UMassD-School of Law Points of Distinction Brochure

Page 1

New Faculty

Pursue Justice

James Freeley, Full-Time Lecturer

J.D., Boston College M.B.A., Babson College B.A., Wesleyan University •C ourses: Legal Skills I & II; Professional Responsibility; Business Organizations • P rior Position: Adjunct Professor and Interim Director of Academic Success, UMass Law •U Mass Law Adjunct Professor of the Year 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 •M ember, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Bar Admissions Curriculum Committee

Dustin Marlan, Assistant Professor of Law J.D., University of Pennsylvania School of Law B.A., Indiana University •C ourses: Business Organizations; Community Development Clinic; Intellectual Property • P rior Position: Fellow, University of Michigan Law School Community Development Clinic •R ecent Publications: “Unmasking the Right of Publicity,” Hastings Law Journal (forthcoming, 2020) “Beyond Cannabis: Psychedelic Decriminalization and Social Justice,” Lewis & Clark Law Review (2019) “Visual Metaphor and Trademark Distinctiveness,” Washington Law Review (2018)

Elizabeth McCuskey, Professor of Law J.D., University of Pennsylvania School of Law B.A., University of Pennsylvania •C ourses: Civil Procedure; Food & Drug Law; Health Law • P rior Position: Professor of Law, University of Toledo College of Law •R ecent Publications: “ Federalism, ERISA, and Single-State Payer Health Care,” University of Pennsylvania Law Review (forthcoming, 2020) “On Drugs: Preemption, Presumption, & Remedy,” Journal of Legal Medicine (2018)

Points of Distinction

“Agency Imprimatur & Health Reform Preemption,” Ohio State Law Journal (2017)

Bar Exam Passage

Danya Reda, Assistant Professor of Law J.D., Harvard Law School M.St., University of Oxford (Islamic Law and Philosophy) A.B., Brown University

Employment Success

• Courses: Civil Procedure; Comparative and Islamic Law; Torts • P rior Position: Associate Professor of Law, Peking University School of Transnational Law •R ecent Publications: “What Does it Mean to Say That Procedure is Political?,” Fordham Law Review (2017) “ How the Anchoring Effect Might Have Saved Civil Rule-Makers Time and Money (and Face),” Review of Litigation (2015)

Affordability

John Towers Rice, Full-Time Lecturer

• Courses: Legal Skills I & II • P rior Position: Associate Attorney, Elmore Stone & Caffey, PLLC; Adjunct Professor, University of Tennessee College of Law • J udicial Clerk, Supreme Court of Tennessee •M ember, American Bar Association Young Lawyers Division Affiliates Assistance Team; Chair, Public Policy Committee, Tennessee Bar Association Young Lawyers Division

University of Massachusetts School of Law • Dartmouth 333 Faunce Corner Road • Dartmouth, MA 02747-1252 508.985.1110 • lawadmissions@umassd.edu

umassd.edu/law

20200629-SOL-PointsofD-BRO-KD

J.D., University of Tennessee College of Law B.S., Clemson University


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