPhil, University of Cambridge JD, Georgetown University Law Center BA, Yale University (716) 645-1743

mboucai@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST CRIMINAL LAW FAMILY LAW CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

My research examines

LAW AND SEXUALITY

various intersections of law

LEGAL HISTORY

and sexuality, from obscenity regulation to same-sex

ARTICLES

marriage. I’m interested in

Is Assisted Procreation an LGBT

how the law favors, tolerates

Right?, Wisconsin Law Review

or disfavors particular

vol. 2016(6): 1065-1125 (2016)

expressions of sexuality and intimacy, and how such

Glorious Precedents: When

treatment relates to moral

Gay Marriage Was Radical, The

systems, social arrangements

Yale Journal of Law and the

and political ideologies. Often

Humanities vol. 27(1): 1-82 (2015)

I explore these questions from a historical perspective, as

BOOK REVIEWS

in current projects on Anita

Canadian Journal of Law & Society

Bryant’s pivotal 1977 campaign

(2016) (reviewing After Legal

against gay rights and the

Equality Family, Sex, Kinship (Robert

1895 trials of Oscar Wilde.”

Leckey, editor) (Routledge, 2015)) Journal of Social History vol. 47(3): 1104-1106 (2014) (reviewing Vicki Eaklor, Queer America: A People’s History of the United States (2011))

Young Scholar on the Rise THE NATIONAL LGBT BAR ASSOCIATION, AN AFFILIATE OF THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION, HAS NAMED ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR Michael Boucai to its “Best LGBT Lawyers Under 40” list for 2017. The honor is given to those “who have distinguished themselves in their field and have demonstrated a profound commitment to LGBT equality.” Boucai’s fellow honorees include practicing lawyers, academics, corporate counsel, members of the judiciary and public servants. A widely published legal historian and scholar, Boucai has written on such subjects as the historical roots of the same-sex marriage movement and assisted procreation for same-sex couples. He also participates in many panel discussions, invited lectures and colloquia on LGBT and other legal topics, and is a sought-after guest in newspaper, radio and television coverage of emerging social issues.

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Irus Braverman PROFESSOR AND WILLIAM J. MAGAVERN F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R SJD, University of Toronto MA, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem LLB, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (716) 645-3030

My research focuses on the

irusb@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

ANIMAL STUDIES

Law’s Underdog: A Call for Nonhuman

NATURE CONSERVATION

Legalities, Annual Review of Law

ISRAEL/PALESTINE

and Social Science (forthcoming 2018)

LAW AND GEOGRAPHY

relationship between law and the environment, broadly construed. In Planted Flags:

LAW AND GENETICS

Renouncing Citizenship as

LEGAL ETHNOGRAPHY

Protest: Reflections by a Jewish

LAW AND SOCIETY

Trees, Land and Law In Israel/ Palestine (2009), I explore the war over tree landscapes in this contentious region. Next, Zooland: The Institution of Captivity (Independent Publisher Award Winner, 2012) takes readers behind the zoo to make surprising interconnections

Israeli Ethnographer, Critical

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES

Inquiry (forthcoming 2018)

BOOKS

“I Save Species One Individual at a

Coral Whisperers: Scientists

Time”: Zoo Veterinarians between

on the Brink (The University of

Welfare and Conservation, Animals

California Press, forthcoming 2018)

& Society (under review 2017)

Ocean Legalities: The Law and

Bleached!: Managing Coral Catastrophe,

Life of the Sea (Irus Braverman and

Futures vol. 92: 12-28 (2017)

Elizabeth R. Johnson, editors) (Duke

between our understandings of

University Press, forthcoming 2018)

the human and the nonhuman.

Anticipating Endangerment: The Biopolitics of Threatened Species Lists,

Finally, my monograph Wild

Gene Editing, Law, and the

Life: The Institution of

Biosocieties vol. 12: 132-157 (2016)

Environment: Life Beyond

Nature (2015) explores the relationship between captive and wild animal population

the Human (Irus Braverman,

Biopolarity: Coral Scientists between

editor) (Routledge, 2017)

Hope and Despair, Anthropology Now vol. 8(3): 26-40 (2016)

management. I am currently

Animals, Biopolitics, Law: Lively

working on a monograph that explores the challenges of coral management and regulation, and coediting a collection on ocean legalities.”

Legalities (Irus Braverman,

Captive: Zoometric Operations in Gaza,

editor) (Routledge, 2016)

Public Culture vol. 29(1): 191-215 (2016)

Wild Life: The Institution of Nature

The Pet Keeping Industry in the

(Stanford University Press, 2015)

American City, Squaderno 42: 51-55 (2016)

The Expanding Spaces of Law: A Timely Legal Geography (with

Rights of Passage: On Doors,

Nicholas Blomley, David Delaney and

Technology, and the Fourth

Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, editors)

Amendment, Journal of Law,

(Stanford University Press, 2014)

Culture, and the Humanities vol. 12(3): 669-692 (2016)

10


Hard Questions on the Genetic Frontier A UB SCHOOL OF LAW CONFERENCE WAS THE GENESIS OF PROFESSOR IRUS BRAVERMAN’S edited volume Gene Editing, Law, And The Environment (Routledge), in which 10 experts from widely varied disciplines wrestle with the legal and ethical questions surrounding genetic modification. In addition to an introduction, Braverman contributed a major chapter in which she took an ethnographic approach to examining how gene scientists work and the ethical assumptions that underlie that work. “These are things that are not usually spoken about in the scientific community,” she says, and some interviewees hadn’t thought deeply about their own unstated assumptions. Braverman has also completed a writing fellowship she received from the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, in Munich, Germany.

Conservation and Hunting:

of Research Methods in

Ewick and Austin Sarat, editors)

Till Death Do They Part? A Legal

Environmental Law (Andreas

(Wiley Press, 2015) (307-321)

Ethnography of Deer Management,

Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos and

Journal of Land Use and Environ-

Victoria Brooks, editors) (Edward

Captive for Life: Conserving Extinct

mental Law vol. 30(2): 1-57 (2015)

Elgar Publishing, forthcoming 2017)

Species through Ex Situ Breeding

Hyperlegality and Heightened

Military-to-Wildlife Geographies:

(Lori Gruen, editor) (Oxford

Surveillance: The Case of Threatened

Bureaucracies of Cleanup and

University Press, 2014) (193-212)

Species Lists, Surveillance &

Conservation in Vieques in

Society vol. 13(2): 310-313 (2015)

Handbook on the Geographies

Good Night, Zoo: Human-Animal-

of Regions and Territories (Anssi

City Relations in Children’s Books

Conservation without Nature:

Paasi, John Harrison, and Martin

in Virtual and Ideal Worlds

The Trouble with In Situ

Jones, editors) (Edward Elgar

Part II (Ulrich Gehmann and

versus Ex Situ Conservation,

Publishing, forthcoming 2017)

Martin Reiche, editors) (Columbia

in The Ethics of Captivity

Geoforum vol. 51: 47-57 (2014)

University Press, 2014)(159-175) The Regulatory Life of Threatened

Governing the Wild: Databases,

Species Lists in Lively Legalities:

Order and Disorder in the Urban

Algorithms, and Population Models

Animals, Biopolitics, Law

Forest in Urban Forests, Trees,

as Biopolitics, Surveillance &

(Irus Braverman, editor)

and Green Space: A Political

Society vol. 12(1): 15-37 (2014)

(Routledge, 2016) (19-38)

Ecology Perspective (L. Anders Sandberg, Adrina Bardekjian and

CHAPTERS

En-Listing Life: Red is the Color

Sadia Butt, editors) (Routledge/

Robotic Life in the Deep Sea:

of Threatened Species Lists in

Earthscan, 2014) (132-146)

Deploying Killer (and Other)

Critical Animal Geographies

Robots to Make Live in Ocean

(Rosemarie Collard and Kathryn

A Study of Animals and Law in the

Legalities (Irus Braverman and

Gillespie, editors) (Routledge/

American City in Law’s Idea of

Elizabeth R. Johnson, editors) (Duke

Earthscan, 2015) (184-202)

Nature (Keith H. Hirokawa, editor)

University Press, forthcoming 2018)

(Cambridge University Press, 2014) Is the Puerto Rican Parrot

Gene Drives, Nature, and

Worth Saving? The Biopolitics of

Who’s Afraid of Methodology?

Governance: An Ethnographic

Endangerment and Grievability

Advocating a Reflective Turn

Perspective in Gene Editing, Law,

in Economics of Death (Kathryn

in Legal Geography in the

and the Environment: Life Beyond

Gillespie and Patricia Lopez, editors)

Expanding Spaces of Law: A

the Human (Irus Braverman, editor)

(Routledge/Earthscan, 2015) (73-94)

(Routledge, forthcoming 2017)

Timely Legal Geography (with Nicholas Blomley, David Delaney and

More-than-Human Legalities

Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, editors)

The Life and Law of Corals:

in The Wiley Handbook of

(Stanford University Press, 2014)

Breathing Meditations in Handbook

Law and Society (Patrick

11


S. Todd Brown PROFESSOR VICE DEAN FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS LLM, Temple University, Beasley School of Law JD, Columbia University School of Law BA, Loyola University of New Orleans (716) 645-6213

stbrown2@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST BANKRUPTCY MASS TORT AND BUSINESS LAW

My research currently focuses

ARTICLES

on the intersection of corporate

Consent, Coercion and Bankruptcy

bankruptcy, bankruptcy

Administration, Journal of

trusts and mass tort litigation.

Business and Technology

Recent articles include a study

Law vol. 11(1): 25-57 (2016)

outlining the performance of 32 bankruptcy trusts and the

The Story of Prudential Standing,

implications for future asbestos

Hastings Constitutional Law

personal injury victims, an

Quarterly vol. 42(1): 95-132 (2014)

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 asbestos related bankruptcies.”

