2013 C|M|LAW YearBook

Page 26

Faculty on Paper

Books: Professor Susan J. Becker Susan J. Becker, C|M|LAW Professor Emeritus Lloyd Snyder and C|M|LAW faculty alumnus Jack Guttenberg published the 3rd edition of The Law of Professional Conduct in Ohio with Lexis Nexis.

Leon M. and Gloria Plevin Professor of Law Browne C. Lewis Browne C. Lewis published Papa’s Baby with NYU Press. In Papa’s Baby Lewis argued that the courts should take steps to ensure that all children have at least two legal parents. Additionally, state legislatures should recognize that more than one class of fathers may exist and allocate paternal responsibility based, again, upon the best interest of the child. Lewis supplements her argument with concrete methods for dealing with different types of cases, including anonymous and non-anonymous sperm donors, married and unmarried women, and lesbian couples. Professor Milena Sterio Milena Sterio published her first book, The Right to Self-determination Under International Law: “Selfistans,” Secession, and the Rule of the Great Powers. Published by Routledge Press, it proposed a novel theory of selfdetermination; the Rule of the Great Powers. It argued that traditional legal norms on self-determination have failed to explain and account for recent results of secessionist self-determination struggles.

Articles and Essays: Professor Michael J. Borden Michael J. Borden wrote Of Inside Monitors and Outside Monitors: The Role of Journalists in Caremark Litigation, which was accepted for publication by the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law.

Professor David F. Forte David F. Forte has published Taking Law Seriously, a review of Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, by Antonin Scalia and Bryan A. Garner, in The Claremont Review of Books. Forte wrote Life, Heartbeat, Birth: A Medical Basis for Reform, which was accepted by the Ohio State Law Review. Professor Peter Garlock Peter Garlock wrote Teaching American Legal History in a Law School, which was accepted for publication by the American Journal of Legal History.

26

Cleveland State University

Professor Dennis Keating and Clinical Professor Emeritus Kermit J. Lind Dennis Keating and Kermit J. Lind co-authored Responding to the Mortgage Crisis: Three Cleveland Examples in the Winter 2012 issue of The Urban Lawyer. Keating and Lind write that years before the mortgage crisis fueled by subprime and predatory lending became a national crisis in 2008, this emerging disaster was ravaging neighborhoods in Cleveland, Ohio. Keating co-authored an article on New Jersey’s Mt. Laurel fair share housing, Massachusetts’ Chapter 40B inclusionary housing, and Oregon’s growth management land use policy. The article, Defending Progressive State Housing and Land Use Policies – The fates of three venerable policies on fair share housing and sustainable land use can point the way for how to support similar efforts in other states, appeared in the Summer 2012 edition of Shelterforce magazine. Leon M. and Gloria Plevin Professor of Law Browne C. Lewis Browne C. Lewis has published A Graceful Exit: Redefining Terminal to Expand the Availability of Physician Assisted Suicide, in the Oregon Law Review. Legal Writing Professor Karin Mika Karin Mika has published an article in the Cornell Human Resources Review, an online publication of Cornell’s Graduate School of Industrial Labor Relations. The article, The Benefit of Adopting Comprehensive Standards of Monitoring Employee Technology Use in the Workplace, addresses employee privacy and employer monitoring of employee use of workplace technology. Mika also published Privacy in the Workplace: Are Collective Bargaining Agreements a Place to Start Formulating More Uniform Standards? in the Willamette Law Review. Professor Alan C. Weinstein Alan C. Weinstein published an article, The Ohio Supreme Court’s Perverse Stance on Development Impact Fees and What To Do About It, in the Cleveland State Law Review. In that article, he argues that the Ohio Court’s rulings that development impact fees are lawful when enacted by municipalities but unlawful when enacted by townships is indefensible both legally and from a policy perspective. Weinstein published: The Effect of RLUIPA’s Land Use Provisions on Local Governments, in the Fordham Urban Law Journal. In the absence of perfect information about how RLUIPA has affected local governments, this article argues that the courts have adopted a pragmatic approach to maneuvering in the difficult terrain that RLUIPA occupies. The article was selected to be included in the 2013 edition of Zoning and Planning Law Handbook.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.