2024 Clifford Symposium brochure

Page 1

June 6-7, 2024

and Online DePaul Conference Center

THE 30 TH ANN UAL CLIFFORD SYMPOSIUM ON TORT LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY
THE LEGACY OF INDUSTRYWIDE DEADLY MISCONDUCT
In-Person
1 E. Jackson Boulevard, 8th
Chicago, Illinois
Floor

THE LEGACY OF INDUSTRYWIDE DEADLY MISCONDUCT

At least three times in the past hundred years, entire American industries have united in a coordinated and sustained effort to advance their financial interests by knowingly promoting products that have deadly consequences for enormous numbers of individuals exposed to them. The three industries involved in these activities have been the asbestos manufacturers, the tobacco sellers and the opioid purveyors.

There have been striking parallels both in their conduct and the inadequate societal response to the harm done.

Accordingly, this year’s Clifford Symposium will explore:

• The historical legacy of these events

• The ethical questions raised by the legal representation offered the industries

• The behavior of those who enabled widespread harm

• The American industries that appear to be following the same deadly roadmap

• The procedures we might adopt to address these activities

THE 30 TH ANN UAL CLIFFORD SYMPOSIUM ON TORT LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY

THE 30 TH ANNUAL CLIFFORD SYMPOSIUM ON TORT LAW AND SOCIAL POLICY

AGENDA

THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 2024

9:00 REGISTRATION AND CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST

9:30 OPENING REMARKS

Stephan Landsman

Emeritus Professor, DePaul College of Law; Director, Clifford Symposium

9:45 SESSION I: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES

Remedy Becomes Regulation

Samuel Issacharoff, New York University

Adam Littlestone-Luria, Member, New York Bar

Toxic Standards: Regulatory Epistemology and the Legacy of Endocrine Disruption Chemicals

Colleen Lanier-Christensen, Harvard University

Corrupted Science: PCBs, Roundup and Monsanto in the Early Years of the EPA

David Rosner, Columbia University

Physicists as Environmental Experts: The Case of Richard Wilson

Rachel Rothschild, University of Michigan

Discussant: Noah Rosenblum, New York University

12:00 LUNCH (provided)

1:00 SESSION II: OTHER INDUSTRIES?

Farm Until It’s Gone: Industrial Animal Agriculture and the Limits of Law

Douglas Kysar, Yale University

Public Health Nuisances

Catherine Sharkey, New York University

Tragic Exposure, Mass Litigation and Regulatory Failure: Does It Have to Be This Way?

Wendy Wagner, University of Texas

Steve Gold, Rutgers University

Thomas McGarity, University of Texas

Evidence of Compliance

Maggie Wittlin, Fordham University

Discussant: Gregory Mark, DePaul University

3:10 BREAK

3:20 SESSION III: ENABLERS

Discovery Gamesmanship in Mass Torts

Seth Endo, Seattle University

New Empirics on Litigation Secrecy (Virtual Presentation)

David Freeman Engstrom, Stanford University*

Toxic Torts and the Shadowland of Responsibility

John Goldberg, Harvard University

Benjamin Zipursky, Fordham University

Effects of Sponsorship on Research Results

Michael Saks, Arizona State University

Discussant: Stephan Landsman

* Collaborators concerning the reported upon research include Nora Freeman Engstrom, Stanford University; Jonah Gelbach, University of California, Berkeley; Austin Peters, Stanford University

5:30 END OF DAY ONE

FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 2024

8:00 REGISTRATION AND CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST

9:00 SESSION IV: ETHICAL DILEMMAS REGARDING LEGAL REPRESENTATION

Deal making and the Ethically Slippery Slope in the Quest for Global Peace

Elizabeth Chamblee Burch, University of Georgia

Corporate Lawyers, Disloyalty and the Opioid Crisis

Elise Maizel, Michigan State University

What About Purdue’s Lawyers? A Brief History of Lawyer Gatekeeping From Social Trustee Professionalism Through the 2023 ABA Model Rules Amendment