12


Luis E. Chiesa PROFESSOR DIRECTOR OF THE BUFFALO CRIMINAL L AW CENTER JSD, Columbia Law School LLM, Columbia Law School JD, University of Puerto Rico Law School BBA, University of Puerto Rico (716) 645-3152

AREAS OF INTEREST ANIMAL CRUELTY LAWS CRIMINAL LAW CRIMINAL PROCEDURE

lechiesa@buffalo.edu

ARTICLES Solving the Riddle of Rape by Deception, Yale Law & Policy Review (forthcoming, 2017)

TORTS

Animal Rights Unraveled: Why

JURISPRUDENCE

Abolitionism Collapses into Welfarism

BOOKS Substantive Criminal Law: Cases, Comments and Comparative Materials (Carolina Academic Press, 2014)

My research lies at the intersection of criminal law, philosophy and comparative

and What it Means for Animal Ethics,

law. Drawing from my

Georgetown Environmental

experience teaching and

Law Review vol. 28: 557-587 (2017)

lecturing about criminal law in

The Evil Waiter Case,

the United States, Canada, Latin

University of Miami Law

America, Europe and Asia, my

Review vol. 69: 161-192 (2014)

work aims to understand and critique domestic criminal law

Reassessing Professor Dressler’s

doctrines by looking at how

Plea for Complicity Reform: Lessons

other countries approach basic

from Civil Law Jurisdictions, New

concepts of criminal theory.”

England Journal of Criminal & Civil Confinement 1 vol. 40: 1-19 (2014) (invited submission) CHAPTERS Comparative Criminal Law in Oxford Handbook of Criminal Law (Oxford University Press, Markus Dubber and Tatjana HÖrnle, editors) (2014) (1089-1114) General Defences to Criminal Liability in the United States in Criminal Defenses (Ashgate, Michael Bohlander and Alan Reed, editors) (2014) (329-342) In Spanish ADN y Proceso Penal in Los Estados Unidos: Cinco Problemas (Juan Luis Gómez-Colomer, editor) (Tirant Lo Blanch Publishers, 2014)

13


Kim Diana Connolly PROFESSOR V I C E D E A N FO R E X P E R I E NTI A L A N D S K I LL S E D U C ATI O N D I R E C TO R O F C LI N I C A L LE GA L E D U C ATI O N DIRECTOR OF THE ADVOCACY INSTITUTE 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

My substantive research

INTERNATIONAL LAW

focuses on a number of related

LAW AND SCIENCE

areas, including wetlands law

LAW AND SOCIAL SCIENCE

and policy as well as other

LEGAL EDUCATION

environmental regulatory

LEGISLATION

and related subjects. More

NATURAL RESOURCES LAW

recently I have added an interest in how the mass

BOOKS

media covers environmental

The Big Thaw: Policy, Governance

law and policy matters. I

and Climate Change in the

have also conducted research

Circumpolar North (with Errol E.

on student learning and

Meidinger and Ezra B.W. Zubrow,

andragogical issues, including

editors) (SUNY Press, forthcoming)

work on experiential and interdisciplinary learning. In

Beyond Jurisdiction: Essential

all cases, I seek to bring serious

Wetlands Law and Policy Questions

scholarly study to pressing

For Our Time (forthcoming 2017)

issues facing people and ecosystems on various levels.”

CHAPTERS Prequel Chapter to Federal Jurisdiction Over Wetlands and Other “Waters of the United States,” (American Bar Association, forthcoming) Marine Protected Areas in Ocean and Coastal Law (American Bar Association, 2nd edition, 2015) (593-626) Regulation of Coastal Wetlands and Other Waters in the United States in Ocean and Coastal Law and Policy (American Bar Association, 2nd edition, 2015) (127-176)

14


Matthew Dimick PROFESSOR PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison JD, Cornell Law School BA, Brigham Young University (716) 645-7968

mdimick@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Better than Basic Income? Liberty,

INCOME TAX

Equality, and the Regulation of

TAX POLICY

Working Time, Indiana Law

LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW

Review vol. 50: 473-515 (2017)

My research studies the

LAW AND ECONOMICS

relationship between law

The Altruistic Rich? Inequality ARTICLES

and Other-Regarding Preferences

Models of Other-Regarding

for Redistribution (with David

Preferences, Inequality and

Rueda and Daniel Stegmueller)

Redistribution (with David

Quarterly Journal of Political

Rueda and Daniel Stegmueller)

Science vol.11(4): 385-439 (2016)

and economic inequality. While we may well condemn inequality as an injustice in itself, it also has many negative side effects: a corrosion of the political process, skewed

Annual Review of Political Science (forthcoming 2017)

public policies, and an unstable

Should the Law Do Anything About

financial system, to name

Economic Inequality? Cornell

a few. While the causes of

Journal of Law and Public

rising income inequality are

Policy vol. 26: 1–69 (2016)

many and complex, the law undoubtedly plays a role.

Wage-Setting Institutions and

Traditionally, the economic

Corporate Governance (with Neel

analysis of law has focused on

Rao) Journal of Comparative

efficiency—how the law can

Economics 44(4): 854-883 (2016)

make society’s economic pie larger. While using many of

Lords and Order: Credible Rulers

the same economist-inspired

and State Failure, Rationality and

tools, my research uses a

Society vol. 27(2): 161-194 (2015)

more sociologically-inspired set of questions to ask how

Productive Unionism, University

the law distributes—slices

of California at Irvine Law

up— the economic pie.”

Review vol. 4(2): 679-724 (2014) BOOK REVIEWS Contemporary Sociology vol. 45(1): 93–95 (2016) (reviewing Kathleen A. Thelen’s Varieties of Liberalization and the New Politics of Social Solidarity (Cambridge University Press, 2014))

15


David M. Engel SUNY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE PROFESSOR JD, University of Michigan Law School MA, University of Michigan AB, Harvard University (716) 645-2514

dmengel@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

The Myth of the Litigious

TORTS

Society: Why We Don’t Sue

LAW AND SOCIETY

(University of Chicago Press, 2016)

ASIAN LEGAL CULTURES

My research traces the ways in which rights become active, identities are forged, and law is

LEGAL ETHNOGRAPHY

ARTICLES

RIGHTS CONSCIOUSNESS

Blood Curse and Belonging in Thailand: Law, Buddhism, and Legal

woven into the fabric of dayto-day experiences. One line of work examines the earliest

BOOKS

Consciousness, Asian Journal of

Injury and Injustice: The

Law and Society vol. 3: 71-83 (2016)

Cultural Politics of Harm and

stages of the tort law system, when individuals suffer traumatic physical harms and, in most cases, refuse to lodge a

Redress (Anne Bloom and Michael

Perception and Decision at the

McCann, editors) (Cambridge

Threshold of Tort Law: Explaining

University Press, forthcoming)

the Infrequency of Claims (Eighteenth Annual Clifford

claim or even consult a lawyer. I explain this overwhelming preference for law avoidance by drawing on interdisciplinary studies of injury and cognition. Another line of work explores recent transformations in law, culture, and society in Southeast Asia, with particular

Le Droit À L’inclusion: Droit

Symposium on Tort Law and Social

Et Identité Dans Les Récits De

Policy) Depaul Law Review vol.

Vie Des Personnes Handicapées

62: 293-334 (2013) (Translated into

Aux États-Unis, Éditions Ehess

Japanese and published in Law As

(Translation by Yohann Aucante

Everyday Practice: Sociology

and Thomas Cayet of David M. Engel

of Law on Clinical Knowledge

and Frank W. Munger’s Rights of

(Hidekazu Nishida and Kenji

Inclusion: Law and Identity in

Yamamoto, editors) (2016))

the Life Stories of Americans

attention to Thailand.”

With Disabilities (University of

Keynote Address: Reimagining

Chicago Press, 2003) (forthcoming))

Law and Society Research in Southeast Asia, Chiang Mai

Insiders, Outsiders, Injuries, and

University Law Review (2015)

Law in the 21st Century: Revisiting “The Oven Bird’s Song” (Mary

Rights as Wrongs: Legality and

Nell Trautner, editor) (Cambridge

Sacrality in Thailand, Asian Studies

University Press, forthcoming)

Review vol. 39: 38-52 (2015)

(Collection of essays commemorating

16

David M. Engel’s “The Oven Bird’s

State and Personhood in Southeast

Song”: Insiders, Outsiders, and

Asia: The Promise and Potential

Personal Injuries in an American

for Law and Society Research (with

Community, Law and Society

Lynette Chua) Asian Journal of Law

Review vol. 18: 551-582 (1984))

and Society vol. 2: 211-228 (2015)


CHAPTERS Chairs, Stairs, and Automobiles: The Cultural Construction of Injuries and the Failed Promise of Law in Injury and Injustice: The Cultural Politics of Harm and Redress (Anne Bloom and Michael McCann, editors) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming) Looking Backward, Looking Forward: Past and Future Lives of “The Oven Bird’s Song” in Insiders, Outsiders, Injuries, and Law in the 21St Century: Revisiting “The Oven Bird’s Song” (Mary Nell Trautner, editor) (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming)

Honoring a Life’s Work THE LAW & SOCIETY ASSOCIATION, THE WORLD’S premier organization for the interdisciplinary study of law, has awarded Professor David Engel its highest honor, the Harry J. Kalven Jr. Prize, in recognition of his long and continuing work in cross-disciplinary legal study. Engel looks at how the legal system actually works in various societies, including our own – thinking about how custom, social norms and belief structures interact with black-letter law. He previously served as president of the Law & Society Association, and he has been a thought leader globally, working especially to build an international research network among scholars in the Pacific Rim countries. He is a founding co-editor of the Asian Journal of Law and Society. “The award is especially meaningful because this is the organization that really helped shape my identity as a scholar,” says Engel, who has taught at the School of Law since 1981.

