Faculty News
Ƶ’s faculty members produce influential and timely scholarship that advances legal education and breaks new ground.
Selected works from 2022 and 2023 are below:
Books and Chapters
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Carolina Academic Press published the second edition of Wallace Stevens Professor of Law Kris Franklin’s bookLegal Reasoning Case Files.
- Associate Professor Molly Guptill Manning authored The War of Words: How America's GI Journalists Battled Censorship and Propaganda to Help Win World War II (Blackstone Publishing, 2023).
Law Reviews, Journals, and Articles
- ʰǴڱǰRichard Chusedauthored “Quantum Copyright Law: Schrödinger’s Cat, Banksy’s Shredder, and Art on the Edge” in the Northwestern School of Law Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property.
- Professor of Law from PracticeShahrokh Falati ’08authored “How ChatGPT Challenges Current Intellectual Property Laws” in theƵ Law Journaland “A Singular Disclosure Requirement is Necessary for Patent Law” inThe Columbia Science and Technology Law Review.
- Wallace Stevens Professor of LawKris Franklinand Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Law Peter Phillips ’87authored “Pass the Salt: Problem-Resolution Lawyering Across the Twenty-First Century Law Curriculum” in thePepperdine Dispute Resolution Law Journal.
- Trustee ʰǴڱǰGerald Korngoldauthored a policy focus report entitled “Land Value in the United States: Funding Infrastructure and Local Government Service,” which was published by Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.
- Associate ʰǴڱǰJustin Murrayauthored “Preface: New Directions in Prosecutorial Reform” in the American Criminal Law Review.
- Professor of Law from PracticeMichael Pastorauthored “Cybersecurity and abortion success: The right to choose now means the right to protect data and privacy for women and providers” in the Ƶ Daily News.
- Joseph Solomon Distinguished ʰǴڱǰRebecca Roipheco-authored “Is NY’s New Professional Conduct Rule 8.4(g) Heading to the Courts?” in the Ƶ Law Journaland “A Fiduciary Theory of Progressive Prosecution” in theAmerican Criminal Law Review.
- ʰǴڱǰRoss Sandlerauthored “Berhardt Goetz & NYC’s Vigilante Future” in the Ƶ Daily News.
- ʰǴڱǰAndrew Schererauthored “Summary eviction proceedings must end” in City & State Ƶ.
- Ernst C. Stiefel Professor of Comparative LawRuti G. Teitelco-authored “The Justice Archive: Transitional Justice and Digital Memory,” in the London Review of International Law.
- Otto L. Walter Distinguished Professor of Tax LawAnn Thomasauthored “The Racial Wealth Gap and the Tax Benefits of Homeownership” in the Ƶ Law Review.
- Assistant ʰǴڱǰClaire R. Thomas ’11authored “The So-Called Stateless: Firm Resettlement, African Immigrants, and Human Rights Violations in Mexico” in the Boston University Public Interest Law Journal.
- Assistant ʰǴڱǰAmy Wallaceauthored “The Exclusion of Public Legal Education from Mandatory and Aspirational State Pro Bono Service Requirements” in the Loyola Journal of Public Interest Law.
- Associate ʰǴڱǰBritney Wilsonauthored “Making Me Ill: Environmental Racism and Justice as Disability” in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.
Faculty Updates
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After a lot of dedicated work and a challenging approvals process, the Patent Law Clinic (PLC) secured a U.S. patent for their client, Mr. Karl C. Clarke, a first-time inventor. Read their full story here: bit.ly/46CX8yf
📷 L to R: Rey Llena ’24, Karl C. Clarke, Sarah Glassman ’24, and Professor Seve Falati ’08. ... See MoreSee Less
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Great work!
Congratulations to Professor Penelope Andrews on her investiture as the John Marshall Harlan II Professor of Law! View more photos from the celebration here: bit.ly/48cGlDJ ... See MoreSee Less
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In his op-ed for Bloomberg Law, Professor Shahrokh Falati ’08 examines how patent eligibility law in the U.S. impedes the development of new and improved anti-cancer drugs and what Congress can do to fix the issues. Read it here. ... See MoreSee Less
news.bloomberglaw.com
Ƶ’s Shahrokh Falati says US patent laws are limiting advancement of life-saving cancer therapies, and that Congress should abolish Supreme Court-created exceptions to written law.0 Comments