Faculty Spotlight
In Memoriam Mushlin, Michael B. Michael B. Mushlin, Unlocking the Courthouse Door: Removing the Barrier of the PLRA’s Physical Injury Requirement to Permit Meaningful Judicial Oversight of Abuses in SuperMax Prisons and Isolation Units, 24 Federal Sentencing Reporter 268 (2012). Nolon, John R. John R. Nolon, Changes Spark Interest in Sustainable Urban Places: But How Do We Identify and Support Them?, Fordham Urban Law Journal (forthcoming 2013).
John R. Nolon, Hydrofracking: Disturbances Both Geological and Political: Who Decides?, 44 Urban Lawyer 507 (2012) (with Victoria Polidoro).
John R. Nolon, Land Use for Energy Conservation and Sustainable Development: A New Path Toward Climate Change Mitigation, 27 Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law 295 (2012).
John R. Nolon, Managing Climate Change through Biological Sequestration: Open Space Law Redux, 31 Stanford Environmental Law Journal 195 (2012).
John R. Nolon, Shifting Paradigms Transform Environmental and Land Use Law: The Emergence of the Law of Sustainable Development, Fordham Environmental Law Review (forthcoming 2013).
Parkin, Jason Jason Parkin, Adaptable Due Process, 160 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1309 (2012).
Powers, Ann Ann Powers, Reflections on Oceans and SIDS, 42 Environmental Policy and Law 239 (2012).
Ann Powers, Sea-Level Rise and Its Impact on Vulnerable States: Four Examples, 73 Louisiana Law Review 151 (2012). Robinson, Nicholas A. Nicholas A. Robinson, Reflecting on Measured Deliberations, 42 Environmental Policy and Law 219 (2012).
Rogers, Audrey Audrey Rogers, From Peer to Peer Networks to Cloud Computing: How Technology is Redefining Child Pornography Laws, Marquette Law Review (2012). Rosenblum, Darren Darren Rosenblum, Unsex Mothering: Toward a New Culture of Parenting, 35 Harvard Journal of Law and Gender 57 (2012). Shulman, Mark R. Mark R. Shulman, Making Progress: How Eric Bergsten and the Vis Moot Advance the Enterprise of Universal Peace, 24 Pace International Law Review 1 (2012).
Mark R. Shulman, Support and Defend: Civil-Military Relations in the Age of Obama, 35 Fordham International Law Journal 409 (2012).
Simon, Michelle S. Michelle S. Simon, Reliable Science: Overcoming Public Doubts in the Climate Change Debate, 37 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 219 (2012) (with Bill Pentland).
Sobie, Merril Merril Sobie, The Delinquent “Toddler”, 26 Criminal Justice 36 (Wint. 2012).
Professor Ralph M. Stein, a founding member of the Pace Law School faculty, died on October 16, 2012, after a long illness. A constitutional law teacher, Professor Stein taught courses on the First Amendment as well as remedies and legal history. His seminars included Slavery, the Constitution, and the Civil War and National Security Law and the Challenge of Terrorism. Devoted to the protection of civil liberties, Professor Stein served on the legal committee of the Anti-Defamation League, and sat on the board of directors of the Lower Hudson Valley Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union. “He loved the students more than anything. He would do anything for his students,” recalled Professor Bennett Gershman. “Ralph was a huge presence at the law school.” Professor Gary A. Munneke, an active member of the local and national legal community, died unexpectedly on November 22, 2012. Professor Munneke was best known for his work in the field of law practice management. A lifetime devotee to preparing and developing future generations of lawyers, Professor Munneke taught Professional Responsibility and seminars on Law Practice Management and the Legal Profession. Professor Munneke was a leader in the American Bar Association and the New York State Bar Association, having most recently chaired a sub-committee of the latter’s Task Force on the Legal Profession and co-authored its corresponding seminal report. “Gary was kind, polite and unfailingly forwardlooking. He was the first to learn about new technologies and teaching techniques,” notes Professor Bridget Crawford. “He encouraged all of us to think about legal education in the future tense.” Dr. Josephine Y. King, professor of law emerita, died on October 24, 2012. A founding member of Pace Law School and its first Associate Dean, Dr. King was an expert in insurance law and health care law. One of the first legal educators to hold both a law degree and a PhD, Dr. King remains the only Pace Law faculty member to have served as chief of appeals for a U.S. Attorney. Professor Jay Carlisle recalls Robert B. Fleming, founding dean of Pace Law School, saying it was through the efforts of Dr. King that Pace Law School achieved accreditation with the ABA. “Dr. King was a pioneer woman legal educator,” shared Professor Carlisle. “She was a brilliant teacher, a superb scholar, a strong advocate for Pace Law School, and a mentor to many members of the law faculty, including me.”
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