17


Charles Patrick Ewing SUNY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE PROFESSOR PhD, Cornell University JD, Harvard Law School BA, Syracuse University (716) 645-2770

cewing@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST CRIMINAL LAW FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY VIOLENT BEHAVIOR

Most of my research deals

MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS IN NATIONAL SECURITY AND SAFETY

with the use of psychological, psychiatric and other

PROFESSIONAL ETHICS

scientific expertise in the resolution of legal conflicts.

BOOKS

Primarily, I am interested

Preventing The Sexual

in the uses and abuses of

Victimization of Children:

psychological/psychiatric

Legal, Psychological and

expert testimony, which

Public Policy Perspectives

plays a key, and sometimes

(Oxford University Press, 2014)

decisive, role in criminal and civil litigation. I also

CHAPTERS

continue to study the etiology

“Above all, do no harm”: The Role of

of interpersonal violence,

Health and Mental Health Professionals

a critical concern in both

in the Capital Punishment Process

criminal and civil litigation.”

(with Steven K. Erickson) in America’s Experiment With Capital Punishment (Carolina Academic Press, 3rd edition, 2014) (613-626)

18


Lucinda M. Finley FRANK G. RAICHLE PROFESSOR OF TR I A L A N D A P P E LL ATE A DVO C AC Y JD, Columbia University Law School BA, Barnard College (716) 645-3594

finleylu@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST TORT LAW AND GENDER ISSUES FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS

My research focuses on

EQUAL PROTECTION LAW AND EQUALITY THEORY

the gender-based impact of seemingly neutral tort

FIRST AMENDMENT AND LIMITS ON PROTEST ACTIVITY

doctrines. I am studying caps on non-economic damages to demonstrate that caps have a

BOOKS

disparate impact on women, the

Feminist Judgments: Torts

elderly, and children’s death

(Cambridge University

cases. I’m also exploring why

Press, forthcoming)

non-economic damages are an under-sustained challenge,

CHAPTERS

and why women tend to receive

Geduldig v. Aiello in Feminist

greater proportions of their

Judgments: Rewritten Opinions

tort awards in non-economic

of the United States Supreme

damages, as well as other

Court (Linda L. Berger, Bridget

important empirical questions

J. Crawford and Kathryn M.

about the hidden or unintended

Stanchi, editors) (Cambridge

consequences of tort reform,

University Press, 2016) (185-207)

including how it will affect lawyers’ case selection and settlement strategies. Better understanding of the actual consequences of legal change on the institutional players and the people who seek access to the civil justice system can lead to sounder and more equitable law reform.”

19


Rebecca R. French PROFESSOR PhD, Yale University LLM, Yale Law School JD, University of Washington Law School BA, University of Michigan (716) 645-2159

rrfrench@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST ANTHROPOLOGY OF LAW COMPARATIVE LAW LAW AND RELIGION

In the course of my

PROPERTY LAW AND SOCIAL SCIENCE

investigation of the Tibetan

BUDDHISM AND LAW

legal system, I discovered a gaping hole in the substantial

BOOKS

discipline of Religious

Buddhism and Law: An Introduction

Legal Studies — the study

(with Mark Nathan, editors)

of Buddhist legal systems.

(Cambridge University Press, 2014)

Incredibly, almost nothing has been written on the legal

ARTICLES

systems that were influenced

The Anthropology of Religion

by Buddhism, one of the

and Law, Religious Studies

largest world religions with

Review (forthcoming 2018)

a 2,500 year history and 500 million followers. My project

How Sophisticated is Buddhist Law?,

for the last few years has

Editor’s Introduction, Buddhism, Law

been to write in this area and

and Society (forthcoming 2017)

to organize a wide array of international scholars to talk,

Editor’s Introduction, Buddhism, Law

think and write about this

and Society vol. 1: vii-xvii (2016)

exciting new subject matter.”

What is Buddhist Law? Buffalo Law Review vol. 63: 833- 872 (2015) Buddhism and Natural Law (Symposium on Natural Law) Journal of Comparative Law vol. 8: 141-157 (2013-14)

20


James A. Gardner SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR BRIDGET AND THOMAS BLACK PROFESSOR JD, University of Chicago Law School BA, Yale University (716) 645-3607

jgard@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Justice Brennan and the Foundations of

CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE OF POLITICS

Human Rights Federalism, Ohio State Law Journal vol. 77: 355-385 (2016)

LAW AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY ELECTION LAW

Practice-Driven Changes to

FEDERALISM

Constitutional Structures of

STATE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Governance, Arkansas Law

Americans have long fretted about the disjunction between our high aspirations for the democratic electoral process

Review vol. 68: 335- 369 (2016)

and the desultory reality of the

BOOKS Election Law in the American

Partitioning and Rights: The Supreme

Political System (with Guy-Uriel

Court’s Accidental Jurisprudence

Charles) (Aspen, 2d edition) (2018)

of Political Representation,

modern election campaign. My research examines the role of the law in constituting this disjunction. I am interested

Florida State University Law ARTICLES

in how the law regulating

Review vol. 42: 61-94 (2015)

campaigns operates in its

Active Judicial Governance, New England Law Review

Autonomy and Isomorphism: The

(forthcoming 2018)

Unfulfilled Promise of Structural

actual institutional setting; how the findings of empirical social science determine

Autonomy in American State Canadian Federalism in Design

Constitutions, Wayne Law

and Practice: The Mechanics

Review vol. 60: 31-67 (2014)

what kinds of campaigns the law might feasibly aspire to institutionalize; and how

of a Permanently Provisional Constitution, Perspectives on

Federalism and Subnational Political

Federalism (forthcoming 2018)

Community, Harvard Law Review

democratic theory addresses the normative desirability of these institutional options.”

Forum vol. 127: 153-158 (2014) La contienda intergubernamental en sistemas federados, Yearbook of the National Academy of Law (Córdoba, Argentina) (forthcoming 2017) Claims of Distinctive Identity in Federal Systems: Judicial Policing of the Limits of Subnational Variance (with Antoni Abat iNinet) International Journal of Constitutional Law vol. 14: 378-410 (2016)

21


Stuart G. Lazar PROFESSOR LLM, New York University School of Law JD, University of Michigan Law School AB, University of Michigan (716) 645-2749

slazar@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST TAXATION CORPORATION TAXATION PARTNERSHIP TAXATION

My research interest has

TAX POLICY

focused on federal tax law. While it might seem like an

ARTICLES

oxymoron to use the terms

Business, Lobbying as an Informational

‘tax law’ and ‘interest’ in the

Public Good: Can Tax Deductions

same sentence, understanding

for Lobbying Expenses Promote

the ‘whats’ and ‘whys’ of a

Transparency? (with Michael

text longer than the Bible has

Halberstam) Election Law

proved fascinating. The term

Journal vol. 13(1): 91-116 (2014)

‘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.”

22



Meredith Kolsky Lewis PROFESSOR V I C E D E A N FO R I NTE R N ATI O N A L A N D G R A D UATE P R O G R A M S DIRECTOR OF THE CROSS-BORDER LEGAL STUDIES CENTER JD, Georgetown University Law Center MSFS, Georgetown University BA, Northwestern University (716) 645-1631

My research focuses on international trade law, particularly issues relating to

mlewis5@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW

The Embedded Liberalism Compromise

INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW

in the Making of the GATT and

INTERNATIONAL DISPUTE SETTLEMENT

Uruguay Round Agreements in 20

FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS

Years of Domestic Policy Under

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION LAW

WTO Law: The Embedded Liberalism Compromise Revisited (Gillian Moon

the World Trade Organization, free trade agreements, dispute settlement and trade policy. My

BOOKS

and Lisa Toohey, editors) (Cambridge

Understanding the Trans-

University Press, forthcoming 2018)

Pacific Partnership (Cambridge

scholarship is influenced by my

University Press, forthcoming)

background in international

Mega-FTAs and Plurilateral Trade Agreements: Implications for

relations and economics. I also have a strong interest in the Asia-Pacific, a result of having lived and worked in

Trade Agreements at the

the Asia-Pacific in The Trans-

Crossroads (with Susy Frankel,

Pacific Partnership: A Paradigm

editors) (Routledge, 2014)

Shift in International Trade Regulation? (Julien Chaisse,

New Zealand and Japan. I am currently engaged in several research projects relating to

ARTICLES

Henry Gao and Chang-fa Lo, editors)

TPP and RCEP: Implications of Mega-

(Springer 2017, forthcoming)

FTAs for Global Governance, Social

plurilateral trade agreements

Science Japan vol. 52: 11-13 (2015)

and mega-FTAs, including a

The TPP as a Potential New Paradigm for Trade Agreements: Implications

monograph for Cambridge University Press on the Trans-Pacific Partnership.”

