Who`s Who 2014 - 2015
Transcription
Who`s Who 2014 - 2015
Who’s Who 2014 2015 Stanford Law School Photo Directory Table of Contents Students Advanced Degree Students (LLM, JSM, MLS, JSD) ....... 1 Class of 2015 JD Students ............................................... 5 Class of 2016 JD Students ............................................... 11 Class of 2017 JD Students ............................................... 16 Deans ................................................................................................ 22 Associate Deans ............................................................................... 22 Faculty and Emeriti ......................................................................... 26 Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty ...................................... 55 Academic and Research Fellows ..................................................... 60 Professional Library Staff ................................................................ 62 Library Staff ..................................................................................... 62 Administrative Staff ......................................................................... 63 Index ................................................................................................ 69 Please note that portions of this photo directory are based on information available as of September 1, 2014. Changes and additions since that date may not appear. Questions about the information presented in this publication should be directed as follows: Deans, Faculty and Emeriti, Lecturers, Visitors, Affiliated Faculty: Amy Applebaum, Academic and Faculty Affairs Officer Administrative Staff and Fellows: Angela Arroyo, Associate Director, Human Resources Professional Library Staff and Library Staff: Paul Lomio, Director, Robert Crown Law Library Students: Catherine Glaze, Associate Dean for Student Affairs Outside and inside cover photo by Bruce Damonte Copyright 2014 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University. Reproduction in whole or in part, without permission of the publisher, is prohibited. Advanced Degree Students (LLM, JSM, MLS, JSD) Pablo Acevedo Wolfang Alschner Nouf Alsulaiti Adi Aron-Gilat JSM LLM Sebastian Alvarado Munoz Yifat Aran LLM JSD Boston University (LLM) University of London Cardiff U. (LLB) LLM JSM Tel Aviv U. (LLB, BA) Santiago, Chile Ferney-Voltaire, France Doha, Qatar Universidad de los Andes The Hebrew University Jerusalem, Israel Stanford Law (JSM) Santiago, Chile Israel Chris Bollard Lina Artunduaga Gilat Juli Bachar Johann Carlos Barcena André Barros Danielle Benecke LLM JSD JSM LLM LLM LLM Universidad Externado de Hebrew University of University of the Philipines MIT Sloan School of University of Sydney (LLB) University College, Cork Colombia Jerusalem (LLB, MBA) Makati City, Philippines Management (MBA) Sydney, Australia Dublin, Ireland Bogota, Colombia Stanford Law (JSM) USA Tel Aviv, Israel Matthieu Bonvoisin JSM University Pantheon Sorbonne Saint Germain En Laye, France Agnes Chong JSD U. of Technology, Sydney (LLB) Stanford Law (JSM) Australia Brenda Brito Do Carmo Mariana Castrellon Eeshan Chaturvedi Shuk Ting Cheng Shih-Chun Chien JSD JSM LLM LLM JSM Para Federal U. Universidad de los Andes Symbiosis Law School University of Hong Kong National Chengchi Stanford Law (JSM) Bogota, Colombia (LLB) Hong Kong University Taipei, Taiwan New Delhi,India Belem, Brazil Maria Jose CorderoSalas Luca Dal Molin Maria Daneri LLM Isabel de Carvalho e Silva Joseph Dollin LLM JSD University of Zurich Universidad Torcuato Di LLM College of Law, Guildford U. of Costa Rica USA Tella Fundacao Getulio Vargas University of Surrey Buenos Aires, Argentina Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Whitchurch, United Stanford Law (JSM) San Jose, Costa Rica LLM Kingdom 1 Advanced Degree Students (LLM, JSM, MLS, JSD) Doron Dorfman Shinsuke Ebato Boaz Fachler Viveca Fallenius Luisa Ferreira-Peralta JSD LLM Visiting Student LLM JSM Alvaro Fomperosa Rivero University of Haifa Waseda University (JD) Jerusalem, Israel Université Robert Schuman Universidad de los Andes LLM Stanford Law (JSM) Tokyo, Japan Brussels, Belgium Bogota, Columbia Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Kiryat Motzkin, Israel Brussels, Belgium Siddharth Fresa Claudio Fuentes Rolando Garcia Miron Diego Gil McCawley Jana Glock Radoslaw Goral LLM JSD JSD LLM JSD Sapienza University of Universidad Diego Portales U. de Chile Leipzig University Warsaw U. (LLM) Rome Diego Portales University Stanford Law (JSM) Leipzig, Germany Warsaw School of Rome, Italy (LLM) Santiago, Chile JSD Harvard Law (LLM) Centro de Estudios Politicos y Constitucionales (Master of Con. Law) Stanford Law (JSM) Mexico City, Mexico Diana Guzman Pablo Hamilton Umberto Hassan Heidi Hietanen Zuyun Hong Desley Horton JSM LLM LLM LLM LLM LLM Universidad Nacional Universidad de Chile University of Milan University of Helsinki East China University of University of Auckland Bogota, Colombia Santiago, Chile Milan, Italy Helsinki, Finland Political Science and Law Auckland, New Zealand Stanford Law (JSM) Santiago, Chile Economics (MSc, M.Econ.) Stanford Law (JSM) Poland Hong Kong Sergei Hovyadinov Ju-Ching Huang Pei-ju Huang Tai-Jan Huang Mikito Ishida Naoko Ishihara JSD University of the Pacific (LLM) Odessa State University (LLB) LLM LLM JSD LLM LLM National Taiwan University Taiwan National University National Taiwan U. University of Tokyo University of Kyoto Taipei, Taiwan Taipei, Taiwan Stanford Law (JSM) Tokyo, Japan Kobe, Japan Stanford Law (JSM) Ukraine 2 New Taipei City, Taiwan Advanced Degree Students (LLM, JSM, MLS, JSD) Anita S. Jwa Mathieu Kohmann JSD Visiting Student Seoul National University Paris, France Shiri Krebs Hiroyuki Kurihara Hisako Kurihara Jae Gul Lee JSD LLM LLM LLM Hebrew U. of Jerusalem University of Tokyo University of Tokyo (LLB, Seoul National University Stanford Law (JSM) (LLB, MA) Tokyo, Japan JD) Seoul, South Korea Seoul, Korea Republic of Stanford Law (JSM) (South) Jerusalem, Israel Nagano, Japan Sujin Lee Celia Lerman Yang Li Lucas Marinovich Patrick McEvoy Mariana Meditsch LLM JSM LLM LLM LLM LLM Seoul National University Universidad Torcuato Di Peking University Pontificia Universidad Trinity C. Pontificia Universidad Seoul, South Korea Tella Beijing, China Catolica de Chile Dublin Ireland Catolica de Rio de Janeiro Buenos Aires, Argentina Santiago, Chile Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Valérie Menoud Tal Mizrahi Bernardo Moura Maithreyi Mulupuru Qian Nie Elena Nrtina LLM Visiting Student LLM JSM LLM LLM University of Lausanne Jerusalem, Israel Federal Fluminese National Law School of East China University of Lomonsov Moscow State University of Zurich University India University Political Science and Law University Geneva, Switzerland Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Bangalore, India Shanghai, China Cheboksary, Russia Ana Cristina Nuñez Paula Oliveira Jonathan Pail Gonzalo Paredes Alexandre Pauwels Arnaud Philippe JSD Universidad Catolica Andres Bello; Universidad Central de Venezuela; Universite Pantheon-Assas Paris II; Stanford Law (JSM) Caracas, Venezuela LLM LLM LLM LLM LLM Faculdade Milton Campos Tel Aviv University Universidad de Chile Catholic University of University of Fribourg Belo Horizonte, Brazil Tel Aviv, Israel Santiago, Chile Louvain University of Geneva University of Namur Geneva, Switzerland Charleroi, Belgium 3 Advanced Degree Students (LLM, JSM, MLS, JSD) Mariela Perrone Sarah Polcz Bhavishyavani Ravi Itay Ravid Fernan Restrepo Matthew Roach Samuel Schroeder JSD Hebrew U. (LLB, B.A.) Tel-Aviv & Northwestern U. (LLM) Stanford Law (JSM) Tel Aviv, Israel Cardona LLM LLM LLM JSD LLM Pontificia Universidad Queen’s U. Canada National Law School of Catolica del Ecuador U. College London India University Quito, Ecuador Stanford Law (JSM) Chennai, India Toronto, Canada JSD University of Queensland U. of Javeriana Brisbane, Australia Harvard Law School (LLM) Stanford Law (JSM) Bogota, Columbia Ayelet Sela Daniel Seng Bo Shang Lu Shi Sangmin Shim Sarah Shirazyan JSD JSD LLM LLM JSD JSD Hebrew U. (LLB); Stanford Law (JSM) Peking University Southwest University of Seoul National U. Yerevan State U. Stanford Law (JSM); Singapore Beijing, China Political Science and Law Stanford Law (JSM) Stanford Law (JSM) University College London Seoul, Korea Yerevan, Armenia Israel University of Sydney Vancouver, Canada Zili Song Visiting Student Nanjing, China Chongquing, China Udit Sood Pan Su Danijela Tanner Roberto Taufick Jill Tellioglu Antoni Terra Ibanez LLM JSM LLM LLM LLM JSM National University of Peking University University of Zurich Universidade de Sao Paulo Heinrich-Heine University, Juridical Sciences Beijing, China Zurich, Switzerland Brasília, Brazil University de CergyPontoise New Delhi, India Duesseldorf, Germany Arm Tungnirun Gonzalo Vial Olga Vorobyeva Di Yao Wanyu Zhang JSD LLM LLM LLM Visiting Student Peking University Universidad Catolica St. Petersburg State Shanghai International Chengdu, China Stanford Law (JSM) Santiago, Chile University Studies University St. Petersburg, Russia Shanghai, China Bangkok, Thailand 4 Universitat Pompeu Fabra Barcelona, Spain Emma Tsurkov JSM Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem, Israel Class of 2015 Ben Adams Adam Amir Abhay Aneja Becca Arriaga Denise Ballesteros Cyndi Barmore James Barton U. of Pennsylvania U. of Florida Wake Forest U. Rice U. UCLA Princeton U. Stanford U. Columbus, OH Aventura, FL San Francisco, CA Houston, TX Monterey Park, CA Arlington Heights, IL Redlands, CA Joy Basu Marta Belcher Arwa BenOmran Elizabeth Berardi David Berman Carly Bittman Alison Bloch Duke U. UC Berkeley C. of William and Mary Saint Louis U. Brown U. UC Santa Barbara Stanford U. Naperville, IL La Cañada Flintridge, CA Fairfax, VA St. Louis, MO New York, NY San Francisco, CA San Francisco, CA Salvatore Bonaccorso Skylar Brooks Alex Carter John Casey Sheli Chabon Nandi Chhabra Leo Chingcuanco U. of Chicago Georgetown U. Dartmouth C. Princeton U. UC San Diego Stanford U. Yale U. Granite Bay, CA Columbus, OH St. George, UT Stockbridge, MA Shreveport, LA Kensington, CA Brooklyn, NY Erin Cho Susie Choi Jon Connolly Casey Corr Vincent Crowley Connie Dang Maret Delf U. of Pennsylvania Stanford U. Yale U. UC Santa Barbara San Diego State U. Stanford U. Southern Methodist U. New York, NY Arroyo Grande, CA Missoula, MT Cerritos, CA Cerritos, CA Loyola Marymount U. (MA) Plano, Texas Los Angeles, CA Samuel Dippo Jessica Dragonetti Gary Dyal Christopher Edelman Ibrahim Elshamy Caroline Esser Kate Falkenstien Georgetown U. U. of Chicago Yale U. Duke U. Dartmouth C. Dartmouth C. Yale U. San Francisco, CA Hendersonville, NC Downingtown, PA U. of Cambridge (MPhil) U. of Ulster (MA) Chicago, IL Lawrence, KS Deerfield, IL Manchester, NH 5 Class of 2015 Zhao Fang Farbod Faraji Jun Feng Jaryn Fields Lauren Finkelstein Jordan Flanders Scott Flanz Haverford C. Stanford U. Peking U. U. of Pennsylvania Washington U. Colorado C. Cornell U. Hefei, Anhui, San Diego, CA Beijing, China Philadelphia, PA Narberth, PA Irvine, CA North Andover, MA Lizzy Foydel Jon Frank Maura Freedman Richard Freeman Michael Frenkel Yiye Fu Geoffrey Garrett Columbia U. Swarthmore C. Duke U. Harvard U. Vassar C. Texas A&M U. U. of Michigan Evanston, IL Whitefish Bay, WI New York, NY Miami, FL Queens, NY Grand Prairie, TX Southfield, MI Jason George Lauren Gollaher Michael Gosling Benjamin Gould Lydia Gray Amelia Green Blair Green Yale U. UC Berkeley Stanford U. Vassar C. Penn State U. Columbia U. Stanford U. Boulder Creek, CA San Diego, CA Encinitas, CA San Francisco, CA Johns Hopkins (MS) Greensboro, NC Scottsdale, AZ Bellwood, PA 6 Amit Gressel Peyton Gulley Marisol Guttman John Haddock Natasha Haney Elissa Hanson Lauren Harding UCLA Tulane U. Grinnell C. Harvard U. Smith C. Washington and Lee U. U. of Pennsylvania Los Angeles, CA Minden, LA Chicago, IL Phoenix, AZ Houston, TX Albuquerque, NM Ryan Harper David Hausman Matt Henry Stephen Herndon Matthew Higgins Michelle Hillenbrand Andrew Ho Holy Cross Harvard U. Cornell U. UNLV Wake Forest U. U. of Iowa Reed C. Belmont, MA Appleton, WI San Francisco, CA Henderson, NV Astoria, NY Mequon, WI Davis, CA Class of 2015 Elizabeth Hook Simon Hu Kip Hustace Vikram Iyengar Sarah Jabero Per Jansen Brooke Jenkins UC Irvine Stanford U. Stanford U. Duke U. (PhD) Dartmouth C. U. of Cincinnati U. of Miami Orange, CA Azusa, CA Waimea, HI Bangalore, India Baghdad, Iraq Cincinnati, OH Ft. Myers, FL Leslie-Bernard Joseph Ali Karol Alex Kasner Gregory Keenan Trevor Kempner Jack Kider Zach Koslap UCLA Stanford U. Claremont McKenna C. Yale U. Washington U. Penn State U. Princeton U. Orinda, CA Granite Bay, CA Floral Park, NY New York, NY Rockville, MD Schnecksville, PA Mansi Kothari Zach Kruth Andrew Kushner Neel Lalchandani Michelle Lamy Brian Lao Lindsey Larson U. of Pennsylvania UC Berkeley Pomona C. U. of Pennsylvania Boston C. UC San Diego Vanderbilt U. Scarsdale, NY Portola Valley, CA Portland, OR Oakland, CA Marlborough, MA San Diego, CA Dallas, TX Brooklyn, NY Andrew Lawrence Percy Lee Samantha Lefland Chris Lewis Lisa Li Yinmei Li Lincoln Lo Stanford U. Dartmouth C. Cornell U. U. Mass. Williams C. Stanford U. UC San Diego Los Angeles, CA Vancouver, BC Roslyn, NY Boston, MA Columbia, MO Maple Grove, MN San Francisco, CA Kori Lorick Kimberly Lovett Elizabeth Lowell Shoshana Lucich Greer Mackebee Mark Mallery Nikki Marquez C. of William and Mary UC San Diego Stanford U. Mount Holyoke C. Duke U. UC Berkeley Stanford U. Ruidoso, NM San Diego, CA Belvedere, CA Salt Spring Island, BC Knoxville, TN Clovis, CA Johns Hopkins (MA) Monterey Park, CA 7 Class of 2015 Philip Mazzara Katherine McBride Cary McClelland Ian McKinley Jake McMahon Shae McPhee Michael Mestitz U.S. Naval Academy Boston C. Harvard U. BYU Colorado State U. Brigham Young U. Vassar C. Virginia Beach, VA Seattle, WA Brooklyn, NY Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Littleton, CO Arlington, TX Chanhassen, MN Jeff Middleton Matt Miller Devon Mobley-Ritter Al Montelongo Andria Montoya Riley Moore Michael Morillo UCLA (BA, MA) U. of Michigan Stanford U. Harvard U. UCLA U. of Wisconsin UCLA Los Angeles, CA McLean, VA San Mateo, CA Corpus Christi, TX Pasadena, CA Stillwater, MN Chino Hills, CA Jake Morrison Yonatan Moskowitz Jordan Murray Roland Nadler Snayha Nath Brett Nelson Ryan Nelson NYU Georgetown U. Cornell U. Harvard U. Duke U. Gustavus Adolphus C. Colgate U. New Paltz, NY Los Osos, CA Delmar, NY U. of British Columbia (MA) Cary, NC Edina, MN Pittsburgh, PA Petaluma, CA Michael Ohlrogge Cameron Ormsby Cecilia Oyediran Alex Pacheco Tucker Page Jenny Palmer Kwan Park U. of Michigan Stanford U. Yale U. Amherst C. Duke U. Princeton U. Cornell U. Okemos, MI Oxford U. (MSt) Harvard U. (M.Ed.) Los Angeles, CA Portland, OR Bethesda, CA Buffalo, NY Greenwich, CT Palisades Park, NJ Christian Perez Ashlee Pinto Amanda Prasuhn Chelsea Priest Raza Rasheed Stephany Reaves Brian Recht Texas A&M U. DePaul U. U. of Missouri Princeton U. Dartmouth C. Yale U. Dartmouth C. Humble, TX Chicago, IL St. Louis, MO Garden Plain, KS Claremont, CA American U. (MAT) New York, NY Woodbridge, VA 8 Class of 2015 Natalia Renta Ramirez Cassidy Rice Jordan Rice Stephen Richards Matt Rietfors Reed C. Duke U. Brigham Young U. UC Berkeley Strawberry Plains, TN Harvard U. Myrtle Creek, OR Chicago, IL American Fork, UT Carlsbad, CA Travis Robertson Randall Robinson Dalton Rodriguez Brian Rogers Lucia Roibal Mikael Rojas BYU Clemson U. U. of Texas Columbia U. Washington State U. Orem, UT Columbia, SC Keller, TX Albuquerque, NM Yakima, WA Tess Reed Trey Reliford Yale U. U. of the South Charlotte, NC Sophia Rios UC Berkeley San Diego, CA San Juan, Puerto Rico U. of Northern Iowa UC Irvine (phD) Cedar Falls, IA Amanda Rubin Carl Ruggiero Melissa Runsten Kristin Saetveit Sarah Salomon Neal Sangal Jonathan Schatz Yale U. Colgate U. Stanford U. Yale U. Yale U. U. of Michigan Duke U. Edina, MN Basking Ridge, NJ Rehoboth Beach, DE Buffalo, NY Pomona, NY Bloomfield Hills, MI Atherton, CA Nick Scheiner Alec Schierenbeck Andrew Schupanitz Greg Schweizer Steven Seber Jacob Shelly Nicholas Sidney U. of Florida Grinnell C. Washington U. Washington U. U.S. Military Academy American U. UC Davis. Brooklyn, NY U. C. Dublin (MSc) Minneapolis, MN Champaign, IL Carl Junction, MO Goshen, IN San Diego, CA Brooklyn, NY Ian Stearns Evan Stein Andy Stevenson Mark Storslee Kaleisha Stuart Laura Sullivan Chris Swift Hamilton C. UC Berkeley Williams C. Furman U. Texas A&M U. Yale U. Arizona State U. New York, NY Northridge, CA Lake Forest, IL Bismarck, ND San Antonio, TX Blue Bell, PA Gresham, OR 9 Class of 2015 Wesley Sze Tres Thompson Joe Tobias Laura Tong Gaelle Tribie Joey Trujillo Grace Tsou U. of British Columbia U.S. Naval Academy Oklahoma State U. U. of Chicago Dartmouth C. UC Santa Barbara Washington U. Vancouver, BC, Canada Crandall, TX Van, TX Chicago, IL Stamford, CT Bakersfield, CA Centerville, OH Swain Uber Andrew Vaden Andrew Van Denover Cody Venzke Matthew Verdin Jessica Verran- Nida Vidutis Northwestern U. U. of Chicago (BA, MA) Macalester C. St. Olaf C. The Ohio State U. Lingard Columbia U. Pittsburgh, PA Carrollton, TX Centennial, CO Manly, IA Toledo, OH Vanderbilt U. Takoma Park, MD Johnson City, TN Stacy Villalobos Rebecca Vogel Thomas Wakefield Jie Wang Xin Wang Stanford U. Dartmouth C. Bowdoin C. Duke U. Peking U. Claremont, CA Rockville, MD Grand Rapids, MI Ardmore, OK Xiamen, China David Watnick Stanford U. U. of Michigan Menlo Park, CA Birmingham, MI Lori Weekes Morgan Weiland Andrew Whalen Krista Whitaker Rachel Wilcox Jenna Williams Philip Womble U. of Pennsylvania Carleton C. U. of Oregon Texas A&M U. Brigham Young U. Brown U. U. of North Carolina (BA, MS) Menlo Park, CA Medford, OR Fort Worth, TX Denver, CO Simi Valley, CA Cary, NC West Windsor, NJ Tiffany Yang Vincent Yiu Emily Zhang Krisina Zuniga Keny Zurita USC Stanford U. Cornell Rice U. Harvard C. Town and Country, MO Oxford U. (MPhil) Hong Kong Laredo, TX Chicago, IL Hong Kong 10 Em Warren Class of 2016 Brendan Ballou James Banker Abigail Barnes Columbia U. San Diego State U. Vanderbilt U. New York, NY Brentwood, CA Silver Spring, MD Thomas Berry Jennifer Binger Micah Bluming Daniel Bobier St. John’s C. UC Davis Tulane U. Emory U. Norcross, GA Folsom, CA Tufts U. (MA) Cincinnati, OH Nicole Adamson Nayha Arora Phillip Arredondo Ivan Au Stanford U. Georgetown U Stanford U. (BA, MA) Cornell U. Los Angeles, CA Burr Ridge, IL Palo Alto, CA Bayside, NY Marni Barta Matthew Benedetto Bethany Bengfort Northwestern U. Temple U. U. of Maryland Los Angeles, CA Pittson, PA (BA, MPP) Grayson, GA Columbia, MD Samuel Bonnette Marcus Bourassa Adam Bowling Sergio Broholm Victoria Buchholz Charles Buker Thomas Buley U.S. Military Academy Stanford U. (BA, MA) U. of Georgia Columbia U. U. of Cambridge Dartmouth C. Duke U. Kalamazoo, MI Albuquerque, NM Powder Springs, GA Ellicott City, MD Solana Beach, CA Atlanta, GA West Chester, PA Karsten Busby Samuel Byker William Cage Nicole Cambeiro Valerie Campbell Charles Cao Joseph Catapano BYU (BS, MS) Brown U. U. of North Texas Vanderbilt U. Cornell U. Williams C. Duke U. Mapleton, UT Los Angeles, CA Frisco, TX Henderson, NV Brooklyn, NY Winnetka, IL Sayville, NY Claire Chapla Grace Chuchla Robert Curran John Daley Taylor Davidson Carolina de Armas Christopher Deetz Duke U. Pomona C. Loyola U. Chicago McGill U. Harvard U. Duke U. UC Berkeley Richmond, VA Beverly Hills, CA Poulsbo, WA Oxford U. (MSc.) Culver City, CA Miami, FL Oakland, CA Mississauga, ON 11 Class of 2016 Karlo Dizon DJ Dorff Andrew Dragstrem John Drdek Eric Dunn Gregory Elinson Nari Ely Yale U. BYU Northwestern U. USC Stanford U. Harvard U. U. of North Carolina LSE Carmel, IN Naperville, IL San Diego, CA Yorba Linda, CA UC Berkeley (MA, PhD) U. of Virgina (MS) Oakland, CA Scottsdale, AZ Tamuning, Guam Fazila Pinar Erciyas Bailey Sara Estela William Evans Connor Feuille Michael Fields Jason Fischbein Ilan Fischer U. of Pennsylvania Colgate U. U. of Pennsylvania UC San Diego Yale U. San Francisco, CA UNLV (MED) Chula Vista, CA East Amherst, NY New York, NY Georgetown U. U. of Chicago (MA) Princeton U. (MA, PhD) Exeter, NH Akiva Freidlin Cindy Garcia Marta Garcia Kaitlyn Gardner Stephanie Gilliam Jeffrey Goldenhersh Gordon Grafft Hampshire C. Pomona C. MIT Stanford U. Rice U. Washington U. USC Columbia U. (MFA) Vernalis, CA Boston, MA Salt Lake City, UT Chapel Hill, NC San Diego, CA Moraga, CA Shereen Griffith Andrew Grimm Gagan Gupta Virginia Halden Shagran Hassan Amy Heath Emily Hellman UC Berkeley Claremont McKenna C. Davidson C. U. of Pennsylvania Yale U. Middlebury C. Tufts U. San Francisco, CA Omaha, NE LSE (MSc) Sandy, UT South San Francisco, CA Arlington, VA Mequon, WI Bogazici U. UC San Francisco (PhD) San Bruno, CA Johns Hopkins U. (MS) Northridge, CA Pittsburgh, PA Belmont, NC 12 Benjamin Hewlett Sieglinde Hindrichs Tiffany Ho Kara Hollis Haley Horton Jessica Hudak Lilah Hume Stanford U. U. of Virginia Rice U. Harvard U. UCLA U. of Michigan Yale U. Embry Riddle (MS) Boston U. Wichita, KS Roswell, GA Laguna Hills, CA Stanford U. San Francisco, CA Palo Alto, CA Ashland, PA Ann Arbor, MI Class of 2016 Kiel Ireland Lindsey Jackson Eric Johnson Krister Johnson Brittany Jones Elizabeth Jones Nicholas Jones UC Santa Cruz Yale U. UC Davis Whitworth U. U. of Virginia (BS, MS) Vassar C. BYU Redondo Beach, CA Relay Grad Sch Ed (MAT) Los Altos, CA Seattle, WA Virginia Beach, VA Berkeley, CA Ventura, CA Los Angeles, CA Christopher Juarez David Jung Andrew Kambic Daniel Kane Deepa Kannappan Ted Karch Caroline Keller-Lynn USC Washington U. The Ohio State U. Stanford U. Stanford U. (BS, MS) U. of Virginia Yale U. Alhambra, CA Berkeley, CA Hilliard, OH Columbia U. (MA) Bakersfield, CA Chesapeake, VA Grandview, NY New York, NY John Kenney Courtney Khademi Cassandra Kildow Hyosang Kim Emma Kleiner Phillip Klimke Grace Kouba Columbia U. Stanford U. Yale U. U. of Virginia U. of Arizona Stanford U. Dartmouth C. Fargo, ND Mill Valley, CA San Francisco, CA Bristow, VA Tucson, AZ Berlin, Germany Eugene, OR Fay Krewer Heather Kryczka Peter Kurtz Pilar Landon Kimberly Larkin Jeffrey Lash U. of Illinois Washington U. Pomona C. Boston C. Davidson C. Rice U. (BA, MA) Madeleine Laupheimer Arlington Heights, IL Naperville, IL U. of Cambridge (MPhil) Carlsbad, CA U. Libre de Bruxelles (MA) Southlake, TX Swarthmore C. Atlanta, GA Weston, MA New York, NY Austin Lee Nicole Leon Jeannie Lieder Kristin Liska Sarracina Littlebird Donna Long DeDe Mann Minnesota State U. Princeton U. U. of Michigan Wellesley C. Columbia U. U. of Wisconsin Duke U. BloomingtonMN Acton, MA Palo Alto, CA Poway, CA Santa Fe, NM Toronto, ON La Cañada, CA 13 Class of 2016 Holly Mariella Tiffany Mason Vincent Mazzurco Sean McElroy Ryan McIlroy Madeleine McKenna Christopher McLamb UC Berkeley Yale U. U.S. Naval Academy Bowdoin C. U.S. Air Force Academy U. of Washington Washington U. Danville, CA U. of Michigan (MPH) Little Neck, NY Capistrano Beach, CA Costa Mesa, CA Bellevue, WA Raleigh, NC Detroit, MI Malia McPherson Nicholas Medling Blake Meyer Isaac Middleton Elizabeth Miller Enrique Molina Johnathan Mondel UC Berkeley Claremont McKenna C. U. of Texas Marquette U. Williams C. Indiana U. C. of William and Mary San Francisco, CA Laguna Hills, CA Southlake, TX Fort Worth, TX Madison, NJ Puebla, Mexico Farmingdale, NJ Clifford Mpare Ruhan Nagra Jena Neuscheler Errol Norman Elizabeth Ody Brown U. Duke U. Minh Olivier Nguyen-Dang Timothy Nicholson Morehouse C. Oregon State U. Vanderbilt U. Wesleyan U. Chapel Hill, NC Town and Country, MO Stamford, C Princeton U. Silverton, OR Wellington, FL Bethesda, MD Erin Olivella-Wright Hyrum Olson Jennifer Oxley Angela Park Caroline Parke Kjarom Pedersen Maya Perelman Stanford U. Southern Virginia U. U. of Arizona Princeton U. Davidson C. BYU Stanford U. Kensington, CA Bragg Creek, AB Georgetown U. (MA) Seoul, S. Korea New Braunfels, TX Orem, UT Sunnyvale, CA Singapore Edgewater, MD 14 Alexandra Piarino Andrew Pike Serena Premjee Joseph Pullano Michael Qian Brian Quinn Neil Raina USC Colgate U. U. of Georgia Rice U. Harvard U. Stanford U. UC San Diego San Diego, CA Mentor, OH Alpharetta, GA San Diego, CA Austin, TX River Forest, IL Saratoga, CA Class of 2016 David Ramirez Christopher Randall Jacob Raver Dana Rehnquist Daniel Renz Nicole Roberts Ashley Robertson UCLA Creighton U. Johns Hopkins U. U. of Pennsylvania Washington State U. U. of Washington U. of Virginia Paramount, CA Sioux Falls, SD Hebrew U. (MA) Sharon, MA Spokane, WA Seattle, WA Greenville, SC Scarsdale, NY Shelby Robertson Henry Robinson Michael Ronca Nicholas Rosellini Michael Rubin Alon Sachar David Sayet Wellesley C. U. of Georgia Fordham U. (BA, MBA) Stanford U. U. of Pennsylvania UC Santa Barbara, Dartmouth C. Sacramento, CA Lithia Springs, GA Peekskill, NY Issaquah, WA Wynnewood, PA American U.