Bradley Wendel, Cornell University

Discussant: Myriam Gilles, Yeshiva University

11:00 BREAK

11:15 SESSION V: RESPONSES

On the Relation Between Causation and Misconduct

Alexandra Lahav, Cornell University

Using Public Nuisance Litigation to Address Industry Misconduct: Common Law

Statutes, Delegation Doctrine and Systems Theory

Timothy Lytton, Georgia State University

Hillel Levin, University of Georgia

Microlocal Litigation for a Mass Tort World

Sarah Swan, Rutgers University

Discussant: Robert Rabin, Stanford University

1:15 CONCLUDING REMARKS

SYMPOSIUM FACULTY

Elizabeth Chamblee Burch

University of Georgia

Seth Endo

Seattle University

David Freeman Engstrom

Stanford University

Myriam Gilles

Yeshiva University

Steve Gold

Rutgers University

John Goldberg

Harvard University

Samuel Issacharoff

New York University

Douglas Kysar

Yale University

Alexandra Lahav

Cornell University

Stephan Landsman

DePaul University

Colleen Lanier-Christensen

Harvard University

Hillel Levin

University of Georgia

Adam Littlestone-Luria Member, New York Bar

Timothy Lytton

Georgia State University

Elise Maizel

Michigan State University

Gregory Mark

DePaul University

Thomas McGarity

University of Texas

Robert Rabin

Stanford University

David Rosner

Columbia University

Noah Rosenblum

New York University

Rachel Rothschild

University of Michigan

Michael Saks

Arizona State University

Catherine Sharkey

New York University

Sarah Swan

Rutgers University

Wendy Wagner

University of Texas

Bradley Wendel

Cornell University

Maggie Wittlin Fordham University

Benjamin Zipursky Fordham University

PAST CONFERENCE TOPICS

2023

New Torts?

2022

Litigating the Public Good: Punishing Serious Corporate Misconduct

2021

Civil Litigation in a Post-COVID World

2020

The Opioid Crisis: Where Do We Go from Here?

2019

Rising Stars: A New Generation of Legal Scholars Looks at Civil Justice

2018

Patient Safety: How Might the Law Help

2017

The Impact of Dark Money on Judicial Elections and Behavior

2016

Privacy, Data Theft and Corporate Responsibility

2015

The Supreme Court, Business and Civil Justice

In 1994, Robert A. Clifford (’76) endowed a faculty chair in tort law and social policy. The chair gives meaningful expression to his belief that the civil justice system serves a number of vital interests in American society. The Clifford Chair at DePaul provides a vehicle for exploration of the civil justice system in an intellectually rigorous fashion.

In addition to providing support for faculty research and teaching, the endowment makes possible an annual symposium addressing a timely issue in the civil justice area. The purpose of the symposium is to bring the latest scholarship and advances in legal practice to lawyers and scholars who specialize in tort law, civil justice and related fields. Professor Stephan Landsman is the current organizer and director of the symposium underwritten by the Clifford Chair.

2014

In Honor of Jack Weinstein

2013

Brave New World: The Changing Face of Litigation and Law Firm Finance

2012

A Celebration of the Thought of Marc Galanter

2011

Festschrift for Robert Rabin

2010

The Limits of Predictability and the Value of Uncertainty

2009

Rising Stars: A New Generation of Scholars Looks at Civil Justice

2008

The Challenge of 2020: Preparing a Civil Justice Reform Agenda for the Coming Decade

2007

Distortions in the Attorney/Client Relationship: Threats to Sound Advice?

2006

Is the Rule of Law Waning in America?

2005

Who Feels Their Pain? The Challenge of Non-Economic Damages in Civil Litigation

2004

Starting Over: Redesigning the Medical Malpractice System

2003

After Disaster: The September 11th Compensation Fund and the Future of Civil Justice

2002

Export Import: American Civil Justice in a Global Context

2001

Smoke Signals: Civil Justice in the Wake of the Tobacco Wars

2000

Civil Litigation and Popular Culture

1999

Judges as Tort Lawmakers

1998

The American Civil Jury: Illusion and Reality

1997

Contingent Fee Financing of Litigation in America

1996

Tort Law and the Science of the Twenty-First Century

1995

ADR and Torts: Implications for Practice and Reform

REGISTRATION

Register for this free CLE event by June 6 at 2024Clifford.eventbrite.com.

There is a room cap of 100 in-person attendees, and online participants will receive a link to view the presentation from InReach just ahead of the event.

No proof of vaccination is required of guests and masks are optional.

You may be asked to show your ID while on campus. We know your time is valuable, and we appreciate your patience and cooperation.

DePaul University College of Law is an accredited Illinois MCLE provider. This program has been approved for up to 10.5 hours of general CLE credit hours, which includes 2 hours of ethics credits for Panel IV.

• DAY 1: Up to 6.5 credits

• DAY 2: Up to 4.0 credits

Details from George Grosz, The Pillars of Society, 1926. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Berlin, Germany)
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