Food Miles: Environmental Protection

and Opportunities in El Tlcan

or Disguised Protectionism? (with

Frente a Nuevas Negociaciones

Andrew D. Mitchell) Michigan

Comerciales Regionales: El

Journal of International

Tpp Y El Ttip (María Celia Toro

Law vol. 35: 579-636 (2014)

Hernández, editor) (forthcoming 2017) (translated into Spanish)

Human Rights Provisions in Free Trade Agreements: Do the Ends Justify

The ASEAN-Australian-New Zealand

the Means? Loyola University

Free Trade Agreement in Bilateral

Chicago International Law

and Regional Trade Agreements:

Review vol. 12(1): 1-22 (2014)

Case Studies (Lorand Bartels, Simon Lester and Bryan Mercurio, editors) (Cambridge University Press, Second Edition, 2016) (114-132)

24


International Political Economy

The Significance of the Trans-

OTHER

and the Prisoner’s Dilemma:

Pacific Partnership for the

Bilateralism in The Encyclopedia

Compliance with International

Asia-Pacific in El Acuerdo De

of International Economic Law

Law in The Political Economy

Asociacion Transpacifico

(Thomas Cottier and Krista Nadaka-

of International Law: A

(Tpp): Bisagra o Confrontacion

vukaren Schefer, editors) (Edward

European Perspective (Alberta

Entre el Atlantico y el Pacifico

Elgar Publishing, forthcoming 2017)

Fabricotti, editor) (Edward Elgar

(Arturo Oropeza García, editor)

Publishing, 2016) (178-201)

(National Autonomous University

Multilateralism in The Ency-

of Mexico, 2014) (95-109)

clopedia of International

The United States’ Path to Concluding

Economic Law (Thomas Cotti-

the Trans-Pacific Partnership: Will

What to Do When Disagreement

er and Krista Nadakavukaren

TPA + TAA = TPP? in European

Strikes? The Complexity of Dispute

Schefer, editors) (Edward Elgar

Yearbook of International

Settlement under Trade Agreements

Publishing, forthcoming 2017)

Economic Law, vol. 7 (Marc

(with Peter L.H. Van den Bossche)

Bungenberg, Christoph Herrmann,

in Trade Agreements at the

Plurilateralism in The Encyclopedia

Markus Krajewski and Jörg Philipp

Crossroads (with Susy Frankel,

of International Economic Law

Terhechte, editors) (Springer, 2016)

editors) (Routledge, 2014) (9-25)

(Thomas Cottier and Krista Nadaka-

When Popular Decisions Rest

BOOK REVIEWS

on Shaky Foundations: Systemic

American Journal of

Implications of Selected WTO

International Law (forthcoming

Voluntary Export Restraints (VERs)

Appellate Body Trade Remedies

2018) (reviewing A History of

and Orderly Marketing Arrange-

Jurisprudence in International

Law and Lawyers in the GATT/

ments (OMAs) in The Encyclopedia

Economic Law and Governance:

WTO (Gabrielle Marceau, editor)

of International Economic Law

Essays in Honour of Mitsuo

(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge

(Thomas Cottier and Krista Nadaka-

Matsushita (Julien Chaisse

University Press and the World

vukaren Schefer, editors) (Edward

and Tsai-Yu Lin, editors) (Oxford

Trade Organization, 2015))

Elgar Publishing forthcoming 2017)

vukaren Schefer, editors) (Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming 2017)

University Press 2016) (9-27)

25


Isabel Marcus PROFESSOR PhD, University of California, Berkeley JD, University of California, Berkeley School of Law MA, University of California, Berkeley BA, Barnard College (716) 645-2108

For the past 20 years, I have devoted my scholarly, activist and pedagogical

imarcus@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

FAMILY LAW

Compensatory Women’s Rights

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Legal Education in Eastern Europe:

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS

The Women’s Human Rights

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S HUMAN RIGHTS

Training Institute, Human Rights Quarterly vol. 39(3): 539-573 (2017)

REMEDIES

attention to human rights

Reframing Domestic Violence as

issues, with particular

Terrorism or Torture, Faculty

emphasis on women’s human

of Law, NIS vol. 67: 13-24 (2014)

rights. Much of my lecturing, training and provision of

The “Woman Question” in Post-Socialist

scholarships has been to NGO

Legal Education, Human Rights

lawyers focusing on women’s

Quarterly vol. 36: 507-568 (2014)

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.”

26


Martha T. McCluskey P R O F E S S O R A N D W I L L I A M J . M A G A V E R N F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R JSD, Columbia University School of Law LLM, Columbia University School of Law JD, Yale Law School BA, Colby College (716) 645-2326

mcclusk@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Law and Economics: Contemporary

LAW AND ECONOMICS

Approaches (Casebook Introduction)

WELFARE LAW

(with Frank Pasquale and Jennifer

GENDER AND LAW

Taub) Yale Law and Policy

CRITICAL LEGAL STUDIES

Review vol. 35: 297-308 (2016)

My interest is in exploring questions of economic policy

HEALTH LAW EMPLOYMENT LAW FAMILY LAW DISABILITY LAW CIVIL RIGHTS LAW RACE AND THE LAW INSURANCE AND THE LAW OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH GOVERNMENT ETHICS REGULATION ENERGY LAW HIGHER EDUCATION LAW FINANCE

and regulation from outside

Facing the Ghost of Cruikshank in

the conventional boundaries of

Constitutional Law, Journal of Legal

‘private’ law and neo-classical

Education vol. 65(2): 278-297 (2015)

economics. I am interested in how law and politics shape

Toward a Fundamental Right to Evade

markets and in how economic

Law? Protecting the Rule of Power

policies reflect and reproduce

in Shelby County and State Farm,

ideas about citizenship and

Berkeley Journal of African-

social status. I draw on critical

American Law & Policy (Symposium)

perspectives of legal theory

vol. 17(2): 216-229 (2015) and Touro

to examine the relationships

Law Journal of Race, Gender &

between questions of economics

Ethnicity vol. 7: 216-229 (2015)

and questions of race, gender, class, sexuality and disability

CHAPTERS ARTICLES

Big Government Against Social

Following the Money in Public Higher

Responsibility: A Vulnerability

Education Foundations, Academe

Critique of Privatization’s Public

vol. 103(1): 27-31 (Jan./Feb. 2017)

Priorities in Privatization, Vulner-

status. My work challenges the divide between economic and moral or social regulation.”

ability, and Social Responsibility Constitutional Economic Justice:

(Martha A. Fineman, Ulrika An-

Structural Power for “We the

dersson, and Titti Mattsson, editors)

People,” Yale Law & Policy

(Ashgate/ Routledge, 2017) (24-33)

Review vol. 35(1): 271-296 (2016) Personal Responsibility for Systemic Framing Middle Class Insecurity:

Inequality in Edgar Elgar Handbook

Tax and the Ideology of Unequal

On Political Economy and the

Growth, Fordham Law Review

Law (Ugo Mattei and John Haskell,

vol. 84: 2699-2720 (2016)

editors) (Edward Elgar, 2016) (227-245)

27


Errol E. Meidinger M A RGA RET W. WONG PROFE S SOR D IREC TOR OF TH E BA LDY CE NTE R FOR L AW A N D SOCI A L P OLICY HONORARY PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG, GERMANY PhD, Northwestern University JD, Northwestern University School of Law MA, Northwestern University BA, University of North Dakota (716) 645-6692

“My research focuses on how non-governmental actors interact with each other and with governments to establish and maintain transnational regulatory programs in fields where

eemeid@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Transnational Business Governance

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

Interactions: Conceptualization

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

and Framework for Analysis

INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ LAW

(with Kenneth W. Abbott, Julia

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

Black, Burkard Eberlein and

INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

Stepan Wood) Regulation and

INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND ENVIRONMENT

Governance vol. 8(1): 1-21 (2014)

LEGAL THEORY

CHAPTERS

SOCIOLOGY OF LAW

Governance Interactions in Sustainable Supply Chain Management

governments have typically been the main regulators — e.g., environmental protection, human rights, and food safety. I am studying how effective, fair, and democratic the emerging governance ecosystems are, and particularly, how competition and cooperation among the

BOOKS

in Transnational Business

Transnational Business

Governance Interactions:

Governance Interactions:

Enhancing Regulatory Capacity,

Enhancing Regulatory Capacity,

Ratcheting Up Standards, and

Ratcheting Up Standards, and

Empowering Marginalized Actors

Empowering Marginalized Actors

(Stepan Wood, Rebecca Schmidt,

(with Stepan Wood, Rebecca Schmidt,

Kenneth Abbott and Burkard Eberlein,

Kenneth Abbott and Burkard Eberlein,

editors) (Edward Elgar, forthcoming)

editors) (Edward Elgar, forthcoming)

different regulators affects the

OTHER

overall 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

The Big Thaw: Policy, Governance

Environmental Principles in U.S.

and Climate Change in the

and Canadian Law (with Daniel A.

Circumpolar North (with Ezra B.W.

Spitzer and Charles W. Malcomb) in

Zubrow and Kim Diana Connolly,

Encyclopedia of Environmental

editors) (SUNY Press, forthcoming)

Law (Edward Elgar, forthcoming)

ARTICLES

non-governmental programs

The Interactive Dynamics of

become more important, we

Transnational Business Governance:

may also need to revise some

A Challenge for Transnational Legal

of our main assumptions about

Theory (with Kenneth W. Abbott,

what counts as law and how law

Julia Black, Burkard Eberlein and

is made and implemented.”

Stepan Wood) Transnational Legal Theory vol. 6: 333-369 (2016)

28


Tara J. Melish PROFESSOR DIRECTOR OF THE BUFFALO HUM AN RIGHTS CENTER JD, Yale Law School BA, Brown University (716) 645-2257

tmelish@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW

An Historical Introduction

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

to the Convention in The U.n.

ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS

Convention on the Rights of

COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Article-By-Article Commentary

COMPARATIVE ADJUDICATION STANDARDS

(Ilias Bantekas, Michael Stein and

My current scholarship trains

Persons With Disabilities: An

a comparative lens on the types, numbers and use patterns of the institutional spaces recognized

Dimitris Anastasiou, editors) (Oxford

by national and sub-national

University Press, forthcoming 2018)

communities for deepening

BOOKS On Indivisibility and Social Rights

Putting “Human Rights” Back

Enforcement: Beyond the “Separate

into the U.N. Guiding Principles

But Equal” Paradigm (Pennsylvania

on Business and Human Rights:

University Press, forthcoming 2018)

Shifting Frames and Embedding

domestic engagement with human rights and human rights treaty norms. A mapping of these institutional spaces, particularly with respect to

Participation Rights in Business and

their quality, quantity and

Human Rights: Beyond the End of

accessibility to disaggregated

the Beginning (Cesar Rodriguez-

population groups, provides

Garavito, editor) (Cambridge

a more accurate and reliable

University Press, 2017) (76-96)

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.”

29


James G. Milles PROFESSOR JD, Saint Louis University School of Law MLIS, University of Texas at Austin BA, Saint Louis University (716) 645-5543

jgmilles@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST LEGAL ETHICS BEHAVIORAL LEGAL ETHICS INFORMATION PRIVACY

I am interested in identifying

COMPUTER CRIME

factors that contribute to lawyers’ ethical failures and

ARTICLES

developing practices that

Legal Education in

promote ethical behavior.

Crisis, and Why Law

Ethical failures are not

Libraries are Doomed,

limited to bad lawyers, or bad

Law Library Journal

people. Situational factors

vol. 106: 507-520 (2014)

have enormous influence on compliance with rules and norms. My current research focuses on client waivers of conflicts of interest, and how research in cognitive science illuminates the influences that can prevent consent from being truly informed.”

30


Athena D. Mutua PROFESSOR AND FLOY D H . AND HILDA L . HURST F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R LLM, Harvard Law School MA, American University JD, American University Washington College of Law BA, Earlham College (716) 645-2873

admutua@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST CONSTITUTIONAL LAW CIVIL RIGHTS LAW CORPORATE LAW AND REGULATION

My work is inspired by much

CRITICAL RACE, ECONOMIC, AND FEMINIST LEGAL THEORY

of the activism (both recent and historical) around the pursuit of human dignity, democracy,

ARTICLES

justice, and prosperity. My

Framing Elite Consensus, Ideology

scholarship focuses specifically

and Theory & A ClassCrits

on issues related to racial,

Response, Southwestern Law

economic and gender justice. In

Review vol. 44: 635-667 (2015)

it, I seek to map the mechanisms by which law, together with

Latcrit Praxis @ XX: Toward

other social structures, works

Equal Justice in Law, Education and

to both hinder and support

Society (with Tayyab Mahmud and

these justice pursuits.”

Francisco Valdes) Chicago-Kent Law Review vol. 90: 361-426 (2015) “Disparity” in Judicial Misconduct Cases: Color-Blind Diversity?, The American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law vol. 23: 23-105 (2014) Stuck: Fictions, Failures and Market Talk as Race Talk (Forward to ClassCrits VI Symposium Issue: Stuck in Forward? Debt, Austerity and the Possibilities of the Political) Southwestern Law Review vol. 43: 517-548 (2014)

31


Makau W. Mutua SUNY DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR F L OY D H . A N D H I L D A L . H U R S T F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R SJD, Harvard Law School LLM, Harvard Law School LLM, University of Dar-es-Salaam (Tanzania) LLB, University of Dar-es-Salaam (Tanzania) (716) 645-2311

My scholarship has centered on state legitimacy, postcolonialism, constitutionalism and the

mutua@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

CHAPTERS

PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW

Africans and the ICC: Hypocrisy,

HUMAN RIGHTS

Impunity, and Perversion in

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS

Africans and the ICC: Perceptions

POST-COLONIALISM

of Justice (Kamari Clarke, Abel

THIRD WORLD APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL LAW (TWAIL)

Knottnerus, and Eefje de Volder, editors) (Cambridge, 2016) (47-60)

STATE RECONSTRUCTION

critiques of the human rights idiom. In a world that is increasingly defined by relativism — and the expansion

POST-CONFLICT SOCIETIES

Closing the ‘Impunity Gap’ and

CONSTITUTION-MAKING

the Role of State Support for the

TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE

ICC in Contemporary Issues Facing the International

of the meaning and content of freedom — shackles of state power are constantly being loosened. Human rights is

BOOKS

Criminal Court (Richard H.

Human Rights Standards:

Steinberg, editor) (Martinus

Hegemony, Law, and Politics (David

Nijhoff; Lam edition, 2016) (99-111)

C. Earnest, editor) (SUNY Press, 2016)

the medium of choice for

Is the Age of Human Rights Over?

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

ARTICLES

in The Routledge Companion

Africa and the Rule of Law,

to Literature and Human

International Journal of Human

Rights (Sophia A. McClennen and

Rights (Revista Internacional de

Alexandra Schulthesis Moore,

Direitos Human) vol. 23: 1-6 (2016)

editors) (Routledge, 2016) (450-458)

Mazrui and Barkan: A Tribute,

well determine the pace at

Journal of Contemporary African

which the chasm between

Studies vol. 33: 433-440 (2016)

power and powerlessness shrinks or grows.”

What is the Future of Transitional Justice?, International Journal of Transitional Justice (Special Issue) 1-9 (2015)

32


Anthony O’Rourke PROFESSOR JD, Columbia Law School BA, University of Michigan (716) 645-3097

aorourke@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Statutory Constraints and

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

Constitutional Decisionmaking,

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Wisconsin Law Review

LEGISLATION

vol. 2015: 87-152 (2015)

Much of my research lies at

STATUTORY INTERPRETATION LEGAL THEORY

the intersection of criminal

Substantive Due Process for

procedure and structural

Noncitizens: Lessons from Obergefell, ARTICLES

Michigan Law Review First

Parallel Enforcement and Agency

Impressions vol. 114: 9-20 (2015)

constitutional law. I am currently exploring how political and economic

Interdependence, Maryland Law Review vol. 77 (forthcoming 2018)

conditions affect the capacity

The Speedy Trial Right and National

of courts to solve difficult

Security Detention, Oxford Journal Semantic Vagueness and Extrajudicial

of International Criminal

Constitutional Decisionmaking,

Justice vol. 12: 871-896 (2014)

doctrinal problems. Using a methodological approach that integrates doctrinal

William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal vol. 25 (forthcoming 2017)

analysis with legal theory

Windsor Beyond Marriage: Due

and social science, my work

Process, Equality and Undocumented White Paper of Democratic Criminal

Immigration, William and Mary

Justice (with Joshua Kleinfeld et al.)

Law Review vol. 55: 2171-2225 (2014)

challenges some common assumptions concerning how institutional pressures

Northwestern University Law

shape both constitutional and

Review vol. 111: 1693-1706 (2017)

statutory interpretation.�

33


Jessica Owley 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 (716) 645-8182

My research centers on the evolving meaning of property. I am particularly interested in how shifting

jol@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Enhancing Conservation Options: An

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

Argument for Statutory Recognition

PROPERTY LAW

of Options to Purchase Conservation

NATURAL RESOURCES LAW

Easements (OPCEs) (with Federico

FEDERAL INDIAN LAW

Cheever) Environmental Law

LEGISLATION AND STATUTORY INTERPRETATION

Reporter News & Analysis vol. 47: 10655-10660 (2017)

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

meanings and interpretations

CLIMATE CHANGE

affect environmental values

Mineral Estate Conservation Easements: A New Policy Instrument

and regulatory schemes. My recent line of inquiry examines the intersection between ‘public’ and ‘private’ land conservation and how that moving line influences

BOOKS

to Address Hydraulic Fracturing

Rethinking Sustainability

and Resource Extraction (with

to Meet the Climate Change

Robert Jackson & James Salzman)

Challenge (with Keith H.

Environmental Law Reporter News

Hirokawa, editor) (Environmental

& Analysis vol. 47: 10112-110120 (2017)

Law Institute Press, 2015)

property and environmental

Public Access to Spatial Data on

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

ARTICLES

Private-Land Conservation (with

Exploiting Conservation Lands:

Adena R. Rissman, Andrew W.

Can Hydrofracking Be Consistent

L’Roe, Amy Wilson Morris and

with Conservation Easements?

Chloe B. Wardropper) Ecology

(with Collin Doane) Kansas Law

and Society vol. 22(2): 24 (2017)

Review vol. 66 (forthcoming 2018)

emergence of conservation

Enhancing Conservation Options: An

easements as a preferred method of conservation. Where private agreements regarding land use form the backbone of our conservation strategies, we elevate the role

Beyond Zero-Sum Environmentalism

Argument for Statutory Recognition

(with Shalanda Baker, Robin

of Options to Purchase Conservation

Kundis Craig, John Dernbach, Keith

Easements (OPCEs) (with Federico

Hirokawa, Sarah Krakoff, Melissa

Cheever) Harvard Environmental

Powers, Shannon Roesler, Jonathan

Law Review vol. 40: 1-45 (2016)

Rosenbloom, J.B. Ruhl, Jim Salzman,

of the private landowner over community needs and desires.”

Inara Scott and David Takacs)

Trends in Private Land Conservation:

Environmental Law Reporter News

Increasing Complexity, Shifting

& Analysis vol. 47: 10328-10351 (2017)

Conservation Purposes and Allowable Private Land Uses (with Adena Rissman) Land Use Policy vol. 51: 76-84 (2016)

34


A Bold New Environmental Option THE ENVIRONMENTAL LAW AND POLICY ANNUAL REVIEW, A YEARLY COMPETITION FOR SCHOLARS WRITING IN THIS IMPORTANT SUBJECT area, selected an article co-authored by Professor Jessica Owley as one of just four republished in the Environmental Law Reporter. Owley’s article, Enhancing Conservation Options: An Argument for Statutory Recognition of Options to Purchase Conservation Easements (OPCEs), first published in the Harvard Environmental Law Review, argues that state legislatures should integrate OPCEs into their conservation easement laws. Doing so, she says, would “do for OPCEs what conservation easement statutes have done for conservation easements: transform them into an essential multi-purpose tool for conservation in a changing world.” Owley’s winning article came about as part of a larger research collaboration about private land conservation and climate change. “I think generally that private land conservation mechanisms are going to be more popular,” she says, as environmentalists and their attorneys adjust to the policies of the current presidential administration.

Adapting Conservation Easements

Symbolic Politics for Disempowered

CHAPTERS

to Climate Change (with Adena R.

Communities: State Environmental

The Use of Property Law

Rissman, M. Rebecca Shaw and

Justice Policies (with Tonya Lewis)

Tools for Soil Protection in

Barton H. Thompson), Conservation

Brigham Young University

International Yearbook of

Letters vol. 8: 68-76 (2015)

Journal of Public Law

Soil Law and Policy (Harald

vol. 29: 183-240 (2015)

Ginzky, Elizabeth Dooley, Irene

Cultural Heritage Conservation

Hauser, Till Markus and Tianbao

Easements: The Problem of

Green Siting for Green Energy

Using Property Law Tools for

(with Amy Morris and Emily

Heritage Protection, Land Use

Capello), Journal of Energy

Flexible Conservation in Uncertain

Policy vol. 49: 177-182 (2015)

and Environmental Law

Times (with David Takacs) in

vol. 5: 17-29 (Spring 2014)

Contemporary Issues in Climate

From Vacant Lots to Full Pantries:

Qin, editors) (forthcoming 2018)

Change Law and Policy: Essays

Urban Agriculture Programs and the

Mitigating the Impacts of the

Inspired at the IPCC (Robin

American City (with Tonya Lewis)

Renewable Energy Gold Rush

Kundis Craig and Stephen R.

University of Detroit Mercy

(with Amy Morris), Minnesota

Miller, editors) (Environmental

Law Review vol. 91: 233-258 (2015)

Journal of Law, Science and

Law Institute, 2016) (65-104)

Technology vol. 15: 293-388 (2014) Preservation is a Flawed

Sustainability Thinking for the

Mitigation Strategy, Ecology Law

Towards Engaged Scholarship

Climate Change Generation in

Currents vol. 42: 1-14 (2015)

(with John Nolon, Michelle Bryan

Rethinking Sustainability

Mudd, Michael Burger, Kim

to Meet the Climate Change

A Response to the IPCC Fifth

Diana Connolly, Nestor Davidson,

Challenge (with Keith H. Hirokawa,

Assessment (with Sarah Adams-

Matthew Festa, Jill I. Gross, Lisa

editors) (Environmental Law

Schoen, Deepa Badrinarayana,

Heinzerling, Keith H. Hirokawa,

Institute Press, 2015) (5-21)

Cinnamon Carlarne, Robin

Tim Iglesias, Patrick C. McGinley,

Kundis Craig, John C. Dernbach,

Sean Nolon, Uma Outka, Kalyani

Property Constructs and

Keith H. Hirokawa, Alexandra

Robbins, Jonathan Rosenbloom

Nature’s Challenge to Perpetuity

B. Klass, Katrina Kuh, Stephen

and Christopher Serkin), Pace Law

in Environmental Law and

Miller, Shannon Roesler, Jonathan

Review vol. 33: 821-877 (2014)

Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A

Rosenbloom, Inara Scott and

Constructivist Approach (Keith

David Takacs), Environmental

H. Hirokawa, editor) (Cambridge

Law Reporter News & Analysis

University Press, 2014) (64-86)

vol. 45: 10027-10048 (2015)

35


Stephen J. Paskey L E C T U R E R I N L A W, L E G A L A N A LY S I S , WRITING AND RESEARCH JD, University of Maryland School of Law BA, Michigan State University (716) 645-5044

sjpaskey@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST LAW AND NARRATIVE LAW AND RHETORIC REFUGEE AND ASYLUM LAW

We tend to think of law as a logical system of rules, but legal

ARTICLES

rules are ultimately made of

Telling Refugee Stories: Trauma,

words and the relationships

Credibility, and the Adversarial

between them. My work focuses

Adjudication of Claims for

on the implications of that

Asylum, Santa Clara Law

simple fact, using concepts from

Review vol. 56: 457-530 (2016)

rhetorical theory, narrative theory, cognitive linguistics,

Conveying Titles Clearly: Thoughts

and other disciplines to

on the Fifth Edition of the ALWD

question the conventional

Guide to Legal Citation, Journal

understanding of what legal

of Appellate Practice and

rules are, how they work, and

Process vol. 15: 273-280 (2014)

how lawyers, judges, and juries reason in real-world cases.�

The Law is Made of Stories: Erasing the False Dichotomy Between Stories and Legal Rules, Legal Communication & Rhetoric: Jalwd vol. 11: 51-84 (2014)

36


Stephanie L. Phillips PROFESSOR JD, Harvard Law School BA, University at Buffalo (716) 645-2201

slp@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST MINDFULNESS AND LAW AFRICAN-AMERICAN LEGAL HISTORY CONFLICT OF LAWS

My current research

LAW AND RELIGION

encompasses three topics. First,

CRITICAL RACE THEORY

along with other innovators in the field of Mindfulness

ARTICLES

and Law, I have integrated

Mindfulness in Education: Tools

mindfulness meditation into

for Effective Conflict Resolution,

my substantive teaching

Journal of the Association

and plan to collaborate on

of Women in Colleges of

empirical research into

Education (Lagos, Nigeria, 2016)

the efficacy of mindfulness techniques for improved

CHAPTERS

cognitive functioning,

Teaching African-American

emotional regulation and

Legal History in Teaching

stress management. Second,

Legal History: Comparative

I am co-teaching a series of

Perspectives (R.M. Jarvis, editor)

seminars in African-American

(London: Wildy, Simmonds &

legal history, with a related

Hill Publishing, 2014) (185-188)

book project. Third, I continue to develop my expertise in theologies of religious pluralism, as applied to the constitutional framework for managing religious diversity.�

37


John Henry Schlegel UB DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR F L OY D H . A N D H I L D A L . H U R S T F A C U LT Y S C H O L A R JD, University of Chicago Law School BA, Northwestern University (716) 645-2746

I am at work on a book about

schlegel@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

The Birth of the Modern Law

LEGAL HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN ECONOMY

Professor in Wesley Newcomb

CORPORATE FINANCE

University Press, forthcoming 2017)

ECONOMIC REDEVELOPMENT OF RUST BELT CITIES

law and economy in the 1950s. What fascinates about this

Hohfeld (Ted Sichelman, editor) (Yale

. . . and Law? in Contemporary Legal Thought (Chris Tomlins and Justin

now long passed time is that its understanding of what makes up a ‘good economy’ is so

ARTICLES

Desautels-Stein, editors) (Cambridge

On Absences as Material for

University Press, forthcoming 2017)

Historical Study, Buffalo Law

unlike our own, and yet, that

Review vol. 64: 141-59 (2016)

lost understanding structures

Legal Realism in International Encyclopedia of the Social and

so much of the debate about today’s economy. Such nostalgia for an unrecoverable past

Philosophical Inquiry and Social

Behavioral Sciences (James D.

Practice, Virginia Law Review

Wright, editor) (Elsiver, 2015) (772-775)

vol. 101: 1197-1202 (2015)

is pathological, but there

BOOK REVIEWS

may be a theme here. Most of my earlier work is directed toward recovering pasts that have been pathologically

“The Three Globalizations”: An Essay

American Historical Review

in Inquiry, Law and Contemporary

vol. 121: 260-61 (2016) (reviewing

Problems vol. 78: 19-35 (2015)

Herbert Hovenkamp’s The Opening of American Law: Neoclassical

distorted in our presents.”

CHAPTERS

Legal Thought 1870-1970 (Oxford

And Absence in Critical History:

University Press, 2014))

Positionality in The Oxford Handbook of Historical Legal Research (Chris Tomlins and Markus D. Dubber, editors) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2018) Sez Who?: Critical Legal History without a Privileged Position in The Oxford Handbook of Historical Legal Research (C. Tomlins and M. Dubber, editors) (Oxford University Press, 2018)

38


Matthew Steilen PROFESSOR JD, Stanford Law School PhD, Northwestern University BA, Carleton College (716) 645-8966

mjsteile@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Bills of Attainder, HOUSTON LAW

CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY

REVIEW vol. 53: 767-908 (2016)

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW LEGAL THEORY

Due Process as Choice of Law,

THE COMMON LAW

William and Mary Bill of Rights

I study the history and development of Anglo-

Journal vol. 24: 1047–1106 (2016)

American legal institutions. In

BOOKS Constitutional Law: Sources

On the Place of Judge-Made Law in

and Problems (digital casebook)

a Government of Laws, Critical

(ChartaCourse, 2017)

Analysis of Law vol. 3: 243–260 (2016)

ARTICLES

Judicial Review and Non-

The Josiah Philips Attainder and

Enforcement at the Founding,

the Institutional Structure of the

University of Pennsylvania

American Revolution, Howard Law

Journal of Constitutional

Journal vol. 60 (forthcoming 2017)

Law vol. 17: 479-568 (2014)

England, my primary interest is the King’s Parliament. In America, it is popular assemblies and courts of law.”

39


Robert J. Steinfeld JOS E PH W. B E LLUCK A N D L AU R A L . ASWA D PROFESSOR OF CIVIL JUSTICE 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

BOOKS

during the 1780s. There has

“To Save the People From

been a veritable flood of writing

Themselves”: The Problem of

on this subject in recent years,

Popular Sovereignty and the

but largely because, in my

Development of Early American

view, no completely convincing

Judicial Review (forthcoming)

account of the subject has, thus far, appeared. I argue that the

ARTICLES

origins of judicial review must

The Rejection of Horizontal Judicial

be sought simultaneously in the

Review During America’s Colonial

constitutional controversies

Period, Critical Analysis of

of the 1770s, and in an older

Law vol. 2(1): 214-233 (2015)

set of assumptions about constitutional change

BOOK REVIEWS

through prescription.”

The Journal of the Civil War Era, vol. 4(2): 331-333 (2014) (reviewing Robert J. Cottrol’s The Long, Lingering Shadow: Slavery, Race, and Law in the American Hemisphere, (University of Georgia Press, 2012))

40


Rick Su PROFESSOR JD, Harvard Law School BA, Dartmouth College (716) 645-5134

ricksu@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST IMMIGRATION LAW LOCAL GOVERNMENT LAW

Immigration has long been

ARTICLES

viewed as a quintessential

Have Cities Abandoned Home

national issue. At the same time,

Rule?, Fordham Urban Law

it is becoming increasingly

Journal vol. 44: 181-217 (2017)

apparent that the local dimensions of immigration

Intrastate Federalism,

play a significant role in not

University of Pennsylvania

only the development of our

Journal of Constitutional

immigration policies, but also

Law vol. 19: 191-270 (2016)

how immigrants are perceived in American society. My

CHAPTERS

research aims to bridge this

The Role of States in the National

divide by exposing the intricate

Conversation on Immigration

and complex relationship

in Strange Neighbors: The

between immigration and

Role of States in Immigration

local government law. I am

Policy (Carissa Hessick and

currently examining how local

Gabriel Chen, editors) (New York

government law’s systematic

University Press, 2014) (198-228)

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.”

41


Mateo Taussig-Rubbo PROFESSOR PhD, University of Chicago JD, Yale Law School MPhil, Cambridge University BA, University of Chicago (716) 645-5992

Interweaving my concerns as a legal scholar with my training

taussig@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

BOOKS

ANTHROPOLOGY OF LAW

Contracting Warfare:

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Sacrifice, Law and State Violence

CRIMINAL LAW

in Neoliberal Times (Stanford

COMPARATIVE LAW

University Press, forthcoming 2017)

CONTRACTS

in cultural anthropology,

SOCIAL AND POLITICAL THEORY

my work has focused on a set of legal and theoretical

ARTICLES Appraising 9/11: Sacred Value and Heritage in Neoliberal Times,

challenges posed by changes in

University of Pennsylvania

the nature of state sovereignty

Journal of Constitutional

in an era of privatization

Law vol. 18(4): 1179-1230 (2016)

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 U.S.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.�

42


David A. Westbrook LOUIS A . DEL COTTO PROFESSOR JD, Harvard Law School BA, Emory University (716) 645-2490

dwestbro@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

Who Are Our Allies? Who Are Our

INTERNATIONAL LAW AND GLOBALIZATION

Customers?, World Economics

CORPORATE FINANCE

Association Newsletter

POLITICAL ECONOMY AND SOCIAL THEORY

vol. 5(3): 3-5 (June 2015)

Now that the financial crisis has settled and our wars have

Creative Engagements Indeed! Open ARTICLES

“Disciplines,” The Allure of Others,

Unicorns, Guardians, and the

and Intellectual Fertility, Journal of

Concentration of the U.S. Equity

Business Anthropology vol. 3(2):

Markets (Amy Deen Westbrook &

33-48 (Fall 2014) (To be republished as a

David A. Westbrook) Nebraska Law

book chapter, Peking University Press)

become interminable, I’m again taking a longer view. I am thinking about the possibilities for politics and social thought ‘After Globalization.’ Global capitalism has transformed

Review vol. 96 (3) (forthcoming)

our structures of meaning in

CHAPTERS The Paradigm Sways: Macroeconomics

Magical Contracts, Numinous

Turns to History, International

Capitalism in Magical Capitalism

Finance vol. 20 (forthcoming 2017)

(Brian Moeran and Timothy Malefyt,

deep ways, so I’m trying to get a handle on the contemporary through a number of projects. I’m working with

editors) (Palgrave, forthcoming)

anthropologist Christina

Prolegomenon to a Defense of the City of Gold, Real World

Leaving Flatland: Planar Discourses

Economics Review (Special issue:

and the Search for the G-Axis in

“Trumponomics: Causes and

Political Affairs: Bridging Markets

Consequences”) Issue 78: 141-147

and Politics (Christina Garsten and

(March 2017) (Republished as a

Adrienne Sörbom, editors) (Oxford

book chapter in Trumponomics:

University Press, forthcoming)

Garsten and her team on ‘Global Foresight’ within institutions; with computer scientist Perry Alexander on what ‘computing’ means as an intellectual enterprise; and I’ve written and spoken about the changing

Causes and Consequences (Edward Fullbrook and Jamie Morgan, editors)

Critical Issues for Qualitative

(College Publications, 2017))

Research in The Sage Handbook of

ontology of ‘the university.’ In addition, I’ve drafted a book about the rise of commercial

Qualitative Research (Norman Governing International Finance after

Denzin and Yvonna Lincoln, editors)

the Global Financial Crisis: Three

(SAGE Publications, 5th edition, 2016)

country music as an American response to the contemporary. More, and pictures, available

Views of the Terrain, International Finance vol. 19 (2): 230-243 (2016)

at davidawestbrook.com.”

International Law in Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and

Magical Contracts, Numinous

Politics (Emad El-Din Shahin, editor)

Capitalism in Anthropology Today

(Oxford University Press, 2014)

vol. 32(6): 13-17 (December 2016)

43


James A. Wooten PROFESSOR PhD, Yale University MA, Yale University MPhil, Yale University JD, Yale Law School BA, Rice University (716) 645-2318

My research focuses on employee-benefits law and

jwooten@buffalo.edu

AREAS OF INTEREST

ARTICLES

EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

A Legislative and Political History

LEGAL HISTORY

of ERISA Preemption, Part 4: The

LEGISLATION

‘Deemer’ Clause, Journal of Pension

RETIREMENT POLICY

Benefits vol. 22: 3-13 (Autumn 2014)

TAXATION

policy and, especially, the

A Reflection on ERISA Claims

regulatory regime created

Administration and the Exhaustion

by the Employee Retirement

Requirement, Drexel Law

Income Security Act of

Review vol. 6: 573-587 (2014)

1974. ERISA is a large and complicated statute that governs private-sector pension and welfare plans. ERISA’s sweeping preemption clause has been particularly controversial. I am currently writing a series of articles that explain the political and policy concerns that led lawmakers to include broad preemption language in ERISA.”

44


Baldy Center Fellows in Interdisciplinary Legal Studies OUR 2017–18 POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS Baldy Postdoctoral Fellows are highly promising scholars from a variety of disciplines who have completed or are pursuing their PhDs and/or JDs at other universities, but have not yet commenced tenure track positions. Chosen in an extremely competitive process, they carry out their scholarly projects with the full array of UB research resources and participate regularly in Baldy Center talks, discussions, workshops, and conferences.

Amanda Hughett PHD, DUKE UNIVERSITY MA, Duke University BA, University of Tennessee-Knoxville hughett@buffalo.edu

David McNamee P H D C A N D I DATE , PRINCETON UNIVERSITY JD, Yale Law School BA, Brown University davidmcn@buffalo.edu

HUGHETT’S RESEARCH DOCUMENTS THE efforts of civil liberties lawyers to secure procedural protections for inmates during the 1970s. Her work illuminates the limitations of individual rights claims in the postwar era while helping to explain why American prisons continue to punish more harshly than their counterparts in any Western country.

MCNAMEE’S SCHOLARSHIP, TITLED The Citizens’ Constitution, asserts that it is the responsibility of the citizens to directly participate in constitutional interpretation in certain roles—as voters and jurors, litigants and disobedients, partisans and deliberators. This theory sheds new light on the old idea of the Constitution as fundamental law.

OUR 2017–18 SENIOR FELLOWS Baldy Senior Fellows are accomplished academics and professionals, usually faculty members at other universities, who pursue intensive scholarly projects closely related to the mission of the Baldy Center. They utilize UB’s extensive research resources, participate regularly in Baldy Center events, and share their expertise with the larger Baldy community.

Nora V. Demleitner ROY L . STEINHEIMER, JR. PROFE S SOR OF L AW, WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSIT Y LLM, Georgetown Law Center JD, Yale Law School BA, Bates College

Antonio María Hernández PROFE S SOR OF CON STITUTION A L L AW, N ATI O N A L U N I V E R S IT Y O F CÓ R D O B A , ARGENTINA PhD, National University of Córdoba, Argentina

DEMLEITNER’S RESEARCH OUTLINES THE pressing need to dismantle mass imprisonment and provide proposals on how to achieve that goal. It is based on personal, theoretical, and practical accounts of the U.S. criminal justice system. The work builds on Demleitner’s comparative work in criminal justice, sentencing, and post-sentence collateral consequences.

HERNÁNDEZ’S RESEARCH INCLUDES A constitutional comparative vision on American and Argentinian federations. Using an interdisciplinary approach, he analyzes the similarities and differences between the two, taking into account that the model for the original Argentina Constitution of 1853 was the Philadelphia Constitution of 1787.

Learn more about our Baldy Fellows at www.baldycenter.info

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Areas of Scholarly Interest Page numbers for faculty profiles by area of interest

Criminal Law — Binder (7), Boucai (8), Chiesa (13), Ewing (18), O’Rourke (33), Taussig-Rubbo (42)

are indicated by ( ).

Criminal Procedure — Chiesa (13), O’Rourke (33) Critical Legal Studies — McCluskey (27) Critical Race Theory — Mutua, A. (31), Phillips (37)

Administrative Law — Bernstein (6), Connolly (14), Meidinger (28), Owley (34) Administrative Practice in Democracies — Bernstein (6) Advertising Law — Bartholomew, M. (5)

Cyberlaw — Bartholomew, M. (5) Disability Law — McCluskey (27) Domestic Violence — Marcus (26)

African-American Legal History — Phillips (37)

Economic Redevelopment of Rust Belt Cities — Schlegel (38)

American Legal History — Steinfeld (40)

Economic, Social and Cultural Rights — Melish (29)

Animal Cruelty Laws — Chiesa (13)

Election Law — Gardner (21)

Animal Studies — Braverman (10)

Employee Benefit Plans — Wooten (44)

Anthropology of Law — French (20), Taussig-Rubbo (42)

Employment Law — Dimick (15), McCluskey (27)

Antitrust — Bartholomew, C. (4)

Energy Law — McCluskey (27)

Asian Legal Cultures — Bernstein (6), Engel (16) Bankruptcy — Brown (12)

Environmental Law — Connolly (14), Meidinger (28), Owley (34)

Behavioral Legal Ethics — Milles (30)

Equal Protection Law and Equality Theory — Finley (19)

Buddhism and Law — French (20)

Evidence — Bartholomew, C. (4)

Business Law — Brown (12)

Family Law — Boucai (8), Marcus (26), McCluskey (27)

Civil Procedure — Bartholomew, C. (4), Bernstein (6)

Federal Indian Law — Owley (34)

Civil Rights Law — McCluskey (27), Mutua, A. (31)

Federal Jurisdiction — Bernstein (6)

Climate Change — Owley (34)

Federalism — Gardner (21)

Clinical Legal Education — Connolly (14)

Feminist Legal Theory — Finley (19), Mutua, A. (31)

Commercial Law — Abramovsky (2)

Finance — McCluskey (27), Westbrook (43)

Common Law, History of — Steilen (39)

First Amendment — Barbas (3), Finley (19)

Comparative Law — French (20), Taussig-Rubbo (42)

Forensic Psychology — Ewing (18)

Comparative Adjudication Standards — Melish (29)

Free Trade Agreements — Lewis (24)

Comparative Administrative Law — Bernstein (6) Comparative Constitutional Law — Melish (29)

Gender and Law — Finley (19), Marcus (26), McCluskey (27), Mutua, A. (31)

Computer Crime — Milles (30)

Government Ethics — McCluskey (27)

Conflict of Laws — Phillips (37)

Health Law — McCluskey (27)

Constitutional History — Steilen (39), Steinfeld (40)

Higher Education Law — McCluskey (27)

Constitutional Law — Boucai (8), Mutua, A. (31), O’Rourke (33), Steilen (39), Taussig-Rubbo (42)

Human Rights — Marcus (26), Mutua, M. (32)

Constitutional Structure of Politics — Gardner (21)

Income Tax — Dimick (15)

Constitution-Making — Mutua, M. (32)

Indigenous Peoples’ Law — Meidinger (28)

Consumer Protection — Bartholomew, C. (4)

Information Privacy — Milles (30)

Contracts — Taussig-Rubbo (42)

Immigration Law —Su (41)

Insurance Law — Abramovsky (2), McCluskey (27)

Corporate Finance — Schlegel (38), Westbrook (43) Corporate Law — Mutua, A. (31), Westbrook (43) Corporate Taxation — Lazar (22)

46

Intellectual Property — Bartholomew, M. (5) International Business Transactions — Meidinger (28), Mutua, M. (32)


International Dispute Settlement — Lewis (24)

Natural Resources Law — Braverman (10), Connolly (14),

International Economic Law — Lewis (24)

Meidinger (28), Owley (34)

International Environmental Law — Meidinger (28)

Occupational Safety and Health — McCluskey (27)

International Human Rights —Marcus (26), Melish (29), Mutua, M. (32)

Partnership Taxation — Lazar (22)

International Law and Globalization — Connolly (14), Meidinger (28), Mutua, M. (32), Westbrook (43) International Trade and Environment — Meidinger (28) International Trade Law — Lewis (24) International Women’s Human Rights — Marcus (26) Israel /Palestine — Braverman (10)

Political Economy and Social Theory — Westbrook (43) Post-Colonialism — Mutua, M. (32) Post-Con­flict Societies — Mutua, M. (32) Professional Ethics — Ewing (18) Property Law — French (20), Owley (34), Steinfeld (40)

Jurisdiction — Bernstein (6)

Protest Activity — Finley (19)

Jurisprudence — Binder (7), Chiesa (13)

Public International Law — Melish (29), Mutua, M. (32)

Labor and Employment Law — Dimick (15)

Race and the Law — McCluskey (27)

Law and Democratic Theory — Gardner (21) Law and Economics — Dimick (15), McCluskey (27) Law and Genetics — Braverman (10) Law and Geography — Braverman (10)

Refugee and Asylum Law — Paskey (36) Regulation — McCluskey (27), Mutua, A. (31) Regulation of Financial Entities — Abramovsky (2)

Law and Literature — Binder (7)

Remedies — Bartholomew, C. (4), Marcus (26)

Law and Narrative — Paskey (36)

Reproductive Rights — Finley (19)

Law and Religion — French (20), Phillips (37)

Retirement Policy — Wooten (44)

Law and Rhetoric — Paskey (36)

Rights Consciousness — Engel (16)

Law and Science — Braverman (10), Connolly (14) Law and Sexuality — Boucai (8) Law and Social Science — Braverman (10), Connolly (14), French (20) Law and Society — Bernstein (6), Braverman (10), Engel (16), French (20) Legal Education — Connolly (14)

Science and Technology — Braverman (10) Social and Political Theory — Taussig-Rubbo (42) Sociology of Law — Meidinger (28) State Constitutional Law — Gardner (21) State Reconstruction — Mutua, M. (32)

Legal Ethics — Abramovsky (2), Milles (30)

Statutory Interpretation — O’Rourke (33), Owley (34)

Legal Ethnography — Braverman (10), Engel (16)

Tax Policy — Dimick (15), Lazar (22)

Legal History — Barbas (3), Bartholomew, M. (5), Boucai (8), Steinfeld (40), Wooten (44)

Taxation — Dimick (15), Lazar (22), Wooten (44)

Legal History of the American Economy — Schlegel (38) Legal Theory — Meidinger (28), O’Rourke (33), Steilen (39) Legislation — Connolly (14), O’Rourke (33), Owley (34), Wooten (44) Local Government Law — Su (41) Mass Media Law — Barbas (3) Mass Tort — Brown (12) Mental Health Professionals in National Security and Safety — Ewing (18) Mindfulness and Law — Phillips (37)

Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) — Mutua, M. (32) Tort Law— Chiesa (13), Engel (16), Finley (19) Transitional Justice — Mutua, M. (32) Violent Behavior — Ewing (18) Welfare Law — McCluskey (27) Women and the Law — Marcus (26), McCluskey (27), Mutua, A. (31) World Trade Organization Law — Lewis (24)

47


Contact Information AVIVA ABR A MOVSK Y

C H A R LE S PATR I C K E W I N G

M A K AU W. MUTUA

(716) 645-2052

(716) 645-2770

(716) 645-2311

aabramov@buffalo.edu

cewing@buffalo.edu

mutua@buffalo.edu

SAMANTHA BARBAS

LUCINDA M. FINLEY

ANTHONY O’ROURKE

(716) 645-6216

(716) 645-3594

(716) 645-3097

sbarbas@buffalo.edu

finleylu@buffalo.edu

aorourke@buffalo.edu

C H R I S T I N E P. BARTHOLOMEW

REBECCA R. FRENCH

JESSICA OWLEY

(716) 645-7399

(716) 645-2159

(716) 645-8182

rrfrench@buffalo.edu

jol@buffalo.edu

JAMES A. GARDNER

STEPHEN J. PASKEY

(716) 645-3607

(716) 645-5044

jgard@buffalo.edu

sjpaskey@buffalo.edu

STUART G. LAZAR

STEPHANIE L. PHILLIPS

(716) 645-2749

(716) 645-2201

slazar@buffalo.edu

slp@buffalo.edu

MEREDITH KOLSK Y LE WIS

JOHN HENRY SCHLEGEL

(716) 645-1631

(716) 645-2746

mlewis5@buffalo.edu

schlegel@buffalo.edu

ISABEL MARCUS

M AT TH E W S TE I LE N

(716) 645-2108

(716) 645-8966

imarcus@buffalo.edu

mjsteile@buffalo.edu

M A R TH A T. M CC LU S K E Y

ROBERT J. STEINFELD

(716) 645-2326

(716) 645-2094

mcclusk@buffalo.edu

steinfel@buffalo.edu

ERROL E. MEIDINGER

RICK SU

(716) 645-6692

(716) 645-5134

eemeid@buffalo.edu

ricksu@buffalo.edu

TA R A J . M E LI S H

M ATE O TAU S S I G - R U B B O

(716) 645-2257

(716) 645-5992

tmelish@buffalo.edu

taussig@buffalo.edu

JAMES G. MILLES

DAVID A .WE STB ROOK

(716) 645-5543

(716) 645-2490

jgmilles@buffalo.edu

dwestbro@buffalo.edu

ATH E N A D. M UTUA

JAMES A. WOOTEN

(716) 645-2873

(716) 645-2318

admutua@buffalo.edu

jwooten@buffalo.edu

cpb6@buffalo.edu MARK BARTHOLOMEW (716) 645-5959 bartholo@buffalo.edu A N YA B E R N S TE I N (716) 645-3683 anyabern@buffalo.edu GU YOR A BINDE R (716) 645-2673 gbinder@buffalo.edu MICHAEL BOUCAI (716) 645-1743 mboucai@buffalo.edu IRUS BRAVERMAN (716) 645-3030 irusb@buffalo.edu S. TODD BROWN (716) 645-2052 stbrown2@buffalo.edu LUIS E. CHIESA (716) 645-3152 lechiesa@buffalo.edu K I M D I A N A C O N N O L LY (716) 645-2092 kimconno@buffalo.edu M AT TH E W D I M I C K (716) 645-7968 mdimick@buffalo.edu DAVID M. ENGEL (716) 645-2514 dmengel@buffalo.edu

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For the latest Buffalo faculty research, visit our online Buffalo Legal Studies Research Paper Series, hosted and distributed by the Social Science Research Network (SSRN): W W W. S S R N .CO M /LI N K /B U F FA LO - LE GA L- S TU D I E S . HTM L

PRODUCED BY THE OFFICE OF COMMUNICATIONS, UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO SCHOOL OF LAW — OCTOBER 2017


law.buffalo.edu/faculty


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