- Cairo (MA) Norwich, CT San Diego, CA Giulia Scelzo Lauren Schneider Middlebury C. U. of Michigan Salerno, Italy Mountain View, CA Dorey Schranz Matthew Scorcio Nicole Scott Vina Seelam Sari Sharoni UC Berkeley U.S. Naval Academy UCLA Yale U. Georgetown U. Saratoga, CA Rockwall, TX Loyola Marymount U. (MA) Gilbert, AZ Brooklyn, NY Irvine, CA Michael Skocpol Paulina Slagter Brown U. Loyola Marymount U. Cambridge, MA La Jolla, CA Rylee SommersFlanagan Emory U. U. of Saint Andrews (MA) Missoula, MT Nicholas Sparks Charles Sprague Steven Spriggs Nicholas Standish U. of Virginia Claremont McKenna C. Texas A&M U. Columbia U. Bristow, VA CUNY (MS) Lawton, OK Washington, PA New York, NY Rose Stanley Aaron Stanton JacquelineTandler Vivek Tata Matt Thanabalan Margaret Thompson James Threatt Cornell U. Brown U. Stanford U. Dartmouth C. Brown U. Stanford U. Stanford U. Juneau, AK Syosset, NY San Francisco, CA Westminster Theological Oakland, CA Stanford, CA Palo Alto, CA Seminary San Francisco, CA 15 Class of 2016 Trent Timmons Michael Todisco Naomi Tom Scott Toussaint AlexandriaTwinem U. of Notre Dame Loyola U. Cornell U. Northwestern U. Laura Vittet-Adamson Eric Wang BYU Parma, ID Andover, MA Algonquin, IL LSE (MSc) Brookfield, WI Oxford U. (BA, MPhil) Chicago, IL MIT Brussels, Belgium Washington DC Matthaeus Weinhardt Brian Weissenberg Ashley Williams Chajin Wu Christine Yoon Emi Young UC Berkeley Columbia U. Rice U. Cornell U. Pomona C. Stanford U. (BA, MA) Los Angeles, CA Alexandria, VA West Lafayette, IN Vestal, NY Omaha, NE Claudia Antonacci Gina Anzaldua Rachael Apfel Adam Arguelles Julian Aris U. of Virginia NYU Harvard U. Georgetown U. U. of FLorida. Tallahassee, FL Tigard, OR Highland Village, TX Westford, MA Gainesville, FL Temecula, CA Class of 2017 Maxwell Alderman U. of Nevada, Reno Reno, NV 16 Cathrina AltimariBrown Amherst C.. Mountain View, CA Andrew Baker Lauren Baker David Barnes Kasey Baughan Patrick Benitez Paul Bennetch Katherine Bies Georgetown U. UCLA Kent State U. BYU Princeton U. Cornell U. U. of Michigan San Francisco, CA Tucson, AZ Cortland, OH Provo, UT Stanford U. Stanford U. Relay Grad. Sch. Ed. Stanford, CA Livermore, CA Waconia, MN Class of 2017 Lisa Bixby Afia Bonner William Brenc Cameron Brown Kevin Bush Maria Buxton James Carlson Arizona State U. Stanford U. U. of Washington UC Davis Rice U. UC Berkeley Stanford U. Phoenix, AZ Walnut Creek, CA Longview, WA Lakewood, CA New Caney, TX Redwood City, CA Vista, CA Andrew Chang Grace Chediak Jasmine Cho Sarah Clark Lucien Constable Elizabeth Costello Kevin Cowher UC Berkeley USC UC Berkeley Williams C. Duke U. UC Berkeley Williams C. Arcadia, CA Sacramento, CA Sacramento, CA Ann Arbor, MI Bryn Mawr, PA Orangevale, CA Enon Valley, PA Abbee Cox Kenneth Daines Peter Davis Isaiah Deporto Jason Despain Jocelyn Dicker John Dickson Columbia U. BYU Stanford U. USC BYU USC U. of Texas Lawton, OK North Ogden, UT San Juan Capistrano, CA Moreno Valley, CA Casper, WY Kansas City, KS Katy, TX Vincent Doctor Joshua Dos Santos Laura Douglas Kevin Eaton Gina Elliott Meredith Evancie Trevor Ezell US Military Academy UCLA Indiana U. Southern Methodist U. Georgetown U. Cornell U. Kenyon C. San Francisco, CA La Mirada, CA Zionsville, IN U. of Oxford Washington, D.C. Auburn, CA San Antonio, TX Duncanville, TX Kate Fetrow John Fischer Michael Francus Rachel Frank Zoe Friedland Reid Gardner Matthew Gasperetti Bates C. U. of Oklahoma U. of Chicago U. of Washington Dartmouth C. US Air Force Academy U. of Notre Dame Mahtomedi, MN Flower Mound, TX Pittsburgh, PA Mercer Island, WA West Palm Beach, FL Las Vegas, NV U. of Cambridge Knoxville, TN 17 Class of 2017 Daisuke Gatanaga Sara Gates Kevin Gibson Laura Gilson Alison Gocke Duke U. UC Berkeley Hamilton C. Princeton U. Ana-Maria Gomez Palazzo Juan Gonzalez Yale U. Irvine, CA Bloomfield Hills, MI Redondo Beach, CA Sparta, NJ Ellicott City, MD Boston C. Miami Lakes, FL Dartmouth C. Buffalo, NY Alexander Gourse Shannon Grammel Alexa Graumlich Richard Griffin Angela Guo Alice Hall-Partyka John Hamilton U. of Illinois - Chicago Harvard U. UCLA U. of Texas Rice U. USC Stanford U. Northwestern U. Fort Riley, KS Walnut Creek, CA Fort Worth, TX Duluth, GA. La Canada, CA Norwich U. Mount Airy, MD Madison, WI 18 Amari Hammonds Rachel Haney Sophie Hart George Hayward Pablo Hernandez An-Li Herring Ryan Hollander Columbia U. Pitzer C. U. of Washington Harvard U. Harvard U. U. of Michigan Yale U. New York, NY Centreville, VA Cave Creek, AZ White Plains, NY San Juan, Puerto Rico Alberquerque, NM Winston-Salem, NC Mengyu Huang Carl Hudson Andrew Indorf Sean Janda Yeseung Jang Cari Jeffries Kristopher Jensen Wellesley C. USC Washington U. Georgetown U. U. of North Carolina U. of Florida Severna Park, MD Irvine, CA Georgetown U. Johns Hopkins U. Lafayette Hill, PA Seoul, Korea Pasadena, CA Orlando, FL Baltimore, MD Annick-Marie Jordan Natalie Karl Rylee Kercher Hannah Kieschnick Hugh Kirkpatrick William Koch Sarah Kushner Wellesley C. Stanford U. U. of Pittsburgh Yale U. Boston C. Boston U. Occidental C. Los Angeles, CA Los Angeles, CA Scottsdale, AZ Palo Alto, CA Boston, MA Merrimac, MA Portland, OR Class of 2017 Sydney Lakin Elizabeth LeBow Imani Lee Robyn Levin Adam Lewis Ann Linder Stephen Liu NYU Cornell U. Spelman C. Colby C. Haverford C. Davidson C. Harvard U. Paradise Valley, AZ Atlanta, GA Detroit, MI Denver, CO Nicasio, CA Tufts U. Naperville, IL Shawnee Mission, KS Darryl Long Molly Manning Brandon Martinez Jose Martinez Samuel McClure Sean McGuire Katherine McKeon U. of Miami Dartmouth C. USC Loyola Marymount U. UCLA USC Stanford U. Coral Springs, FL Missoula, MT Camarillo, CA San Diego, CA Menlo Park, CA Diamond Bar, CA Tustin, CA Megan McKoy Christopher Medeiros Benjamin Middleton Mollie Miller Laurel Mills James Morris Olga Musayev Stanford U. UC Santa Barbara Washington U. Yale U. U. of Wisconsin Oberlin C. Yale U. Mitchellville, MD Santa Cruz, CA Frontenac, MO Colorado Springs, CO Johns Hopkins U. Watsonville, CA U. of Oxford Sheboygan, WI Sammamish, WA Christina Neitzey Daniel Nesbit Demoni Newman Bradley Niederschulte John Noh Benjamin Nuyens Kevin O’Connell U. of North Carolina, Carnegie Mellon U. Stanford U. Washington U. Brown U. UC Berkeley Williams C. Charlotte Stockton, CA Torrington, WY Naperville, IL Austin, TX Atherton, CA Larchmont, NY Michael Ohta Tierney O’Rourke Joanna Pak Ari Parker Jeffrey Parker Joshua Parr Jason Perkins Yale U. Stanford U. U. of Pennsylvania U. of Illinois Cornell U. UCLA Carleton C. Torrance, CA San Francisco, CA Duluth, GA Chicago, IL Princeton U. Scotts Valley, CA UC Berkeley Hampstead, NC Brecksville, OH Muncie, IN 19 Class of 2017 Jesse Peters Duncan Pickard Brittany Pifer Anna Porto Mark Prior Kevin Rich Jordan Ritenour Vassar C. Tufts U. Clemson U. U. of Notre Dame UC Berkeley Trinity C. UCLA Knox, IN Harvard U. 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Brooklyn, NY Oceanside, NY Topanga, CA San Francisco, CA Perry, GA Berkeley, CA Wangshu Tai Mari Takemoto-Chock Amy Tannenbaum Lauren Tarpey Torryn Taylor Brandon Teachout Reece Trevor Colgate U. U. of Hawaii Hamilton C. U. of Chicago Stanford U. Concordia C. U. of Chicago Nanjing, China NYU Hyattsville, MD Greensboro, NC Sacramento, CA Georgetown U. Washington, D.C. San Francisco, CA 20 Shenandoah, IA Class of 2017 Caitlin Troyer Mackenzie Tudor Daniel Tully John Ugai Elizabeth Vissers George Warner Margo Watson Trinity U. Stanford U. Northwestern U. Occidental C. UC Berkeley Brown U. Stanford U. Arizona State U. Kirkland, WA Downers Grove, IL Durango, CO Sunnyvale, CA Brooklyn, NY San Francisco, CA David Wick Joshua Wolf Michelle Wu James Xi Arizona State U. UC Santa Cruz Princeton U. Cornell U. San Jose, CA Rapid CIty, SD San Carlos, CA Orangeburg, NY West Chester, OH Atlanta, GA Tamar Weinstock Matthew Wells Cornell U. Case Western Reserve U. Claremont McKenna C. Jewish Theological Seminary Cincinnati, OH Ryan Wessels Palo Alto, CA Kevin Xu Mengyi Xu Michael Yakima James Yoon Diana Yu Lauren Zack Donna Zamora-Stevens Brown U. Princeton U. US Air Force Academy Harvard U. London School of Arizona State U. Middlebury C. Washington, D.C. Chicago, IL Harvard Kennedy School Atlanta, A Economics Tempe, AZ Brookline, MA Philadelphia, PA Pittsburgh, PA Christopher Zanetis Weizi Zhang Yiyue Zhao Grace Zhou NYU Mount Holyoke C. Cornell U. Duke U. New York, NY Beijing, China Surrey, British Columbia New York, NY 21 Deans M. Elizabeth Magill Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean Mary Elizabeth Magill was appointed the Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean of Stanford Law School on September 1, 2012. She is the law school’s 13th dean. Before coming to Stanford she was on the faculty at the University of Virginia School of Law for 15 years, serving most recently as vice dean, the Joseph Weintraub–Bank of America Distinguished Professor of Law, and the Elizabeth D. and Richard A. Merrill Professor. An expert in administrative law and constitutional structure, Dean Magill teaches administrative law, constitutional law, and food and drug law. Her scholarly articles have been published in leading law reviews, and she has won several awards for her scholarly contributions. She is a member of the American Law Institute, and served as a fellow in the Program in Law and Public Affairs at Princeton University, a visiting professor at Harvard Law School, and the Thomas Jefferson Visiting Fellow at Downing College, Cambridge University. After completing her BA in history at Yale University in 1988, Dean Magill served as a senior legislative assistant for energy and natural resources for U.S. Senator Kent Conrad, a position she held for four years. She left the Hill to attend the University of Virginia School of Law, where she was articles development editor of the Virginia Law Review and received several awards for academic and scholarly achievement. After graduating in 1995, Dean Magill clerked for Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and then for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Mark G. Kelman James C. Gaither Professor of Law and Vice Dean A prolific scholar whose jurisprudential interests range from law and economics to cognitive psychology, Mark G. Kelman has applied social science approaches to diverse legal fields including criminal law, taxation, administrative regulation, and disability law. His most recent book, The Heuristics Debate (Oxford University Press, 2011), focuses on disputes about the fundamental nature of heuristic reasoning associated, respectively, with the heuristics and biases school and the fast and frugal heuristics school. He is especially concerned with the implications of these debates for a wide variety of issues of both legal theory and policy (ranging from questions about whether values are commensurable or the ordinary tendency to spend more willingly to rescue identifiable victims than to prevent “statistical” lives from being lost is defensible to controversies over the efficacy of distinct forms of criminal sanctions). He has also been engaged in a substantial experimental research project on moral reasoning, and has begun to explore how surgeons come to recommend particular procedures when the costs and benefits of the procedures are difficult to commensurate, a project that bridges his ongoing interests in how people actually make decisions and his interests in normative philosophy. In addition to being a longtime teacher of both criminal law and property to first-year students, he has served as the academic coordinator, academic associate dean, and, currently, vice dean at the law school. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1977, Professor Kelman was the director of criminal justice projects for the Fund for the City of New York. Associate Deans Juliet M. Brodie Professor of Law, Associate Dean for Clinical Education, and Director of the Mills Legal Clinic and of the Community Law Clinic Juliet M. Brodie, who directs the Stanford Community Law Clinic (CLC), was named Associate Dean of Clinical Education and Director of the Mills Legal Clinic in the spring of 2013. She has dedicated her career to the legal rights and interests of low-income people and communities. As a clinical teacher, she has always worked in clinics embedded in low-income neighborhoods, including Stanford’s CLC, which is in East Palo Alto. She has written on the role of neighborhood-based poverty law clinics in exposing students to important debates about public interest law while providing diverse lawyering opportunities. She is a frequent speaker on community lawyering and clinical education, and the intersection between the two. Her research interests include poverty law and the role of law in advancing economic justice for the “have-nots” in American society. She is an expert in poverty and the law, and co-author of the first casebook on that subject to be published in over fifteen years, Poverty Law, Policy, & Practice (Wolters Kluwer 2014). Professor Brodie has served as a member of the editorial board of the Clinical Law Review and as Chair of the Section on Poverty Law at the AALS. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2006, Professor Brodie was an associate clinical professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Before entering law teaaching, she was an assistant attorney general for the state of Wisconsin, prosecuting health care providers accused of defrauding the Medicaid system. 22 Associate Deans Frank F. Brucato Senior Associate Dean for Administration and CFO Frank F. Brucato, Stanford Law School’s chief financial officer and senior associate dean for administration, joined the Stanford staff in 1983 as an assistant financial manager. During his years at the law school, Brucato is credited with masterminding numerous building projects, including the classroom, library, and clinic renovations, and has spearheaded the construction of the Munger Graduate Residence and the William H. Neukom Building. Prior to coming to the law school, Brucato served as an accountant at D. Bradburn & Co. in Monterey after graduating from California State University at San Jose. Diane T. Chin Associate Dean for Public Service and Public Interest Law and Lecturer in Law Diane T. Chin oversees the John and Terry Levin Center for Public Service and Public Interest Law’s career development, pro bono, externship, and mentoring programs. She also teaches, plans and coordinates public interest curriculum, and engages in external relations and fundraising. In 2007, she co-edited and contributed to Beyond the Big Firm: Profiles of Lawyers Who Want Something More, and she previously served as the Levin Center’s founding director in 2003. Prior to her return to Stanford, Diane was the director of Equal Justice Works/West, the first regional office of that national organization, outside of its Washington, D.C., headquarters. Diane also served as associate director of the Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice at the UC Berkeley School of Law and as the executive director for Chinese for Affirmative Action. She began her law career as a staff attorney and Skadden Fellow for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law of the Boston Bar Association when she graduated from Northeastern University School of Law, and then as a staff attorney for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area. Later she worked as a housing attorney for Protection & Advocacy, Inc. and as a senior trial attorney for the Office of Citizen Complaints for the San Francisco Police Commission. Diane was an adjunct member of the New College of Law faculty (Race and the Law, Constitutional Law). Her substantive areas of practice have been within the civil rights field: hate violence, police misconduct, affirmative action and housing discrimination. At Stanford, she serves as a lecturer in law, teaching Lawyering for Social Change and other courses. Faye Deal Associate Dean for Admissions and Financial Aid Faye Deal, Stanford Law School’s associate dean for admissions and financial aid, has spent more than 20 years serving in the law school’s administration. Originally an assistant registrar when she joined the Stanford staff in 1985, Deal went on to become an associate registrar, the assistant director of admissions, the director of admissions, and finally assumed the position of associate dean in 1992. During her tenure, Deal has overseen the consistent increase of admission applications, combined with Stanford’s sustained national ranking in the highest tier of law schools; she thus presides over one of the most competitive admissions processes in the country. Prior to coming to Stanford, Deal graduated from Occidental College. Julia Erwin-Weiner Associate Dean for External Relations Julia Erwin-Weiner, Stanford Law School’s associate dean for external relations, joined the law school staff in 1998 as the associate director of alumni relations, and has gone on to serve as the school’s director of alumni relations, director of external programs, and director of development. During her tenure at the law school, she has worked directly with the dean, faculty, and alumni volunteer leaders to help drive the Campaign for Stanford Law School which ended in 1999, and more recently, the school’s successful participation in The Stanford Challenge—a five-year, $4.3 billion, university-wide campaign that concluded on December 31, 2011. In her current role, Erwin-Weiner serves as chief development officer and advisor to the dean on all aspects of development and alumni relations, and is responsible for the design and successful execution of all development and alumni relations programs. Her professional service includes co-chairing the American Bar Association’s Law School Development Committee and membership in the executive committee of the Association of American Law Schools’ Section on Institutional Advancement. Julia earned her BA cum laude in Russian & Soviet Studies from Wesleyan University and her MA in history from Columbia University. 23 Associate Deans Catherine Glaze Associate Dean for Student Affairs Catherine Glaze, JD ’85 (BA ’80), joined the Stanford staff in 2000, bringing with her a wealth of experience not only as a Stanford student, but also as a practicing attorney and former law school administrator and instructor. Prior to returning to Stanford Law School as a staff member, Glaze served as an associate with the firms of Day, Berry & Howard and Cooley Godward, was in private practice for another three years, and then served as a lecturer, clinical professor, and associate dean for student services at Golden Gate University School of Law. Glaze has served as chair of the Association of American Law Schools’ Student Services Section and is a member of the American Bar Association’s Law School Administration Committee. Among her many university roles, Glaze has chaired the Board on Judicial Affairs and is a founding member of the Disability Advisory Committee. Deborah R. Hensler Judge John W. Ford Professor of Dispute Resolution and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies Deborah R. Hensler’s empirical research on dispute resolution, complex litigation, class actions and mass tort liability has won international recognition. A political scientist and public policy analyst who was the director of the RAND Corporation’s Institute for Civil Justice before joining the Stanford Law School faculty, she has testified before state and federal legislatures on issues ranging from alternative dispute resolution to asbestos litigation and mass torts and consulted with judges and lawyers outside of the United States on the design of class action regimes. Professor Hensler is the organizer of the Stanford Globalization of Class Actions Exchange, which is spearheading international research on class actions and mass litigation, and the co-editor of the recently published volume The Globalization of Class Actions. She co-authored RAND’s comprehensive 2002 report on the status of asbestos litigation in the United States and is the lead author of Class Action Dilemmas: Pursuing Public Goals For Private Gain. At Stanford she teaches seminars on complex litigation, the legal profession, and the use of policy analysis in the law and serves as associate dean of graduate studies. Professor Hensler is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Political and Social Science. She was the director of the Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation from 1998 to 2003. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1998, she was a professor at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law and held a variety of high-level positions at RAND where she was employed from 1973 to 2001. Professor Hensler is an associate research fellow of the Oxford Centre for SocioLegal Studies, has taught at the University of Melbourne (Australia) and has been awarded a visiting professorship to Tilburg University by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Sabrina Johnson Associate Dean for Communications and Public Relations and CCO With a rich background of corporate experience, Sabrina Johnson joined the Stanford Law School staff in 2005 as associate dean for communications and public relations. She is also the chief communications officer for the law school. Prior to coming to Stanford, Johnson spent five years in the biotech sector, serving as the director of corporate public relations for Genentech and as the director of global external communications for Amgen. Johnson spent over a decade working in corporate communications for Levi Strauss & Co. There she served in a variety of roles, including director of European Communications at the company’s Brussels, Belgium office. She received her BA from the College of Wooster. Jenny S. Martinez Associate Dean for Curriculum, Professor of Law and Warren Christopher Professor in the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy Professor Jenny S. Martinez is a leading expert on international courts and tribunals, international human rights, national security, constitutional law, and the laws of war. Her research focuses on the role of courts and tribunals in advancing and protecting human rights, ranging from her work on the all-but-forgotten 19th-century international tribunals involved in the suppression of the trans-Atlantic slave trade through her work on contemporary institutions like the International Criminal Court and the role of courts in policing human rights abuses in connection with anti-terrorism policies. She has also written extensively on national security law and the constitutional separation of powers. She is the author of The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law (Oxford University Press, 2012) and numerous articles in leading academic journals. Her op-eds have been published in The New York Times and Washington Post, and she has been an expert commentator for both print and broadcast media including ABC World News, CNN, PBS Newshour, NPR, The Washington Post, The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and others. She teaches courses in international law, international human rights law, constitutional law, and civil procedure. 24 Associate Deans Jenny S. Martinez (continued) An experienced litigator, she has worked on numerous cases in the U.S. Supreme Court and the courts of appeals involving international law and constitutional law issues, including cases involving the Alien Tort Statute, the Torture Victim Protection Act, and the detention and trial of post-9/11 detainees. Professor Martinez was named to the National Law Journal’s list of “Top 40 Lawyers Under 40” and the American Lawyer’s “Young Litigators Fab Fifty.” She serves on the board of directors for the Open Society Justice Initiative, which promotes human rights and builds legal capacity for open societies around the world. In the past, she has served as a consultant on international human rights issues for both Human Rights First and the International Center for Transitional Justice. She is also a member of the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Committee on International Law. She is a faculty affiliate of Stanford’s Center on International Security and Cooperation and Stanford’s Center on Democracy Development and the Rule of Law. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 2003, Professor Martinez was a senior research fellow at Yale University and an attorney at Jenner & Block. She clerked for Justice Stephen Breyer (BA ‘59) of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Guido Calabresi of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; she was also an associate legal officer for Judge Patricia Wald of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in the Hague, where she worked on trials involving genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Susan C. Robinson Associate Dean for Career Services, Lecturer in Law Susan C. Robinson came to Stanford Law School from the private sector, where she worked as an associate in the San Francisco law firms of Farella Braun + Martel LLP and Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe. She joined the Stanford staff in 1997, first as associate director and then as associate dean for career services. In this position, Robinson oversees and manages all aspects of the office, including counseling, programming, and recruiting. Prior to beginning her legal career, Robinson received her BA from Wellesley College and her JD from Columbia University School of Law. F. Daniel Siciliano Professor of the Practice of Law and Associate Dean for Executive Education and Special Programs F. Daniel Siciliano, JD ’04, is a legal scholar and entrepreneur with expertise in corporate governance, corporate finance, and immigration law. He assumes a variety of leadership roles at the law school, including faculty director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, associate dean for executive education and special programs and co-director of Stanford’s Directors’ College. He is also the co-originator of the OSCGRS (Open Source Corporate Governance Reporting System) Project. Previously, Siciliano was a teaching fellow for the law school’s international LLM degree program in Corporate Governance and Practice and executive director of the Program in Law, Economics and Business. He is the senior research fellow with the Immigration Policy Center and a frequent commentator on the long-term economic impact of immigration policy and reform. His work has included expert testimony in front of both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Prior to joining Stanford Law School, Siciliano co-founded and served as executive director of the Immigration Outreach Center in Phoenix, Arizona. He has launched and led several successful businesses, including LawLogix Group—named three times to the Inc. 500/5000 list. Siciliano serves as a governance consultant and trainer to board directors of several Fortune 500 companies and is a member of the Academic Council of Corporate Board Member magazine. George Triantis Associate Dean for Strategic Planning, James and Patricia Kowal Professor of Law George Triantis is an expert in the fields of contracts, commercial law, business law, and bankruptcy. He was the Eli Goldston Professor of Law at Harvard Law School before joining the Stanford faculty in 2011, and he currently serves on the Visiting Committee of Harvard Law. Among his contributions to legal scholarship, Professor Triantis pioneered the application of options theory to the study of contracts and commercial law, and authored a series of articles that develop principles of contract design. His recent publications concern the link between contract design and dispute resolution, the design of legal remedies in commercial contracts, the impact of bargaining power on contract design, and the forces of disruption and innovation in transactional legal practice. He is also the coauthor of the book Foundations of Commercial Law (Foundation Press, 2009). Triantis began his teaching career in 1989 as an assistant professor at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and Faculty of Management, and since then, was a member of the law faculties at Virginia, Chicago and Harvard. 25 Faculty and Emeriti Janet Cooper Alexander Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law, Emerita An expert in civil procedure, complex litigation, and federal courts, Janet Cooper Alexander (MA ’73) has written on procedural design, the institutional dynamics of litigation, and legal and constitutional issues related to terrorism. Her current research focuses on class actions, the civil jury, procedural design, federal courts, and terrorism and the courts. In addition to her role as a professor at Stanford Law School, Professor Alexander has been a principal investigator at the Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation, where she spearheaded interdisciplinary research in dispute resolution and litigation from 1994-2002. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1987, she was a partner at Morrison & Foerster in San Francisco and an attorney at Califano, Ross & Heineman in Washington, D.C. Professor Alexander is a former law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and Judge Shirley M. Hufstedler, LLB ’49, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Michelle Wilde Anderson Professor of Law Michelle Wilde Anderson is a public law scholar and practitioner focused on state and local government, including urban policy, city planning, local democracy, and public finance. Her work combines legal analysis with the details of human experience to understand the local governance of high poverty areas, both urban and rural, and the legal causes of concentrated poverty and fiscal crisis. Her current research explores legal restructuring (such as bankruptcy, disincorporation, and receiverships) for cities and counties in distress—issues that affect not only Rust Belt capitals such as Detroit, but also post-industrial cities in California, rural areas in Oregon, and small towns across the Northeast and South. These issues are examined in her recent publications including “The New Minimal Cities,” Yale Law Journal (2014); “Detroit: What a City Owes its Residents,” Los Angeles Times (2013); “Making a Regional School District: Memphis City Schools Dissolves into its Suburbs,” Columbia Law Review Sidebar (2012); and “Dissolving Cities,” Yale Law Journal (2012). Prior to joining Stanford Law School in 2014, Anderson was an assistant professor of law at Berkeley Law School. Additionally, she has been a research fellow at the European Commission’s Urban Policy Unit in Brussels, an environmental law fellow at Shute, Mihaly, & Weinberger, and a member of the faculty executive committee of the Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice at Berkeley Law. She clerked for Judge Guido Calabresi on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and Judge Marilyn Hall Patel of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Barbara Babcock Judge John Crown Professor of Law, Emerita The first woman appointed to the regular faculty, as well as the first to hold an endowed chair and the first emerita at Stanford Law School, Barbara Babcock has taught and written in both the fields of civil and criminal procedure for many years. She has also pioneered the study of women in the legal profession. Most notably, Babcock is the author of Woman Lawyer: The Trials of Clara Foltz, (Stanford Press, 2011), a biography of the first woman lawyer in the west, and the founder of the public defender movement. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 1972, Babcock served as the first director of the Public Defender Service of the District of Columbia. On leave from Stanford, she was assistant attorney general for the Civil Division in the U.S. Department of Justice in the Carter administration. Upon her graduation from law school, she clerked for Judge Henry Edgerton of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and worked for the noted criminal defense attorney, Edward Bennett Williams. Professor Babcock is a distinguished teacher, being a four-time winner of the John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching at Stanford Law School. She is also a recipient of the Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award. Joseph Bankman Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business A leading scholar in the field of tax law, Joseph Bankman is the author of two widely used casebooks on the subject. His writings on tax policy cover topics such as progressivity, consumption tax, and the role of tax in the structure of Silicon Valley start-ups. He has gained wide attention for his work on how government might control the use of tax shelters and has testified before Congress and other legislative bodies on tax compliance problems posed by the cash economy. He has written and spoken extensively on how we might use technology to simplify filing. He also worked with the State of California to co-author a bill creating ReadyReturn—a completed tax return prepared by the state. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1989, Professor Bankman was a professor at the University of Southern California Law Center and a tax practitioner with the Los Angeles firm of Tuttle & Taylor. 26 Faculty and Emeriti Ralph Richard Banks Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law Ralph Richard Banks (BA ‘87, MA ‘87) is the Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law at Stanford Law School and Professor, by courtesy, at the School of Education. A native of Cleveland, Ohio and a graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Law School (JD 1994), Banks has been a member of the Stanford faculty since 1998. Prior to joining the law school, he practiced law at O’Melveny & Myers, was the Reginald F. Lewis Fellow at Harvard Law School, and clerked for a federal judge, the Honorable Barrington D. Parker, Jr. (then of the Southern District of New York). Professor Banks teaches and writes about family law, employment discrimination law, and race and the law. He is the author of Is Marriage for White People? How the African American Marriage Decline Affects Everyone. At Stanford, he is affiliated with the Michelle R. Clayman Institute for Gender Research, the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and the Ethnicity, the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education, and the Center for the Study of Poverty and Inequality. His writings have appeared in a wide range of popular and scholarly publications, including the Stanford Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, The New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times. He has been interviewed and quoted by numerous print and broadcast media, including ABC News/Nightline, National Public Radio, The New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times, among others. Paul Brest Professor of Law, Emeritus and Former Dean A leading scholar and teacher of constitutional law and co-author of the casebook Processes of Constitutional Decision-Making, Paul Brest now focuses on judgment and decision making and philanthropy. He is the co-author of Problem Solving, Decision Making, and Professional Judgment (2010) and Money Well Spent: A Strategic Guide to Smart Philanthropy (2008). Professor Brest joined the Stanford Law School faculty in 1969 and served as dean from 1987 to 1999 before becoming president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation in 2000. He returned to Stanford Law School in 2012, where, as an emeritus professor recalled to active duty, he is teaching Judgment and Decision-Making at the Law School and Impact Investing and Managing to Outcomes at the Graduate School of Business. Professor Brest is also collaborating with Professor Deborah Hensler in designing a law and public policy laboratory at Stanford Law School. Professor Brest is a fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and holds honorary degrees from Northwestern University School of Law and Swarthmore College. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1969, he clerked for Judge Bailey Aldrich of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and Justice John M. Harlan of the U.S. Supreme Court, and did civil rights litigation with the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in Mississippi. Juliet M. Brodie Professor of Law, Associate Dean for Clinical Education, and Director of the Mills Legal Clinic and of the Community Law Clinic Juliet M. Brodie, who directs the Stanford Community Law Clinic (CLC), was named Associate Dean of Clinical Education and Director of the Mills Legal Clinic in the spring of 2013. She has dedicated her career to the legal rights and interests of low-income people and communities. As a clinical teacher, she has always worked in clinics embedded in low-income neighborhoods, including Stanford’s CLC, which is in East Palo Alto. She has written on the role of neighborhood-based poverty law clinics in exposing students to important debates about public interest law while providing diverse lawyering opportunities. She is a frequent speaker on community lawyering and clinical education, and the intersection between the two. Her research interests include poverty law and the role of law in advancing economic justice for the “have-nots” in American society. She is an expert in poverty and the law, and co-author of the first casebook on that subject to be published in over fifteen years, Poverty Law, Policy, & Practice (Wolters Kluwer 2014). Professor Brodie has served as a member of the editorial board of the Clinical Law Review and as Chair of the Section on Poverty Law at the AALS. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2006, Professor Brodie was an associate clinical professor at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Before entering law teaaching, she was an assistant attorney general for the state of Wisconsin, prosecuting health care providers accused of defrauding the Medicaid system. Margaret “Meg” Caldwell Senior Lecturer in Law Margaret “Meg” Caldwell, JD ’85, has dedicated her career to environmental law, having worked as an attorney, professor, and board member in the field. Her scholarship has focused on the environmental effects of local land use decisions, the use of science in environmental and marine resource policy development and implementation, and developing private and public incentives for natural resource conservation. In addition to her role as lecturer in law, Caldwell directs the Environmental and Natural Resources Law and Policy Program at the law school. Caldwell also has an appointment with the Woods 27 Faculty and Emeriti Margaret “Meg” Caldwell (continued) Institute for the Environment where she serves as executive director of the Center for Ocean Solutions. The center is a collaboration between Stanford, the Monterey Bay Aquarium, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute whose core mission is to increase the impact of the natural, physical and social sciences on ocean policy and management. Caldwell is a regular in Washington, D.C. and Sacramento alike, working with elected officials, ocean and coastal agencies and their stakeholders to tackle major challenges with practical approaches. She has testified in Congress regarding reauthorization of the National Marine Sanctuaries Act and the ecological and economic impacts of the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster. She also served as a senior consultant to the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, providing both oral testimony and written reports to the commission on recommendations to reform federal oversight of offshore oil exploration and drilling. A well-respected figure in environmental law, she was selected as the chair of the California Coastal Commission and served on that body for nearly three years. While chair of the commission, Caldwell also served on the board of the California Coastal Conservancy. She was appointed by the California secretary for natural resources to the Marine Life Protection Act Blue Ribbon Task Force for the central, north central, and south coast study regions and is currently serving on the Blue Ribbon Task Force for the north coast. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1994, Caldwell was an instructor at San Jose State University and the University of California, Davis; counsel for MicroCLEAN, Inc.; a member of the City of Saratoga Planning Commission; and an associate in the environmental law group of McCutchen, Doyle, Brown & Enersen. Gerhard Casper Professor of Law, Emeritus and President Emeritus of Stanford University A lifelong leader in academia and an esteemed scholar of constitutional law, Gerhard Casper served as Stanford University’s president from 1992-2000. During that time, his commitment to excellence in both undergraduate and graduate education resulted in a number of major initiatives. A decorated academic, Professor Casper holds honorary doctorates from Yale and Uppsala Universities. He has been elected to membership in the American Law Institute, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the International Academy of Comparative Law, the Order Pour le Mérite for the Sciences and Arts, and the American Philosophical Society. During the fall of 2006, he held the Kluge Chair in American Law and Governance at the Library of Congress. He has served as a successor trustee of Yale University (2000-2008) and on the boards of trustees of the American Academy in Berlin (2000-2009) and the Central European University in Budapest (2000-2012). He is a trustee of the Committee for Economic Development and a member of international advisory councils at the Israel Democracy Institute, the European University at St. Petersburg, and Koç University, Istanbul. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1992, Professor Casper was a longtime faculty member at the University of Chicago, where he served as the provost of the university, the dean of the law school, and a professor of law. He began his career as a professor of political science at the University of California at Berkeley. James Cavallaro Professor of Law, Director of Stanford International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic, and Director of Stanford Human Rights Center Professor James Cavallaro, the founding director of Stanford Law School’s International Human Rights and Conflict ResoProfessor James Cavallaro, the founding director of Stanford Law School’s International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic, has dedicated his career to human rights—in both his scholarly research and his legal practice. His extensive expertise is derived from active involvement in the defense of rights, in the development of international human rights law and the human rights movement, in work involving human rights issues in Latin America and the developing world, and in international human rights litigation, with emphasis in the Inter-American and United Nations systems. Professor Cavallaro is a prolific scholar and sought-after voice on international human rights issues, and is frequently called upon to offer his expertise by the media and civil society. In June of 2013 Professor Cavallaro was elected to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) at the 43rd General Assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS) in Antigua, Guatemala. The IACHR was created in 1959 and is a principal and autonomous organ of the OAS whose mission is to promote and protect human rights in the American hemisphere. It is composed of seven independent members who serve in a personal capacity. Early in his career, Professor Cavallaro spent several years working with Central American refugees on the U.S.-Mexico border and with rights groups in Chile challenging abuses by the Pinochet government. In 1994, he opened a joint office for Human Rights Watch and the Center for Justice and International Law (CEJIL) in Rio de Janeiro and served as director of the office, overseeing research, reporting and litigation against Brazil before the Inter-American system’s human rights bodies. In 1999, he founded the Global Justice Center, which is now a leading Brazilian human rights nongovernmental organization. He then joined the academy, holding positions at Harvard Law School, most recently as clinical professor of 28 Faculty and Emeriti James Cavallaro (continued) law and executive director of the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program. He joined Stanford Law School’s faculty in 2011. Professor Cavallaro received his BA from Harvard University and his JD from University of California at Berkeley School of Law, where he served on the California Law Review and graduated with Order of the Coif honors. Following law school, he served as a law clerk to Chief Judge Dolores K. Sloviter of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (19931994). Professor Cavallaro is the author of several books, reports and articles on human rights issues. Among his recent scholarly works are: Reevaluating Regional Human Rights Litigation in the Twenty-First Century: the Case of the Inter-American Court (2008); Looking Backward to Address the Future?: Transitional Justice, Rising Crime and Nation-Building (2008); and Never Again?: The Legacy of the Argentine and Chilean Dictatorships for the Global Human Rights Regime (2008). Joshua Cohen Professor of Political Science, Philosophy and Law Joshua Cohen is a political theorist, trained in philosophy, with a special interest in issues that lie at the intersection of democratic norms and institutions. He has written extensively on issues of democratic theory, particularly deliberative democracy and its implications for personal liberty, freedom of expression, religious freedom, and political equality. Professor Cohen has also written on issues of global justice, including the foundations of human rights, distributive fairness, supranational democratic governance, and labor standards in supply chains. He is also a professor in Stanford’s departments of political science and philosophy, teaches in Stanford’s d.school, and he serves as co-editor of Boston Review, a bimonthly magazine of political, cultural, and literary ideas. He has recently publishedPhilosophy, Politics, Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2009); Rousseau: A Free Community of Equals (Oxford University Press, 2010); The Arc of the Moral Universe and Other Essays (Harvard University Press, 2011); and edited (with Alex Byrne, Gideon Rosen, and Seana Shiffrin) The Norton Introduction to Philosophy (forthcoming 2014). Cohen is also a member of the faculty of Apple University. William Cohen C. Wendell and Edith M. Carlsmith Professor of Law, Emeritus Author of an influential series of articles on national rights to equal citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment and other aspects of federalism, William Cohen has devoted over 50 years to the study and teaching of constitutional law. In addition to his scholarship in the field of federal jurisdiction, Professor Cohen is the editor of a major constitutional law casebook, which is currently in its 12th edition, and a longtime teacher of torts. He has been a visiting professor at Arizona State University College of Law, where he served as the Merriam Distinguished Visiting Professor. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1970, he was a professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles School of Law and at the University of Minnesota Law School. Early in his career he clerked for Justice William O. Douglas of the U.S. Supreme Court. G. Marcus Cole Wm. Benjamin Scott and Luna M. Scott Professor of Law Marcus Cole is a leading scholar of the empirical law and economics of commerce and finance, and teaches courses in the areas of Bankruptcy, Banking, Contracts, and Venture Capital. Professor Cole’s writings have explored questions such as why corporate bankruptcies are increasingly filed in Delaware, and what drives the financial structure of firms backed by venture capital. His current research interests involve the ways in which the world’s poor are using technology to solve their own problems, often in the face of government restrictions hindering such solutions. Professor Cole has served as a National Fellow at the Hoover Institution, and is a Fellow at the University of Amsterdam Center for Law and Economics. He has been a Visiting Professor at a number of institutions around the world, including the University of Amsterdam, the University of Vienna, the University of Leiden, Bucerius University in Hamburg, Germany, Northwestern University, Korea University, and Peking University School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen. Professor Cole has also served on the boards of several civic and charitable organizations, including that of the Central Pacific Region of the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith, and Businesses United in Lending and Development (“BUILD”). He currently serves on the Editorial Board of the Cato Supreme Court Review, the Academic Advisory Board of Bar-Bri, the Advisory Board of the Independent Institute’s Center on Culture and Civil Society, and is President of the Board of Directors of Rocketship Education, a national, non-profit charter school network, operating California’s most successful charter schools for low-income children. Before joining the Stanford Law faculty in 1997, Professor Cole was an associate with the Chicago law firm of Mayer Brown, and he clerked for Judge Morris Sheppard Arnold of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. 29 Faculty and Emeriti Richard Craswell William F. Baxter-Visa International Professor of Law A leading scholar of the economics and jurisprudence of contract law, Richard Craswell works at the intersections of law and economics and law and philosophy. He is an expert in all aspects of commercial law, including commercial paper and secured credit, as well as in antitrust and consumer protection law. Professor Craswell was an academic associate dean at Stanford Law School from 1999 to 2001. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1998, he was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and the University of Southern California School of Law, where he was an associate dean. Upon completion of his law degree, he was an attorney with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in the Office of Policy Planning and the Bureaus of Competition and Economics. Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Director of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar (PhD ’00, MA ’96) works at the intersection of law, public policy, and political science. He is the Director of Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and a Senior Fellow at the Institute, the Stanley Morrison Professor of Law at Stanford Law School, and Professor (by courtesy) of Political Science. Cuéllar’s research and teaching focus on administrative law and governance, public organizations, and transnational security. A member of the Stanford faculty since 2001, he has worked in two presidential administrations, served as Co-Director of Stanford’s Center for International Security and Cooperation, and has an extensive record of involvement in public service. During 2009-2010, he served as Special Assistant to the President for Justice and Regulatory Policy at the White House. Among other issues, Cuéllar worked on enhancing food safety standards, improving public health agencies, law enforcement and sentencing policy, regulatory transparency, immigration, and the Quadrennial Homeland Security Review. Before working at the White House, he co-chaired the Obama-Biden Transition’s Immigration Policy Working Group. During the second term of the Clinton Administration, he worked at the U.S. Department of the Treasury as Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary for Enforcement. In July 2010, the President appointed him to the Council of the Administrative Conference of the United States, an independent agency charged with improving the efficiency and fairness of federal regulatory programs. From 2011 to early 2013, he co-chaired the Department of Education’s Equity and Excellence Commission. He is a board member of the American Constitution Society as well as the Constitution Project, a non-profit think tank that builds bipartisan consensus on constitutional and legal issues. After graduating from Calexico High School in California’s Imperial Valley, he received an BA magna cum laude from Harvard, a J.D. from Yale Law School, and a Ph.D. in political science from Stanford. He clerked for Chief Judge Mary M. Schroeder of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and is a member of the American Law Institute and the Council on Foreign Relations. Robert M. Daines Pritzker Professor of Law and Business Robert M. Daines is the Pritzker Professor of Law and Business and Co-Director of the Rock Center on Corporate Governance at Stanford. His research focuses on the intersection between law and finance, including CEO pay, corporate governance, mergers and acquisitions, mandatory disclosure regulations, IPOs, shareholder voting and takeover defenses. Professor Daines’ work has appeared in such top publications as the Journal of Financial Economics, the Journal of Law, Economics and Organization, and The Yale Law Journal. His research has also been covered by The Economist, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Forbes, Fortune, and other media. Before entering academia, he was an investment banker at Goldman Sachs, where he advised firms on bank and bond financings. He is also Professor of Finance (by courtesy) at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. He clerked for Judge Ralph K. Winter of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Prof. Daines was awarded the 2012 John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching. 30 Faculty and Emeriti Michele Landis Dauber Professor of Law and Bernard D. Bergreen Faculty Scholar A law professor and a sociologist, Michele Landis Dauber has written highly original historical and sociological studies about the relationship between welfare programs and disaster relief programs in the formation of the modern American welfare state. She has focused her scholarship on aspects of the history of the New Deal and the fate of the legal doctrines and policies it created. She has also written about such varied topics as abortion clinic conflict, social security privatization, affirmative action, and the early history of administrative law during the War of 1812. In addition to her scholarly work, Professor Dauber is an officer and director of Building a Better Legal Profession, which was founded by Stanford Law students in 2007. The organization uses innovative data advocacy and Web-based social entrepreneurship strategies to mobilize market pressure for workplace reforms in large law firms, including better working conditions, work-life policies, and increased racial and gender diversity. Currently Professor Dauber teaches Law and Wikinomics, which focuses on this issue. Winner of the 2006 Walter J. Gores Award, Professor Dauber is only the second law professor to receive the highest teaching honor at Stanford University. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2001, she was a clerk to Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Professor Dauber has an appointment (by courtesy) with the Stanford University Department of Sociology and is a faculty affiliate with the Stanford Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity. Lance E. Dickson Professor of Law, Emeritus, and Former Director of the Robert Crown Law Library Lance E. Dickson served as director of the Robert Crown Law Library for 17 years. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1987, he was professor of law and law library director at Louisiana State University Law Center, following an earlier appointment at the University of Texas School of Law. John J. Donohue III C. Wendell and Edith M. Carlsmith Professor of Law John J. Donohue III has been one of the leading empirical researchers in the legal academy over the past 25 years. Professor Donohue is an economist as well as a lawyer and is well known for using empirical analysis to determine the impact of law and public policy in a wide range of areas, including civil rights and antidiscrimination law, employment discrimination, crime and criminal justice, and school funding. Professor Donohue previously was a member of the law school faculty from 1995–2004. Before rejoining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2010, Professor Donohue was the Leighton Homer Surbeck Professor of Law at Yale Law School. He recently co-authored Employment Discrimination: Law and Theory with George Rutherglen. Earlier in his career, he was a law professor at Northwestern University as well as a research fellow with the American Bar Association. Additionally, he clerked with Chief Justice T. Emmet Clarie, of the U.S. District Court of Hartford, Connecticut. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the former editor of the American Law and Economics Review and president of the American Law and Economics Association. David Freeman Engstrom Professor of Law David Freeman Engstrom’s scholarship focuses on the design of public institutions, particularly regarding civil rights, as well as topics in administrative law, employment law, complex litigation, constitutional federalism, and law and education. Current work includes a book exploring the pre-Title VII, state-level origins of American employment discrimination law; a quantitative analysis of disability discrimination laws; and a project examining the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act. Previously, Professor Engstrom, JD ’02, was a law clerk to Judge Diane P. Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and a John M. Olin Fellow in Law, Economics, and Public Policy at Yale Law School. He also practiced for four years, most of it at Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel, where he represented clients before the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Courts of Appeals, and various trial courts and administrative agencies. Earlier in his career, he worked on education, early childhood, and civil rights issues at the Edward Zigler Center at Yale University and the Hewlett Foundation and taught high school and coached football in the Mississippi Delta. 31 Faculty and Emeriti Nora Freeman Engstrom Professor of Law Nora Freeman Engstrom’s scholarship lies at the intersection of tort law and professional ethics. Her current work explores the day-to-day operation of the tort system and particularly the tort system’s interaction with alternative compensation mechanisms, such as workers’ compensation and no-fault automobile insurance. Professor Engstrom has also written extensively on law firms she calls “settlement mills”—high-volume personal injury law practices that heavily advertise and mass-produce the resolution of claims. Before joining Stanford Law’s faculty in 2009, Professor Engstrom, JD ’02, was a research dean’s scholar at Georgetown University Law Center and an associate at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, where she drafted several U.S. Supreme Court briefs and represented clients before various appellate and trial courts. She was also a law clerk to Judge Merrick B. Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and Judge Henry H. Kennedy Jr., of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Prior to law school, she worked at the U.S. Department of Justice, focusing on domestic terrorism and national security issues. George Fisher Judge John Crown Professor of Law and Faculty Co-Director, Criminal Prosecution Clinic A former Massachusetts assistant attorney general and assistant district attorney, George Fisher is one of the nation’s top scholars of criminal law and evidence. In his scholarship he explores, through meticulous archival research, the history of criminal law and criminal institutions from prisons to juries, from plea bargaining to the regulation of alcohol and drugs. His publications include an acclaimed casebook on evidence and a history of plea bargaining in America. Professor Fisher is the faculty co-director of the Criminal Prosecution Clinic at the law school and a four-time winner of the John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching at Stanford Law School. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1995, he was a clinical professor at Boston College Law School, an assistant attorney general in the Civil Rights Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, and an assistant district attorney for Middlesex County, Massachusetts. Early in his career Professor Fisher clerked for Judge Stephen G. Breyer (BA ’59) of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. Jeffrey L. Fisher Professor of Law and Co-Director, Supreme Court Litigation Clinic A leading authority on Supreme Court practice and nationally recognized expert on criminal procedure, Jeffrey L. Fisher’s work at the law school revolves around handling cases in the U.S. Supreme Court. He has argued 23 cases in the Court, on issues ranging from criminal justice to maritime law to telecommunications law. His successes include the landmark cases of Crawford v. Washington and Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts, in which he persuaded the Court to adopt a new approach to the Constitution’s Confrontation Clause; Riley v. California, in which the Court for the first time applied the Fourth Amendment’s protections against unreasonable searches to digital information on smart phones and other computers; Blakely v. Washington, in which the Court held that the Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial applies to sentencing guidelines; and Kennedy v. Louisiana, in which the Court held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits states from imposing capital punishment for crimes against individuals that do not result in death. In 2006, The National Law Journal named Professor Fisher one of the 100 most influential lawyers in America—the youngest person on the list. In addition to his teaching and practice concerning the Supreme Court, Professor Fisher has published numerous articles on various criminal and constitutional issues, and he currently is writing a treatise on the Confrontation Clause. Before joining the Stanford faculty, Professor Fisher co-chaired the appellate practice group of Davis Wright Tremaine. He clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens and Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Richard Thompson Ford George E. Osborne Professor of Law An expert on civil rights and antidiscrimination law, Richard Thompson Ford (BA ’88) has distinguished himself as an insightful voice and compelling writer on questions of race and multiculturalism. His scholarship combines social criticism and legal analysis and he writes for both popular readers and for academic and legal specialists. His work has focused on the social and legal conflicts surrounding claims of discrimination, on the causes and effects of racial segregation, and on the use of territorial boundaries as instruments of social regulation. Methodologically, his work is at the intersection of critical theory and the law. 32 Faculty and Emeriti Richard Thompson Ford (continued) Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1994, Professor Ford was a Reginald F. Lewis Fellow at Harvard Law School, a litigation associate with Morrison & Foerster, and a housing policy consultant for the City of Cambridge, Massachusetts. He has also been a Commissioner of the San Francisco Housing Authority. He has written for the Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Christian Science Monitor and for Slate, where he is a regular contributor. His latest books are Universal Rights Down to Earth and Rights Gone Wrong: How Law Corrupts the Struggle for Equality. Marc A. Franklin Frederick I. Richman Professor of Law, Emeritus A renowned teacher and scholar, Marc A. Franklin is a pioneer in the field of mass media law and regulation and has written extensively on legal issues that affect the press, such as libel and privacy. He is the author of numerous textbooks and is co-author, with Professor Robert L. Rabin, of a widely used casebook on tort law. Professor Franklin’s body of work has provided an essential reference for lawyers and the press alike. He has been a Fulbright Scholar at Victoria University in New Zealand and a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1962, he was a professor of law at Columbia University School of Law. Early in his career he clerked for Chief Justice Earl Warren of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Carroll C. Hincks of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Barbara H. Fried William W. and Gertrude H. Saunders Professor of Law Barbara H. Fried’s scholarly interests lie at the intersection of law, economics, and philosophy. She has written extensively on questions of distributive justice, in the areas of tax policy, property theory and political theory. She is also the author of a path-breaking intellectual biography of Robert Hale, one of the leading legal realists. Professor Fried is a three-time winner of the John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching. She regularly teaches the Legal Studies Workshop at Stanford Law School, an interdisciplinary student-faculty workshop designed for law students interested in pursuing academic careers, as well as contracts, modern American legal thought, tax, and advanced seminars in law and moral/political theory. She has twice been a visiting professor of law at New York University Law School. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1987, Professor Fried practiced as an associate with the New York City law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, and served as a law clerk to Judge J. Edward Lumbard of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Lawrence M. Friedman Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law An internationally renowned, prize-winning legal historian, Lawrence M. Friedman has for a generation been the leading expositor of the history of American law to a global audience of lawyers and lay people alike—and a leading figure in the law and society movement. He is particularly well known for treating legal history as a branch of general social history. From his award-winning History of American Law, first published in 1973, to his American Law in the 20th Century, published in 2003, his canonical works have become classic textbooks in legal and undergraduate education. Professor Friedman is a prolific author on crime and punishment, and his numerous books have been translated into multiple languages. He is the recipient of six honorary law degrees and is a fellow in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1968, he was a professor of law at the University of Wisconsin Law School and at Saint Louis University School of Law. Professor Friedman has an appointment (by courtesy) with the Stanford University Department of History and the Department of Political Science. Ronald J. Gilson Charles J. Meyers Professor of Law and Business An experienced practitioner of corporate and securities law before entering academia, Ronald J. Gilson is the author of major casebooks on corporate finance and corporate acquisitions. He has written widely on U.S. and comparative corporate governance and on venture capital and was a reporter of the American Law Institute’s Corporate Governance Project. Professor Gilson is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the European Corporate Governance Institute and is the board chair for American Century Investments in Mountain View, managing over $26 billion in assets. In addition 33 Faculty and Emeriti Ronald J. Gilson (continued) to his role at Stanford Law School, he is the Marc and Eva Stern Professor of Law and Business at Columbia University School of Law. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1979, Professor Gilson was a partner at a San Francisco corporate law firm. He clerked for Chief Judge David L. Bazelon of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Paul Goldstein Stella W. and Ira S. Lillick Professor of Law A globally recognized expert on intellectual property law, Paul Goldstein is the author of an influential four-volume treatise on U.S. copyright law and a one-volume treatise on international copyright law, as well as leading casebooks on intellectual property and international intellectual property. He has authored nine books including three novels devoted to intellectual property themes, Errors and Omissions and A Patent Lie. Some of his other works include Copyright’s Highway: From Gutenberg to the Celestial Jukebox, a widely acclaimed book on the history and future of copyright, and Intellectual Property: The Tough New Realities That Could Make or Break Your Business. Havana Requiem, his most recent novel, has won the 2013 Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction. Professor Goldstein currently serves as of counsel at Morrison & Foerster in their intellectual property group and has been regularly included in Best Lawyers in America. He has served as chairman of the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment Advisory Panel on Intellectual Property Rights in an Age of Electronics and Information, has been a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright, and Competition Law in Munich, Germany, and was a founding faculty member of the Munich Intellectual Property Law Center. In addition, before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1975, he was a professor of law at the State University of New York at Buffalo Law School. Robert W. Gordon Professor of Law A preeminent legal historian, prolific scholar, and gifted teacher, Professor Robert W. Gordon’s expertise in American legal history, evidence, the legal profession, and law and globalization spans four decades, his influence on generations of lawyers and legal scholars incalculable. He has written extensively on contract law, legal philosophy, and on the history and current ethics and practices of the organized bar. Professor Gordon is known for his key works, The Legacy of Oliver Wendell Holmes (1992), and Storie Critiche del Diritto (Critical Legal Histories) (1995), and is editor of Law, Society, and History: Themes in the Legal Sociology and Legal History of Lawrence M. Friedman, which examines and celebrates the scholarship of Stanford’s Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law Lawrence Friedman. Professor Gordon received his BA from Harvard University and his JD from Harvard Law School. Before going to law school, he worked as a newspaper reporter and served in the U.S. Army. Following law school, he served in the Office of the Attorney General of Massachusetts (1971). Professor Gordon taught previously at Stanford Law School in 1983-1995, and most recently, he was the Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and Legal History at Yale Law School. He also taught at the University of Buffalo Law School SUNY and the University of Wisconsin, and was a visiting professor at Harvard University, Oxford University, the University of Toronto, and the European University Institute. Professor Gordon has served on several American Bar Association and Connecticut Bar task forces on professional ethics and practice and on the Advisory Board of the Legal Profession Program of the Open Society Institute (Soros Foundation). He also is a past president of the American Society for Legal History. His forthcoming publications include: Lawyers of the Republic; Taming the Past: Law in History and History in Law (essays on legal history and the uses of history in legal argument); and The American Legal Profession, 1870-2000. William B. Gould IV Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus A prolific scholar of labor and discrimination law, William B. Gould IV has been an influential voice on worker-management relations for more than forty years and served as Chairman of the National Labor Relations Board (1994-98) and Chairman of the California Agricultural Labor Relations Board (2014-___). He is the Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus at Stanford Law School. Professor Gould has been a member of the National Academy of Arbitrators since 1970 and has arbitrated and mediated more than 300 labor disputes. As NLRB Chairman, he and his agency played a critical role in ending the longest strike in baseball history (1994-95)—and he was a salary arbitrator in the 1992 and 1993 salary disputes between the Major League Baseball Players Association and the Major League Baseball Player Relations Committee. 34 Faculty and Emeriti William B. Gould IV (continued) In 1966-67, Professor Gould served as Consultant to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and, in that connection, conciliated racial discrimination complaints in Alabama and South Carolina. He served as Independent Monitor for FirstGroup America, addressing freedom of association complaints (2008-2011). Professor Gould served as Special Advisor to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (2011-2012). Twice, he has served as an Expert Witness for the National Hockey League on issues relating to the extraterritorial application of American labor law. He also served as an Expert Witness for the County of Santa Clara, California on issues relating to the intersection between public sector collective bargaining and political involvement. Professor Gould was a member of the very first Fact-Finding Board established under the New York Taylor Law in 1967. A critically acclaimed author of ten books and more than sixty law review articles, Professor Gould’s work includes his historical record of the experiences of his great-grandfather in Diary of a Contraband: The Civil War Passage of a Black Sailor, and his own Washington story, Labored Relations: Law, Politics and the NLRB: A Memoir. A tenth book, Bargaining with Baseball: Labor Relations in an Age of Prosperous Turmoil appeared in 2011. In 2013, the 5th edition of his A Primer on American Labor Law was published by Cambridge University Press. Professor Gould is the recipient of five honorary doctorates for his significant contributions in the fields of labor law and labor relations. Before joining the Stanford Law School Faculty in 1972, he was a professor of law at Wayne State University Law School and was an attorney for the National Labor Relations Board, as well as for United Auto Workers. Hank Greely Deane F. and Kate Edelman Johnson Professor of Law Hank Greely (BA ‘74) specializes in the ethical, legal, and social implications of new biomedical technologies, particularly those related to neuroscience, genetics, or stem cell research. He frequently serves as an advisor on California, national, and international policy issues. He is chair of California’s Human Stem Cell Research Advisory Committee, a member of the Advisory Council of the NIH’s National Institute for General Medical Sciences, a member of the Committee on Science, Technology, and Law of the National Academies, a member of the Neuroscience Forum of the Institute of Medicine, and served from 2007-2010 as co-director of the Law and Neuroscience Project, funded by the MacArthur Foundation. Professor Greely chairs the steering committee for the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and directs both the law school’s Center for Law and the Biosciences and the Stanford Program in Neuroscience and Society. In 2007 Professor Greely was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1985, Greely was a partner at Tuttle & Taylor, served as a staff assistant to the secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy, and as special assistant to the general counsel of the U.S. Department of Defense. He served as a law clerk to Justice Potter Stewart of the U.S. Supreme Court and to Judge John Minor Wisdom of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Greely is also a professor (by courtesy) of genetics at Stanford School of Medicine. He received the University’s Richard W. Lyman Prize in 2013. Thomas C. Grey Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law, Emeritus A leading legal theorist and historian of the development of modern American legal thought, Thomas C. Grey (BA ’63) has written extensively on the development of such strains of legal thought as pragmatism, formalism, and realism with particular attention to the jurisprudence of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. Earlier in his career, he wrote significant articles on constitutional law, history, and theory, including a classic work on the unwritten constitution. In addition, he has taught torts to first-year students for more than 30 years. Professor Grey is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and is the recipient of an honorary law degree from Chicago-Kent College of Law. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1971, he served as a clerk to Justice Thurgood Marshall of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge J. Skelly Wright of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. 35 Faculty and Emeriti Joseph A. Grundfest W. A. Franke Professor of Law and Business Joseph A. Grundfest, JD ’78, is a nationally prominent expert on capital markets, corporate governance, and securities litigation. His scholarship has been published in the Harvard, Yale, and Stanford law reviews, and he has been recognized as one of the most influential attorneys in the United States. Professor Grundfest founded the award-winning Stanford Securities Class Action Clearinghouse, which provides detailed, online information about the prosecution, defense, and settlement of federal class action securities fraud litigation. He launched Stanford Law School’s executive education programs and continues to co-direct Directors’ College, the nation’s leading venue for the continuing professional education of directors of publicly traded corporations. He is also a senior faculty member with the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance. Additionally, he is co-founder and director of Financial Engines and a director of Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1990, Professor Grundfest was a commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission, served on the staff of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors as counsel and senior economist for legal and regulatory matters, and was an associate at Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering. Early in his career he was a research associate at the Brookings Institution and an economist and consultant with the RAND Corporation. Lucas Guttentag Professor of the Practice of Law Lucas Guttentag specializes in immigration law, immigrants’ rights and constitutional litigation. He is the founder and former national director of the American Civil Liberties Union Immigrants’ Rights Project, which he led from 1985-2011. For nearly thirty years, he litigated complex civil rights, class action and constitutional cases in courts throughout the United States, including successfully arguing in the Supreme Court. Under his direction, the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project established offices in New York and San Francisco and became the largest immigration litigation program in the country committed to enforcing the civil and constitutional rights of non-citizens. His writings focus on the intersection of civil rights and immigration law. Professor Guttentag has been widely recognized for his litigation and leadership on immigration issues by national and local organizations, including being named a human rights “hero” by the ABA Human Rights journal, lawyer of the year by California Lawyer magazine, and among California’s top 100 lawyers. He is a fellow of the American Bar Foundation and received an honorary degree from CUNY Law School in 2013. Professor Guttentag joined the Stanford faculty in 2014 as Professor of the Practice. In the fall he teaches at Yale Law School, where he is Robina Foundation Distinguished Senior Fellow and Ford Foundation Distinguished Senior Research Scholar. For many years, Professor Guttentag taught immigration law as an adjunct at Columbia Law School and later at the University of California Berkeley (Boalt Hall). He previously practiced civil rights law in Los Angeles at the Center for Law in the Public Interest and served as law clerk to renowned district judge William Wayne Justice in Texas. Thomas C. Heller Lewis Talbot and Nadine Hearn Shelton Professor of International Legal Studies, Emeritus An expert in international law and legal institutions, Thomas C. Heller has focused his research on the rule of law, international climate control, global energy use, and the interaction of government and nongovernmental organizations in establishing legal structures in the developing world. He has created innovative courses on the role of law in transitional and developing economies, as well as the comparative study of law in developed economies. He has co-directed the law school’s Rule of Law Program, as well as the Stanford Program in International and Comparative Law. Professor Heller has been a visiting professor at the European University Institute, Catholic University of Louvain, and Hong Kong University, and has served as the deputy director of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University, where he is now a senior fellow. Professor Heller is also a senior fellow (by courtesy) at the Woods Institute for the Environment. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1979, he was a professor of law at the University of Wisconsin Law School and an attorney-advisor to the governments of Chile and Colombia. 36 Faculty and Emeriti Deborah R. Hensler Judge John W. Ford Professor of Dispute Resolution and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies Deborah R. Hensler’s empirical research on dispute resolution, complex litigation, class actions and mass tort liability has won international recognition. A political scientist and public policy analyst who was the director of the RAND Corporation’s Institute for Civil Justice before joining the Stanford Law School faculty, she has testified before state and federal legislatures on issues ranging from alternative dispute resolution to asbestos litigation and mass torts and consulted with judges and lawyers outside of the United States on the design of class action regimes. Professor Hensler is the organizer of the Stanford Globalization of Class Actions Exchange, which is spearheading international research on class actions and mass litigation, and the co-editor of the recently published volume The Globalization of Class Actions. She co-authored RAND’s comprehensive 2002 report on the status of asbestos litigation in the United States and is the lead author of Class Action Dilemmas: Pursuing Public Goals For Private Gain. At Stanford she teaches seminars on complex litigation, the legal profession, and the use of policy analysis in the law and serves as associate dean of graduate studies. Professor Hensler is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Academy of Political and Social Science. She was the director of the Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation from 1998 to 2003. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1998, she was a professor at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law and held a variety of high-level positions at RAND where she was employed from 1973 to 2001. Professor Hensler is an associate research fellow of the Oxford Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, has taught at the University of Melbourne (Australia) and has been awarded a visiting professorship to Tilburg University by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Daniel E. Ho Professor of Law and Robert E. Paradise Faculty Fellow for Excellence in Teaching and Research Daniel E. Ho’s scholarship centers on quantitative empirical legal studies, with a substantive focus on administrative law, antidiscrimination law, and courts. He has written on information disclosure, media regulation, the New Deal Court, affirmative action, and election administration. Prior to joining Stanford Law School, he clerked for Judge Stephen F. Williams on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University. His work has been supported by the National Science Foundation, and he was recipient of the John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching (2010) and co-recipient of the Warren Miller Prize for the best paper published in Political Analysis (2008), the McGraw-Hill Award for the best paper published by political scientists on law and courts (2006), and the Pi Sigma Alpha award for the best paper delivered at the Midwest Political Science Association. He served as president for the Society of Empirical Legal Studies (2011-12) and is co-editor of The Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization. Erik G. Jensen Professor of the Practice of Law and Director of Rule of Law Program Erik G. Jensen is a professor of the practice of law at Stanford Law School, director of the law school’s Rule of Law Program, and an affiliated faculty member at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law (CDDRL) at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University (FSI). A lawyer trained in Britain and the United States, he has, for the last 25 years, taught, practiced and written about the field of law and development in 30 countries. He has been a Fulbright scholar, a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and the African Development Bank, and a representative of The Asia Foundation, where he currently serves as a senior advisor for governance and law. His teaching and research activities explore various dimensions of reform aimed at strengthening the rule of law, including the political economy of reform; the connections between legal systems and the economies, polities and societies in which they are situated; and the relationship of Islam to the rule of law. As co-director of the Rule of Law Program, Jensen serves as faculty advisor to student-driven projects in Afghanistan, Bhutan, Timor-Leste, and Iraq that, with strong local partnerships, develop legal tools in these developing democracies. Jensen lived for 14 years in Asia and was an active participant in policy dialogues in South and Southeast Asia. From 1996 to 1998, he led the governance section of an Asian Development Bank-funded study called “Pakistan 2010,” which examined subjects including judicial and legal reform, countering corruption, governance process, civil service reform, decentralization and empowering the country’s citizenry. In September 1999, he served as co-team leader of a 35-member consulting team which prepared an extensive report on “Legal and Judicial Reform in Pakistan” for the Asian Development Bank. Jensen’s recent past activities include: a research project funded by the Ford Foundation that surveys Pakistani and Indian perceptions of doing business across their acrimonious border; serving as an outside expert in an evaluation of a World Bank project on judicial reform in Venezuela; designing and teaching a research workshop, at Stanford Law School, on judicial reform in developing countries; and serving on the advisory board of two international rule-of-law projects for the World Bank in Mexico and Argentina. 37 Faculty and Emeriti Erik G. Jensen (continued) Among his recent publications are “Confronting Misconceptions and Acknowledging Imperfections: A Response To Khaled Abou El Fadl’s ‘Islam And Democracy’” published in the Fordham International Law Journal (2003), and Beyond Common Knowledge: Empirical Approaches to the Rule of Law (Stanford University Press, 2003), which he edited with Thomas C. Heller. Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz endorsed Beyond Common Knowledge with the admonition, “No scholar or policymaker should utter the words ‘rule of law’ without first reading this volume.” Jensen holds a JD degree from the William Mitchell College of Law and an LLM degree from the London School of Economics. Pamela S. Karlan Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law and Co-Director, Supreme Court Litigation Clinic A productive scholar and award-winning teacher, Pamela S. Karlan is currently on leave from the Law School serving as a Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. Prior to her leave, she was co-director of the school’s Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, where students litigate live cases before the Court. One of the nation’s leading experts on voting and the political process, she has served as a commissioner on the California Fair Political Practices Commission and an assistant counsel and former cooperating attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Professor Karlan is the co-author of leading casebooks on constitutional law, constitutional litigation, and the law of democracy, as well as numerous scholarly articles. She also wrote a column on the Supreme Court and legal issues for the Boston Review. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1998, she was a professor of law at the University of Virginia School of Law and served as a law clerk to Justice Harry A. Blackmun of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Abraham D. Sofaer of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Karlan is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers, and the American Law Institute. Mark G. Kelman James C. Gaither Professor of Law and Vice Dean A prolific scholar whose jurisprudential interests range from law and economics to cognitive psychology, Mark G. Kelman has applied social science approaches to diverse legal fields including criminal law, taxation, administrative regulation, and disability law. His most recent book, The Heuristics Debate (Oxford University Press, 2011), focuses on disputes about the fundamental nature of heuristic reasoning associated, respectively, with the heuristics and biases school and the fast and frugal heuristics school. He is especially concerned with the implications of these debates for a wide variety of issues of both legal theory and policy (ranging from questions about whether values are commensurable or the ordinary tendency to spend more willingly to rescue identifiable victims than to prevent “statistical” lives from being lost is defensible to controversies over the efficacy of distinct forms of criminal sanctions). He has also been engaged in a substantial experimental research project on moral reasoning, and has begun to explore how surgeons come to recommend particular procedures when the costs and benefits of the procedures are difficult to commensurate, a project that bridges his ongoing interests in how people actually make decisions and his interests in normative philosophy. In addition to being a longtime teacher of both criminal law and property to first-year students, he has served as the academic coordinator, academic associate dean, and, currently, vice dean at the law school. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1977, Professor Kelman was the director of criminal justice projects for the Fund for the City of New York. Amalia D. Kessler Lewis Talbot and Nadine Hearn Shelton Professor of International Legal Studies A scholar whose research focuses on the evolution of commercial law and civil procedure, Amalia D. Kessler (MA ’96, PhD ’01) seeks to explore the roots of modern market culture and present-day process norms. In 2007–08, she received a Charles A. Ryskamp Research Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies, supporting research on her current book project concerning the 19th-century origins of American adversarial legal culture. In 2008, her book, A Revolution in Commerce: The Parisian Merchant Court and the Rise of Commercial Society in Eighteenth-Century France (Yale University Press, 2007), was awarded the American Historical Association’s J. Russell Major Prize for the best book in English on any aspect of French history. In 2011, she received the Hessel Yntema Prize from the American Society of Comparative Law for the “most outstanding” article by a scholar under 40 appearing in the previous year’s volume of the American Journal of Comparative Law. And in 2005, she received the Surrency Prize from the American Society for Legal History for the best article in the previous year’s volume of the Law and History Review. Professor Kessler has been a visiting professor at, among other places, Tel Aviv University Law School, the Université Panthéon-Assas (Paris II) and the École des hautes études en sciences sociales. She is the Jean-Paul Gimon Director of the France-Stanford Center for Interdisciplinary Studies and has an appointment (by courtesy) with the Stanford University Department of History.Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2003, Professor Kessler was a trial attorney in the Civil Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and clerked for Judge Pierre N. Leval of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. 38 Faculty and Emeriti Daniel P. Kessler Professor of Law An expert on health policy and health care finance, Daniel P. Kessler’s scholarship is particularly timely. His recent book, Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Five Steps to a Better Health Care System (with John Cogan and R. Glenn Hubbard), outlines how market-based health care reform in the U.S. can help fix our system’s current problems. His recent research examines how tax policy affects medical spending. His research interests also include empirical studies in antitrust law and law and economics. Currently he is investigating how vertical integration and other shared ownership structures in markets for health services affect the cost and quality of care. A senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor of health research and policy (by courtesy) with the Stanford School of Medicine, Professor Kessler, JD ’93, has been on the Stanford Graduate School of Business faculty for 15 years—and now brings to the law school a uniquely interdisciplinary perspective to his teaching. He is also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Professor Kessler has won awards for his advising and research from Stanford, the National Institute for Health Care Management Foundation, and the International Health Economics Association. He has received grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and the California HealthCare Foundation. He has served as a consultant to corporations, foundations, and the governments of the United States and Canada. He has taught courses in health economics, public policy, and antitrust law at Stanford, Harvard, and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He has published numerous papers in economics journals and law reviews. He has also appeared on The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and written several articles on health reform for The Wall Street Journal and Health Affairs. Michael Klausner Nancy and Charles Munger Professor of Business and Professor of Law Michael Klausner teaches and writes in the areas of corporate law, corporate governance, business transactions and financial regulation. His research has included theoretical and empirical analyses of corporate governance, liability risk for corporate officers and directors, securities litigation, takeover defenses, standardization of contracts, and the economics underlying business transactions. He oversees Stanford Securities Litigation Analytics, which maintains a large database covering securities class actions and SEC enforcement actions, and he is currently writing a book on the economics of business transactions. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1997, he was a professor of law at New York University School of Law, a White House Fellow and deputy associate director in the Office of Policy Development in the White House, and a corporate law practitioner with Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher in Washington, D.C. and Hong Kong. He clerked for Justice William Brennan of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge David Bazelon of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. William Koski Eric and Nancy Wright Professor of Clinical Education and Director, Youth and Education Law Project An accomplished clinical teacher and litigator, William Koski (PhD ’03) is the founder and director of the law school’s Youth and Education Law Project (YELP). He and the students in the law project have represented hundreds of disadvantaged children and their families in educational equity, disability rights, and school reform matters. Professor Koski and YELP are currently representing more than 60 students from across California in the pathbreaking Robles-Wong v. California lawsuit that seeks to reform California’s dysfunctional and insufficient K-12 public school finance system. Reflecting his multidisciplinary background as a lawyer and social scientist, Professor Koski’s scholarly work focuses on the related issues of educational accountability, equity, and adequacy; the politics of educational policy reform; and judicial decision making in educational policy reform litigation. Professor Koski’s current research concentrates on the normative case for and policy implications of ensuring equality of educational opportunity in the current context of educational standards, adequacy, and accountability. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2001, Professor Koski was a lecturer in law at Stanford and a supervising attorney at the law school’s East Palo Alto Community Law Project. He was also an associate at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe and then Alden, Aronovsky & Sax. Professor Koski has an appointment (by courtesy) with the Stanford School of Education. 39 Faculty and Emeriti Larry Kramer Lecturer and Former Dean Larry Kramer is president of The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, a position he took up in September 2012. He is on leave from the Stanford Law School faculty until 2014. He joined Stanford Law School in 2004 as Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean. As the school’s 12th dean, he spearheaded significant educational reforms, including dramatically expanding joint degree programs as part of a multidisciplinary approach to legal studies, enlarging the clinical education program to promote reflective lawyering, revamping programs to foster a public service ethos, and building the international law program to support a growing emphasis on globalization in legal practice. Professor Kramer has written and taught in such varied fields as constitutional law, conflict of laws, civil procedure, federalism and its history, and the role of courts in society. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Law Institute. In December 2008, Equal Justice Works named him to its Board of Directors. He has appointments (by courtesy) with the Stanford University Department of History and with the Graduate School of Business. Before joining the Stanford faculty, he served as Associate Dean for Research and Academics and Russell D. Niles Professor of Law at New York University School of Law; professor of law at the University of Chicago and University of Michigan law schools; and consultant for Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP. Early in his career, Professor Kramer clerked for Justice William J. Brennan Jr. of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Henry J. Friendly of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Mark A. Lemley William H. Neukom Professor of Law Mark Lemley is the William H. Neukom Professor of Law at Stanford Law School, the Director of the Stanford Program in Law, Science and Technology, and the Director of Stanford’s LLM Program in Law, Science and Technology. He teaches intellectual property, computer and internet law, patent law, and antitrust. He is the author of seven books (most in multiple editions) and 135 articles on these and related subjects, including the two-volume treatise IP and Antitrust. His works have been cited more than 150 times by courts, including nine United States Supreme Court opinions, and over 11,000 times in books and law review articles, making him one of the five most cited legal scholars of all time. He has published 9 of the 100 most-cited law review articles of the last twenty years, more than any other scholar, and a 2012 empirical study named him the most relevant law professor in the country. His articles have appeared in 22 of the top 25 law reviews and in multiple peer- reviewed and specialty journals. They have been reprinted throughout the world, and translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Italian, and Danish. He has taught intellectual property law to federal and state judges at numerous Federal Judicial Center and ABA programs, has testified seven times before Congress, and has filed numerous amicus briefs before the U.S. Supreme Court, the California Supreme Court, and the federal circuit courts of appeals. Mark is a founding partner of Durie Tangri LLP. He litigates and counsels clients in all areas of intellectual property, antitrust, and internet law. He has argued 15 federal appellate cases and numerous district court cases, and represented clients including Comcast, Genentech, DISH Network, Google, Grokster, Guidewire, Hummer Winblad, Netflix, and the University of Colorado Foundation in over 90 cases in his more than two decades as lawyer. Mark is a founder and board member of Lex Machina, Inc., a startup company providing data and analytics around IP disputes to law firms, companies, courts, and policymakers. Mark has been named California Lawyer’s Attorney of the Year (2005), Best Lawyers’ San Francisco IP Lawyer of the Year (2010), and a Young Global Leader by the Davos World Economic Forum (2007). In 2009 he received the California State Bar’s inaugural IP Vanguard Award. In 2002 he was chosen as Boalt’s Young Alumnus of the Year. He has been recognized as one of the top 50 litigators in the country under 45 by the American Lawyer (2007), one of the 100 most influential lawyers in the nation by the National Law Journal (2006 and 2013), one of the 10 most admired attorneys in IP (2010) by IP360, one of the 25 most influential people in IP (2010) by the American Lawyer, among other honors. He is a member of the American Law Institute. Mark clerked for Judge Dorothy Nelson on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and has practiced law in Silicon Valley with Brown & Bain and with Fish & Richardson and in San Francisco with Keker & Van Nest. Until January 2000, he was the Marrs McLean Professor of Law at the University of Texas School of Law, and until June 2004 he was the Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Professor of Law at the Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley. In his spare time, Mark enjoys cooking, travel, yoga, and feeding his addiction to online video games (at this writing, Elder Scrolls Online). 40 Faculty and Emeriti Robert MacCoun Professor of Law and Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Robert MacCoun is a social psychologist and public policy analyst who has published numerous studies on a variety of topics, including illicit drug use, drug policy, judgment and decision-making, citizens’ assessments of fairness in the courts, social influence processes, and bias in the use and interpretation of research evidence by scientists, journalists, and citizens. A preeminent scholar working at the border of law and psychology, his scholarship involves a mix of experimental and non-experimental empirical research as well as computational modeling and simulation. MacCoun’s recent publications include “Moral Outrage and Opposition to Harm Reduction,” Criminal Law & Philosophy, 7, 83-98, (2013); “The Burden of Social Proof: Shared Thresholds and Social Influence,” Psychological Review, (2012); and “An Agnostic’s Guide to the Drug Legalization Debate,” Annual Review of Law & Social Science (2011). MacCoun’s book with Peter Reuter, Drug War Heresies (Cambridge, 2001) is considered a landmark scholarly analysis of the drug legalization debate. MacCoun has also written extensively on the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. His analysis of military unit cohesion, which was featured in a landmark RAND study, was influential in the 1993 and 2010 policy debates about allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly in the US military. Prior to joining SLS in 2014, MacCoun was a member of the faculties of the Law School and the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC Berkeley. He has been a visiting professor at Stanford Law School and at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School. From 1986 to 1993 he was a behavioral scientist at RAND Corporation, where he served as a staff member at the Institute for Civil Justice and the Drug Policy Research Center as well as a faculty member at the RAND Graduate School of Policy Studies. MacCoun also holds a joint appointment as a Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute at Stanford University, and a courtesy appointment in the Department of Psychology. M. Elizabeth Magill Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean Mary Elizabeth Magill was appointed the Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Dean of Stanford Law School on September 1, 2012. She is the law school’s 13th dean. Before coming to Stanford she was on the faculty at the University of Virginia School of Law for 15 years, serving most recently as vice dean, the Joseph Weintraub–Bank of America Distinguished Professor of Law, and the Elizabeth D. and Richard A. Merrill Professor. An expert in administrative law and constitutional structure, Dean Magill teaches administrative law, constitutional law, and food and drug law. Her scholarly articles have been published in leading law reviews, and she has won several awards for her scholarly contributions. She is a member of the American Law Institute, and served as a fellow in the Program in Law and Public Affairs at Princeton University, a visiting professor at Harvard Law School, and the Thomas Jefferson Visiting Fellow at Downing College, Cambridge University. After completing her BA in history at Yale University in 1988, Dean Magill served as a senior legislative assistant for energy and natural resources for U.S. Senator Kent Conrad, a position she held for four years. She left the Hill to attend the University of Virginia School of Law, where she was articles development editor of the Virginia Law Review and received several awards for academic and scholarly achievement. After graduating in 1995, Dean Magill clerked for Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and then for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Phil Malone Professor of Law and Director of the Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic Phil Malone joined Stanford Law School’s faculty in July 2013 as the inaugural director of the Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic of the Mills Legal Clinic and professor of law. A leading expert in IP, innovation and cyberlaw, he brings to the position nearly a decade of experience in clinical education and another 20 years of antitrust and technology litigation. His clinical work and scholarship is focused on understanding and promoting sound innovation and exploring how intellectual property and competition policy in high-tech industries affect it. His work also looks at ways in which to encourage broad opportunities for creativity, online expression, open access and dissemination of information, and increased access to justice. His teaching has addressed the relationship between legal policy and innovation, including the role of competition and antitrust law, intellectual property, privacy, and security law. Professor Malone comes to Stanford from Harvard Law School, where he was a clinical professor of law and the director of the Cyberlaw Clinic at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society. He also taught courses in cybercrime; antitrust, technology and innovation; IP and cyberlaw litigation; and a Harvard College freshman seminar, Cyberspace in Court: Law of the Internet. Professor Malone was one of the faculty directors of the Berkman Center and was the initial HLS liaison to the Harvard Innovation Lab, a new, university wide center aimed at facilitating innovation and entrepreneurship among Harvard students and faculty. 41 Faculty and Emeriti Phil Malone (continued) Prior to joining the academy, Professor Malone was a senior attorney for over 20 years with the Antitrust Division of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), where he directed numerous civil and criminal investigations and litigated a number of major antitrust trials. Much of his DOJ experience focused on high-technology industries, the Internet and computer software and hardware. Beginning in 1996 he was lead counsel in the DOJ’s investigations of Microsoft, and he was the primary career counsel, along with outside counsel David Boies, in the trial of U.S. v. Microsoft Corp (D.D.C). Before leaving the Justice Department he was one of the lead lawyers in the government’s antitrust case against Oracle Corp. From 2001-2003 he was the Victor H. Kramer Fellow at HLS, focusing on legal approaches to encouraging and preserving innovation in high-tech industries, evolving competition policy in the computer industry, and the use of technology in discovery and litigation. Lawrence C. Marshall Professor of Law A nationally renowned advocate for reform of the U.S. criminal justice system, Professor Lawrence Marshall has been widely recognized for his lawyering, activism and teaching. Much of his scholarly and legal work has focused on issues surrounding appellate practice, criminal law, wrongful convictions and application of the death penalty. Professor Marshall is also a recognized expert in Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility, a field in which he has researched and taught for more than two decades. He has frequently served as an expert consultant and witness on an array of matters pertaining to lawyers’ responsibilities. From 2005-2013, Professor Marshall served as Associate Dean of Clinical Education and as the David and Stephanie Mills Director of the Mills Legal Clinic. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 2005, he was a professor of law at Northwestern University School of Law and of counsel at Mayer, Brown & Platt. At Northwestern, he co-founded and served as legal director of the world-renowned Center on Wrongful Convictions, where he represented many wrongly convicted inmates, including many inmates who at one time had been sentenced to death. In 2013, Professor Marshall became part-time of counsel to Kirkland & Ellis. Early in his career, he clerked for Justice John Paul Stevens of the U.S. Supreme Court and for Judge Patricia M. Wald of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Janet Martinez Senior Lecturer in Law Janet Martinez focuses her research and consulting on the lawyer’s role in negotiation, domestically and internationally; conflict resolution system design; facilitation of public disputes, particularly in the fields of international trade and the environment; negotiation and consensus-building training; and negotiation curriculum development for clients in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. In addition to her role as director of the law school’s Gould Negotiation and Mediation Program, Professor Martinez is a senior consultant at the Consensus Building Institute in Cambridge, Mass., a nonprofit institution whose mission is to improve conflict resolution, and a consultant at Lax Sebenius, a negotiation consulting firm in Concord, Mass. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2002, she did research, writing, and teaching in various aspects of negotiation at Harvard University’s graduate schools of business, law, and government and was senior counsel for the McKesson Corporation. Jenny S. Martinez Associate Dean for Curriculum, Professor of Law and Warren Christopher Professor in the Practice of International Law and Diplomacy Professor Jenny S. Martinez is a leading expert on international courts and tribunals, international human rights, national security, constitutional law, and the laws of war. Her research focuses on the role of courts and tribunals in advancing and protecting human rights, ranging from her work on the all-but-forgotten 19th-century international tribunals involved in the suppression of the trans-Atlantic slave trade through her work on contemporary institutions like the International Criminal Court and the role of courts in policing human rights abuses in connection with anti-terrorism policies. She has also written extensively on national security law and the constitutional separation of powers. She is the author of The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law (Oxford University Press, 2012) and numerous articles in leading academic journals. Her op-eds have been published in The New York Times and Washington Post, and she has been an expert commentator for both print and broadcast media including ABC World News, CNN, PBS Newshour, NPR, The Washington Post, The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and others. She teaches courses in international law, international human rights law, constitutional law, and civil procedure. 42 Faculty and Emeriti Jenny S. Martinez (continued) An experienced litigator, she has worked on numerous cases in the U.S. Supreme Court and the courts of appeals involving international law and constitutional law issues, including cases involving the Alien Tort Statute, the Torture Victim Protection Act, and the detention and trial of post-9/11 detainees. Professor Martinez was named to the National Law Journal’s list of “Top 40 Lawyers Under 40” and the American Lawyer’s “Young Litigators Fab Fifty.” She serves on the board of directors for the Open Society Justice Initiative, which promotes human rights and builds legal capacity for open societies around the world. In the past, she has served as a consultant on international human rights issues for both Human Rights First and the International Center for Transitional Justice. She is also a member of the U.S. State Department’s Advisory Committee on International Law. She is a faculty affiliate of Stanford’s Center on International Security and Cooperation and Stanford’s Center on Democracy Development and the Rule of Law. Before joining the Stanford faculty in 2003, Professor Martinez was a senior research fellow at Yale University and an attorney at Jenner & Block. She clerked for Justice Stephen Breyer (BA ‘59) of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Guido Calabresi of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; she was also an associate legal officer for Judge Patricia Wald of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in the Hague, where she worked on trials involving genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Michael W. McConnell Richard and Frances Mallery Professor of Law Michael W. McConnell is the Richard and Frances Mallery Professor and director of the Constitutional Law Center at Stanford Law School, as well as Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is a leading authority on freedom of speech and religion, the relation of individual rights to government structure, originalism, and various other aspects of constitutional history and constitutional law. He is author of numerous articles and co-author of two casebooks: The Constitution of the United States (Foundation Press) and Religion and the Constitution (Aspen). He is co-editor of Christian Perspectives on Legal Thought (Yale Univ. Press). Since 1996, he has been a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Professor McConnell brings wide practical experience to bear on his teaching and scholarship. Before joining Stanford in 2009, he served as a circuit judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. He has argued 14 cases in the United States Supreme Court, most recently Horne v. Department of Agriculture, in 2013. Before his appointment to the bench, McConnell was Presidential Professor of Law at the S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah, and prior to that the William B. Graham Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School. He has taught six times as a visiting professor at Harvard Law School. McConnell was assistant general counsel at the Office of Management and Budget, and Assistant to the Solicitor General in the Department of Justice, under President Ronald Reagan, and a member of the President’s Intelligence Oversight Board from 1988-1990. He served as law clerk to then Chief Judge J. Skelly Wright of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and to Justice William J. Brennan Jr. of the U.S. Supreme Court. He is a graduate of Michigan State University (1976) and the University of Chicago Law School (1979). He is of counsel to the law firm of Kirkland & Ellis. Michelle Mello Professor of Law and School of Medicine Professor of Health Research and Policy Michelle Mello (BA ’93) is a leading empirical health law scholar whose research is focused on understanding the effects of law and regulation on health care delivery and population health outcomes. She is the author of more than 130 articles and book chapters on the medical malpractice system, medical errors and patient safety, research ethics, regulation of pharmaceuticals, legal interventions to combat obesity and noncommunicable disease, and other topics. Her investigations into the dynamics of medical malpractice litigation, the effects of medical liability reforms, the ability of hospitals to shift costs of medical errors to others, and allocating responsibility for medical errors between hospital systems and individual physicians have been particularly important and impactful. Mello’s publications appear in medical, health policy, and law journals, and she is a frequent contributor to the New England Journal of Medicine. Recent publications include “Prospects for Regulation of Off-Label Drug Promotion in an Era of Expanding Commercial Speech Protection,” North Carolina Law Review (2014); “Implementing Hospital-Based Communication-andResolution Programs: Lessons Learned in New York City,” Health Affairs (2014); “Survey Finds Public Support for Legal Interventions Directed at Health Behavior to Fight Noncommunicable Disease,” Health Affairs (2013); “Critical Opportunities for Public Health Law: A Call for Action,” American Journal of Public Health (2013); “High Physician Concern About Malpractice Risk Predicts More Aggressive Diagnostic Testing in Office-Based Practice,” Health Affairs (2013); and “Preparing for Responsible Sharing of Clinical Trial Data,” New England Journal of Medicine (2013). 43 Faculty and Emeriti Michelle Mello (continued) In 2013, Mello was elected to the Institute of Medicine, one of the highest honors in the fields of health and medicine, in recognition of outstanding professional achievement and commitment to service. Mello’s work has also garnered the Alice S. Hersh New Investigator Award from AcademyHealth, the leading professional organization for health services and health policy research in the U.S.; a Greenwall Faculty Scholars Award in Bioethics; and a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Investigator Award in Health Policy Research. Mello, who holds a PhD in Health Policy and Administration as well as a JD, has a joint appointment at the Stanford School of Medicine in the Department of Health Research and Policy. She teaches courses in public health law and public health ethics. Prior to joining Stanford in 2014, she was a Professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and Director of the School’s Program in Law and Public Health, as well as a Lab Fellow at Harvard’s Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics. She currently serves as a Key Consultant to the National Program Office of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s program in Public Health Law Research. Miguel A. Méndez Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law, Emeritus After a litigation career in public interest law that included work for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and California Rural Legal Assistance, Miguel A. Méndez entered academia and has become a foremost expert, scholar, and teacher in the field of evidence law. An author of leading works on the laws of evidence in California, he writes about reforms in the federal and California evidence codes and on emerging issues in state substantive criminal law. He is a consultant to the California Law Revision Commission and an elected member of the American Law Institute. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1977, Professor Méndez was deputy public defender in the Monterey County Public Defender’s Office, deputy director of California Rural Legal Assistance, and a staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Early in his career he clerked for the U.S. Court of Claims and was a legislative assistant to U.S. Senator Alan Cranston (BA ̕36). He is currently a professor of law at the University of California, Davis, School of Law. John Henry Merryman Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law, Emeritus An internationally renowned expert on art and cultural property law and comparative law, John Henry Merryman continues to teach and publish prolifically, while now in his tenth decade. He has received numerous international prizes and honors, including the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic and honorary doctorates from Aix-en Provence, Rome (Tor Vergata), and Trieste, and has been celebrated in two Festschiften: Comparative and Private International Law: Essays in Honor of John Henry Merryman on His Seventieth Birthday and Legal Culture in the Age of Globalization: Latin America and Latin Europe. In 2004 Professor Merryman received the American Society of Comparative Law’s Lifetime Achievement Award “for his extraordinary scholarly contribution over a lifetime to comparative law in the United States.” He also has been both a Guggenheim Fellow and a Fulbright Research Professor at the Max Planck Institute. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1953, Professor Merryman was a member of the faculty at Santa Clara University. Bernadette Meyler Professor of Law and Deane F. Johnson Faculty Scholar Bernadette Meyler, JD ‘03, is a scholar of British and American constitutional law and of law and the humanities. She returned in 2013 to Stanford Law School, where she had previously served as Leah Kaplan Visiting Professor in Human Rights. Her research and teaching bring together the sometimes surprisingly divided fields of legal history and law and literature. They also examine the long history of constitutionalism, reaching back into the English common law ancestry of the U.S. Constitution. Professor Meyler’s two current book projects stem from these respective areas of her scholarship. Theaters of Pardoning from Shakespeare to Kant tracks changing conceptions of sovereignty within the plays and politics of seventeenth-century England. In doing so, the book considers how the shared audiences of dramatic and historical tragicomedy—whether Kings, students at the Inns of Court, or potential jurors—brought concepts from the literary into the legal arena and back again. Common Law Originalism shifts to the American context, looking at the multiple eighteenth-century common law meanings—both colonial and English—of various constitutional terms and phrases. Based on this variety, as well as on the practices of common law interpretation with which members of the Founding generation were familiar, the book argues that we should, in large part, reject the pursuit of a singular and determinate original meaning; instead, it contends, we must embrace a more vigorous debate in the present over contested constitutional meanings. 44 Faculty and Emeriti Bernadette Meyler (continued) After receiving her BA in Literature with a focus on Classics at Harvard University, Professor Meyler obtained her JD from Stanford Law School and completed a PhD in English at UC, Irvine as a Mellon Fellow in Humanistic Studies and a Chancellor’s Fellow. Following law school, Professor Meyler clerked for the Hon. Robert A. Katzmann of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Professor Meyler previously taught at Cornell University, where she served, most recently, as Professor of Law and English and Faculty Director of Research at the Cornell Law School. She also visited Princeton University as the inaugural Mellon/LAPA Fellow in Law and the Humanities. David W. Mills Professor of the Practice of Law and Senior Lecturer in Law Professor David Mills teaches classes in Criminal Law and White-Collar Crime at Stanford Law School. Mills founded and served as the first director of the school’s renowned Clinical Education program that prepares students for the real-world challenges and responsibilities of a legal career. Prior to joining the faculty of Stanford Law School in 2000, Mills was a lecturer at Rutgers School of Law-Newark and the Santa Clara University School of Law. Mills serves on a number of non-profit boards and is cochair of the board of directors of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. A lifelong advocate for social justice, Professor Mills has combined a career in the law with an extensive business career and his charitable endeavors. He is the author of numerous articles most recently focusing on white collar crime. Jay A. Mitchell Associate Professor of Law and Director, Organizations and Transactions Clinic Jay A. Mitchell (BA ’80) specializes in the areas of corporate law, finance, and commercial transactions. He joined the law school in 2007 to launch and direct the Organizations and Transactions Clinic, which helps prepare students for corporate practice. His research focuses on the application of information, document, and graphic design principles to legal documents; clinical and transactional skills teaching; and sustainable agriculture and food systems. Before joining Stanford Law School, Professor Mitchell spent nearly 15 years as chief corporate counsel and a member of the legal and finance senior management teams at Levi Strauss & Co., where he was responsible for stockholder, finance, governance, disclosure and commercial transaction matters. Mitchell also is a former senior corporate counsel at ALZA Corporation, former partner and associate with Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe, and an associate with Arnold & Porter. Early in his career, he clerked for Judge John Lewis Smith of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Throughout his career, Mitchell has worked on a broad array of corporate and commercial matters in the United States and Europe, including acquisitions, bank and bond financings, recapitalizations, stockholder and voting agreements, raw material supply and contract manufacturing agreements, outsourcing agreements, trademark licenses, product technology agreements, joint ventures, financial reporting and retail relations and antitrust compliance, among others. Alison D. Morantz Professor of Law and John A. Wilson Distinguished Faculty Scholar A scholar whose work has explored the law and economics of protective labor regulation, the enforcement of workplace safety laws, and legal history, Alison D. Morantz seeks to parse the real–world effects of legal and policy reform. Much of her recent empirical research examines the effects of unionization on mine safety and the intensity of regulatory scrutiny, the ways in which statistical techniques can be used to target the nation’s most hazardous employers, the consequences of permitting firms to opt out of workers’ compensation, and the impact of devolving enforcement authority from federal to state regulators. Morantz is the principal investigator of multi–year research projects funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, and co–director of the Martin Daniel Gould Center for Conflict Resolution’s ADR Research Initiative. In the spring of 2010, she was one of four experts appointed, at Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis’s request, to a federal panel that provided an independent analysis of the Mine Safety and Health Administration’s internal review following the explosion at Upper Big Branch Mine on April 5, 2010, that claimed 29 miners’ lives. After receiving a BA summa cum laude from Harvard in 1993, Morantz earned an MSc from Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship; a JD from Yale Law School; and a PhD in economics from Harvard University. She subsequently clerked for Judge Patti B. Saris of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, and worked as a union–side labor lawyer and antidiscrimination advocate in Boston, before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2004. 45 Faculty and Emeriti Lisa Larrimore Ouellette Assistant Professor of Law Lisa Larrimore Ouellette’s scholarship addresses empirical and theoretical problems in intellectual property and innovation law. She takes advantage of her training in physics to explore policy issues such as the value of technical disclosures in patents, the patenting of federally funded research under the Bayh-Dole Act, the polarized public discourse over patents, and the integration of patent law with other levers of innovation policy. She has also written about the potential of online search results to address the evidentiary problem of trademark distinctiveness. Prior to her appointment at Stanford Law School, Professor Ouellette was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. She also clerked for Judge Timothy B. Dyk of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and Judge John M. Walker, Jr., of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. She holds a J.D. from Yale Law School, where she was an Articles Editor of the Yale Law Journal and a Coker Fellow in Contract Law. She earned a Ph.D. in physics from Cornell University as well as a B.A. in physics from Swarthmore College, and she has conducted scientific research at the Max Planck Institute, CERN, and NIST. Nathaniel Persily James B. McClatchy Professor of Law An award-winning teacher and nationally recognized constitutional law expert, Professor Persily, JD ‘98, focuses on the law of democracy, addressing issues such as voting rights, political parties, campaign finance, and redistricting. A sought-after nonpartisan voice in voting rights, he has served as a court-appointed expert to draw legislative districting plans for Georgia, Maryland, and New York and as special master for the redistricting of Connecticut’s congressional districts. Most recently, he also served as the Senior Research Director for the Presidential Commission on Election Administration, a bipartisan commission created by the President to deal with the long lines at the polling place and other administrative problems witnessed in the 2012 election. The Report of the Commission is available at www.supportthevoter.gov. His other principal area of scholarly interest concerns American public opinion toward various constitutional controversies. He designed the Constitutional Attitudes Survey, a national public opinion poll executed in both 2009 and 2010. The survey includes an array of questions concerning attitudes toward the Supreme Court, constitutional interpretation, and specific constitutional controversies. Professor Persily has edited three books. The first, Public Opinion and Constitutional Controversy (Oxford, 2008), examines the effects of Supreme Court decisions on American public opinion and in areas such as desegregation, criminal rights, abortion, gay rights, federalism, school prayer, and the death penalty. The second, The Health Care Case: The Supreme Court’s Decision and Its Implications (Oxford Press, 2013), presents expert analysis of NFIB v. Sebelius from the nation’s leading professors of constitutional and health law. And the third, Solutions to Polarization (Cambridge Press, 2015) sets forth an array of proposals to deal with the hyper-partisanship and gridlock that plague the current American political system. Persily has also published dozens of articles in both scholarly publications and popular media on the legal regulation of political parties, on issues surrounding the census and redistricting process, on voting rights, and on campaign finance reform. Prior to joining the faculty at Stanford Law School in July 2013, Professor Persily was the Charles Keller Beekman Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science at Columbia Law School, and prior to that he was Professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania. Professor Persily has also been a visiting professor at Harvard, NYU, Princeton, the University of Amsterdam, and the University of Melbourne. He received a combined B.A./M.A. in political science from Yale (1992), his J.D. from Stanford (1998) where he was President of Volume 50 of the Stanford Law Review, and his Ph.D. in Political Science from U.C. Berkeley (2002). Joan Petersilia Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law Dr. Joan Petersilia has spent over 30 years studying the performance of U.S. criminal justice agencies and has been instrumental in affecting sentencing and corrections reform in California and throughout the United States. She is the author of 11 books about crime and public policy, and her research on parole reform, prisoner reintegration and sentencing policy has fueled changes in policies throughout the nation. A criminologist with a background in empirical research and social science, Dr. Petersilia is also faculty co-director for the Stanford Criminal Justice Center (SCJC), focusing on policies related to crime control, sentencing, and corrections, and developing nonpartisan analyses and recommendations intended to aid public officials, legal practitioners, and the public in understanding criminal justice policy at the state and national levels. She teaches classes at Stanford Law School on juvenile justice, prisons, community corrections, policy analysis, research methods, and criminal sentencing. 46 Faculty and Emeriti Joan Petersilia (continued) Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty, Dr. Petersilia was a professor of criminology, law and society in the School of Social Ecology at the University of California, Irvine, and director of UCI’s Center for Evidence-Based Corrections. She also previously served as a special advisor to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, helping to reorganize juvenile and adult corrections and working with the California State Legislature to implement prison and parole reform. She chaired Governor Schwarzenegger’s Rehabilitation Strike Team and was also co-chair of California’s Expert Panel on Offender Programs. She continues to advise the California legislature on matters related to California’s Public Safety Realignment Law of 2011 (A.B. 109), the state’s historic attempt to downsize prisons and enhance rehabilitation. She is currently the co-principal investigator of four research grants designed to assess the impacts of A.B. 109. Results from those research projects were published in November 2013 and can be found on Stanford’s Criminal Justice Center website. Dr. Petersilia is a former director of the Criminal Justice Program at the RAND Corporation; former president of the American Society of Criminology; former president of the California Association for Criminal Justice Research; former co-director of the National Research Council’s study on Community Supervision and Desistance from Crime; and former director of the National Research Council’s study on Crime Victims with Developmental Disabilities. In 2010, she was appointed by Attorney General Eric Holder to be a member of the Department of Justice Scientific Advisory Board. Professor Petersilia was recently honored with the prestigious Stockholm Prize in Criminology for her work on prisoner reentry and supporting ex-offenders during the high risk period immediately following release from prison. As the most prestigious award that a criminologist can receive, the Stockholm Prize is awarded for outstanding achievements in criminological research conducted for the reduction of crime and the advancement of human rights. Dr. Petersilia was just awarded an honorary Doctor of Public Policy by the Pardee RAND Graduate School at their 2014 commencement. Petersilia was also chosen by Stanford University as the recipient of the 2013 Roland Volunteer Service Prize. The Roland prize recognizes a single Stanford faculty member annually who involves students in integrating academic scholarship with significant volunteer service to society. A. Mitchell Polinsky Josephine Scott Crocker Professor of Law and Economics A pioneering American figure in the applications of economic theory to law, A. Mitchell Polinsky is a prolific scholar, producing work on the economic analysis of a wide variety of legal issues, from property to contract law to liability and punitive damages. He has written major articles on the economic efficiency of various forms of legal sanctions in achieving deterrence across a range of problems, including criminal law, contract, and tort disputes. Professor Polinsky is the founder and director of the John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics at Stanford Law School. He has been a Guggenheim Fellow and a president of the American Law and Economics Association, and is currently a research associate in the Law and Economics Program of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1979, he was a member of the faculty at Harvard University. Professor Polinsky has an appointment (by courtesy) with the Stanford University Department of Economics. Robert L. Rabin A. Calder Mackay Professor of Law An expert on torts and legislative compensation schemes, Robert L. Rabin is highly regarded for his extensive knowledge of the history and institutional dynamics of accident law. He is a prolific author on issues relating to the functions of the tort system and alternative regulatory schemes and is the co-editor of a classic casebook on tort law. Professor Rabin is currently an advisor to the ongoing American Law Institute Restatement of Torts Third project and has been the program director for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Program on Tobacco Policy Research and Evaluation, as well as a reporter for the American Law Institute Project on Compensation and Liability for Product and Process Injuries and the American Bar Association Action Commission to Improve the Tort Liability System. He has been a member of the Stanford Law School faculty since 1970. 47 Faculty and Emeriti Dan Reicher Professor of the Practice of Law Dan Reicher is Executive Director of the Steyer-Taylor Center for Energy Policy and Finance at Stanford University, a joint center of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and Stanford Law School, where he also holds faculty positions. Reicher came to Stanford in 2011 from Google, where he served since 2007 as Director of Climate Change and Energy Initiatives. Reicher has more than 25 years of experience in energy and environmental policy, finance, and technology. He has served three Presidents including in the Clinton administration as Assistant Secretary of Energy for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and Department of Energy Chief of Staff, as a member of President Obama’s Transition Team and Co-chair of the Energy and Environment Team for Obama, and as a staff member of President Carter’s Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island. Reicher is a member of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board, the National Academy of Sciences Board on Energy and Environmental Systems and co-chairman of the Board of the American Council on Renewable Energy. He also serves on the boards of the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy and American Rivers, the Advanced Energy Economy Advisory Committee, the Vermont Law School Environmental Advisory Committee, and is an advisor to Renewable Funding LLC and Sighten. He is also Senior Advisor to the Atlantic Wind Connection, a project backed by Google and other investors to build an underwater transmission line for offshore wind power and grid reliability along the US east coast. In 2012 Reicher received an honorary doctorate from the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry and was also named one of the five most influential figures in U.S. clean energy by Oilprice.Com. Before his position at Google, Reicher was President and Co-founder of New Energy Capital Corp., a private equity firm funded by the California State Teachers Retirement System and Vantage Point Venture Partners to invest in clean energy projects. He also was Executive Vice President of Northern Power Systems, one of the nation’s oldest renewable energy companies and a recipient of significant venture capital investment. Reicher was also an adjunct professor at the Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and Vermont Law School. In the Clinton Administration, Reicher served for eight years at the Department of Energy as Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Chief of Staff and Deputy Chief of Staff to the Secretary of Energy, and Acting Assistant Secretary for Policy and International Affairs. He also worked for the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee and the World Resources Institute. Earlier in his career Reicher was as an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council, Assistant Attorney General in Massachusetts, a law clerk to a federal district court judge in Boston, and a legal assistant in the Hazardous Waste Section of the U.S. Department of Justice. Reicher holds a BA in biology from Dartmouth College and a JD from Stanford Law School. He also studied at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and MIT. An avid kayaker, Reicher was a member of the first expedition on record to navigate the entire 1888-mile Rio Grande (with support from the National Geographic Society) and to kayak the Yangtze River in China. He is married to Carole Parker. Carole and Dan have three children and live in Piedmont California. Deborah L. Rhode Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law Deborah L. Rhode is the Ernest W. McFarland Professor of Law, the director of the Center on the Legal Profession, and the director of the Program in Law and Social Entrepreneurship at Stanford University. She is the founding president of the International Association of Legal Ethics, the former president of the Association of American Law Schools, the former chair of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Women in the Profession, the former founding director of Stanford’s Center on Ethics, a former trustee of Yale University, and the former director of Stanford’s Institute for Research on Women and Gender. She also served as senior counsel to the minority members of the Judiciary Committee, the United States House of Representatives, on presidential impeachment issues during the Clinton administration. She is the most frequently cited scholar on legal ethics. She has received the American Bar Association’s Michael Franck Award for contributions to the field of professional responsibility; the American Bar Foundation’s W. M. Keck Foundation Award for distinguished scholarship on legal ethics, the American Bar Foundation’s Outstanding Scholar Award, the American Bar Association’s Pro Bono Publico Award for her work on expanding public service opportunities in law schools, and the White House’s Champion of Change Award for a lifetime’s work in increasing access to justice. She is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and vice chair of the board of Legal Momentum (formerly the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund). 48 Faculty and Emeriti Deborah L. Rhode (continued) Professor Rhode graduated Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude from Yale College and received her legal training from Yale Law School. After clerking for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, she joined the Stanford faculty. She is the author or coauthor of over twenty books and over 250 articles. She also serves as a columnist for the National Law Journal and has also published editorials in The New York Times, Washington Post, Boston Globe, and Slate. Recent publications include The Beauty Bias, Women and Leadership, Legal Ethics, Gender and Law, Moral Leadership, and Access to Justice. Jane S. Schacter William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law Jane S. Schacter is a leading national expert on statutory interpretation and legislative process, constitutional law, and sexual orientation law. Her work has been published in numerous law journals, and she co-edits casebooks on constitutional law and sexual orientation law. Her most recent work has focused on various aspects of the debate over same-sex marriage, an issue that lies at the intersection of her teaching and research interests. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2006, Professor Schacter was professor of law at the University of Wisconsin Law School, as well as the University of Michigan Law School. Early in her career she was an assistant attorney general in Massachusetts, an associate at Hill & Barlow in Boston, and a law clerk to Judge Raymond J. Pettine of the U.S. District Court for the District of Rhode Island. Kenneth E. Scott Ralph M. Parsons Professor of Law and Business, Emeritus Kenneth E. Scott, JD ’56, law and business professor emeritus and Hoover Institution senior research fellow, is a leading scholar in the fields of corporate finance reform and corporate governance who has written extensively on federal deposit insurance issues and federal banking regulation. His current research concentrates on legislative and policy developments related to the current financial crisis, comparative corporate governance, and financial regulation. Professor Scott has extensive consulting experience, including work for the World Bank, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Resolution Trust Corporation, and, most recently, the National Association of Securities Dealers (now FINRA). He is also a member of the Shadow Financial Regulatory Committee, Financial Economists Roundtable, and the State Bar of California’s Financial Institutions Committee. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1968, he served as general counsel to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, chief deputy savings and loan commissioner of California and worked in private practice in New York with Sullivan & Cromwell. F. Daniel Siciliano Professor of the Practice of Law and Associate Dean for Executive Education and Special Programs F. Daniel Siciliano, JD ‘04, is a legal scholar and entrepreneur with expertise in corporate governance, corporate finance, and immigration law. He assumes a variety of leadership roles at the law school, including faculty director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, associate dean for executive education and special programs and co-director of Stanford’s Directors’ College. He is also the co-originator of the OSCGRS (Open Source Corporate Governance Reporting System) Project. Previously, Siciliano was a teaching fellow for the law school’s international LLM degree program in Corporate Governance and Practice and executive director of the Program in Law, Economics and Business. He is the senior research fellow with the Immigration Policy Center and a frequent commentator on the long-term economic impact of immigration policy and reform. His work has included expert testimony in front of both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. Prior to joining Stanford Law School, Siciliano co-founded and served as executive director of the Immigration Outreach Center in Phoenix, Arizona. He has launched and led several successful businesses, including LawLogix Group—named three times to the Inc. 500/5000 list. Siciliano serves as a governance consultant and trainer to board directors of several Fortune 500 companies and is a member of the Academic Council of Corporate Board Member magazine. Shirin Sinnar Assistant Professor of Law Shirin Sinnar JD ’03 joined the faculty as an assistant professor in 2012. Her current scholarship focuses on the role of nonjudicial institutions in protecting individual rights in the national security context. Her most recent work explores the capacity of Inspectors General, internal watchdog institutions within federal agencies, to provide oversight of national security programs that affect civil rights and liberties. Other research interests include comparative national security oversight, accountability mechanisms for domestic intelligence-gathering, and the impact of counterterrorism policies on U.S. immigrant communities. 49 Faculty and Emeriti Shirin Sinnar (continued) Prior to her faculty appointment, Sinnar taught Legal Research and Writing and Federal Litigation to first-year law students as a Stanford Law Fellow. She previously served as a public interest attorney with the Asian Law Caucus and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of San Francisco, where she represented individuals facing discrimination based on government national security policies and unlawful employment practices. Sinnar also served as a law clerk to the Honorable Warren J. Ferguson of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. She is a graduate of Stanford Law School (JD 2003), Cambridge University (M. Phil. International Relations 1999), and Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges (summa cum laude, BA History 1998). Deborah A. Sivas Luke W. Cole Professor of Environmental Law and Director, Environmental Law Clinic A leading environmental litigator, Deborah A. Sivas, JD ’87, is director of the highly regarded Environmental Law Clinic, in which students provide legal counsel to dozens of national, regional, and grassroots nonprofit organizations on a variety of environmental issues. Professor Sivas’s litigation successes include challenging the Bush administration’s gas mileage standards for SUVs and light trucks and holding the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency accountable for regulating the discharge of invasive species in ship ballast water. Her current research is focused on the interaction of law and science in the arena of climate change and coastal/marine policy and the ability of the public to hold policymakers accountable. She is a frequent speaker on these topics. Prior to assuming the clinic directorship in 1997, Professor Sivas was a partner at Gunther, Sivas & Walthall, an attorney with Earthjustice (formerly Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund), an associate in the environmental practice group at Heller Ehrman, and a law clerk to Judge Judith N. Keep of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California. She currently serves as chair for the board of directors for the Turtle Island Restoration Network. In recognition of her work on behalf of the environment, California Lawyer magazine named Professor Sivas one of its 2008 Attorneys of the Year. David Alan Sklansky Professor of Law David Sklansky teaches and writes about criminal law, criminal procedure, and evidence. A former federal prosecutor, he brings rich knowledge of criminal justice institutions to his scholarship, which has addressed topics as diverse as the political science of policing, the interpretation and application of the Fourth Amendment, fairness and accuracy in criminal adjudication, the relationship between criminal justice and immigration laws, and the role of race, gender, and sexual orientation in law enforcement. Sklansky is the author of the well-regarded evidence casebook, Evidence: Cases, Commentary, and Problems. His other recent publications include “Evidentiary Instructions and the Jury as Other,” Stanford Law Review (2013); “Crime, Immigration and Ad Hoc Instrumentalism,” New Criminal Law Review (2012); “Private Police and Human Rights,” Law & Ethics of Human Rights (2011); “Hearsay’s Last Hurrah,” Supreme Court Review (2009); and “Anti-Inquisitorialism” Harvard Law Review (2009). Prior to joining the faculty of Stanford Law School in 2014, