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Review, Virginia Law Review, Yale Law Journal, and the Journal of Legal Education, among other publications. Her law review works published in 2013 or currently forthcoming include: “Racial Capitalism,” 126 Harvard Law Review 2151 (2013); “Gideon’s Law Protective Function,” 122 Yale Law Journal 2460 (2013); “Half/Full,” 3 Irvine Law Review 252 (2013); “‘So Closely Intertwined’: Labor and Racial Solidarity,” 81 George Washington Law Review (forthcoming, 2013); and “Improving Rights,” 99 Virginia Law Review (forthcoming, 2014). lauRie levenSon Visiting Professor Law Laurie Levenson is a professor of law and David W. Burcham chair in ethical advocacy at Loyola Law School. She joined the Loyola faculty in 1989 and served as Loyola’s associate dean for academic affairs from 19961999. She has taught Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, White Collar Crime, Ethical Lawyering, Evidence, Terrorism and the Law LAUrie Levenson and Advanced Trial Advocacy. Professor Levenson’s recent scholarship includes: Federal Criminal Rules Handbook (2013 ed. Thomson West); Roadmap on Criminal Law (3rd ed.); Criminal Procedure (Aspen Publishers 2008); Glannon Guide on Criminal Law (3rd ed. 2011); “Discovery from the Trenches: The Future of Brady,” 60 UCLA Law Review Discourse 74 (2013); “Courtroom Demeanor: The Theater of the Courtroom,” 92 Minnesota Law Review 573 (2008); and “Live and Learn: Depoliticizing the Interim Appointments of U.S. Attorneys,” 31 Seattle Law Review 297 (2008). Professor Levenson received an A.B. degree from Stanford University and a J.D. degree from UCLA School of Law, where she was chief articles editor of the UCLA Law Review. After graduation, she served as law clerk to the Honorable James Hunter III of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. In 1981, Professor Levenson was appointed assistant United States attorney, criminal section, in Los Angeles, where she was a trial and appellate lawyer for eight years and attained the position of senior trial attorney and assistant division chief. Professor Levenson was a member of the adjunct faculty of Southwestern University Law School from 1982-1989. She has served as an attorney representative to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, a board member of the UCLA Hillel Council and special master, Los Angeles County Superior Court and U.S. District Court. gRegoRy ogden Visiting Professor of Law
gregory ogden
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Gregory Ogden is a professor of law at Pepperdine University School of Law. He teaches Administrative Law, Civil Procedure, Professional Responsibility and Remedies. Professor Ogden is a cum laude graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles, and he received a J.D. degree from the University of California, Davis, School of Law. He was the senior research editor for the UC Davis
Law Review. Following law school, he was awarded the Reginald Heber Smith Fellowship and worked for the San Mateo Legal Aid Society, representing clients in numerous administrative hearings, and other civil cases. He then worked for a small law firm representing clients in many administrative hearings, as well as civil and criminal litigation. In 1976, Professor Ogden returned to the academic world as a law and humanities teaching fellow at Temple University School of Law. He earned an LL.M. degree with a concentration in legal education from Temple in 1978. He joined the Pepperdine law faculty in 1978 as an associate professor of law, and became a professor of law in 1982. He was awarded the Chambership Fellowship in Legislation at Columbia School of Law and received an LL.M. with a concentration in administrative law from Columbia in 1981. Professor Ogden was a consultant to the Administrative Conference of the United States on two different projects from 1982-1984 and 1987-1989. He authored the final report entitled “Public Regulation of Siting of Industrial Development Projects,” which provided the basis for A.C.U.S. Recommendation No. 84 1 (1 C.F.R. Section 305-841) adopted in June 1984. His second study focused on governmental ethics with an emphasis on ethics program assessment at the General Services Administration. Professor Ogden was the editor and contributing author for California Public Agency Practice, a three-volume treatise on California administrative law published in 1988, and he was the editor and principal author of the 1997 two-volume revision of that treatise, entitled California Public Administrative Law, both published by Matthew Bender Publishing Company. Professor Ogden served as the reporter (2006-2010) for the Revised 2010 Model State Administrative Procedure Act (MSAPA) project for the National Conference of Commissioners for Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL). He was an active participant in commenting on consultant reports and proposals with the California Law Revision Commission study on the California Administrative Procedure Act (1990 to 1996), and he was a consultant to the California Law Revision Commission for the Administrative Rulemaking study from 1996-1998. Professor Ogden is the author of a number of law review articles, with a concentration in administrative law subjects. Professor Ogden was a member of the law faculty committee that helped to establish the Pepperdine Legal Aid Clinic at the Union Rescue Mission. He was the founding faculty editor of the Pepperdine Dispute Resolution Law Journal, and he was instrumental in bringing the Journal of the NAALJ to Pepperdine Law School. He is the current faculty editor of the Journal of the NAALJ. elizabeth Ribet Visiting Professor of Law Elizabeth (“Beth”) Ribet received her Ph.D. in Social Relations from UC Irvine (2005) and her J.D. from UCLA, with a concentration in Critical Race Studies (2009). She returns to UCLA Law in fall 2013 subsequent to a visiting research professor appointment at Seton Hall University, where she also served as principal investigator on an empirical legal research project focusing on state variations in family and medical leave law, supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Professor Ribet’s research agenda focuses primarily on law, health and the infliction of new illnesses and disabilities in the context of complex social inequality. She continues to engage in related projects— particularly studying the production of injury and illness among vulnerable populations—in areas such as labor and employment, mass
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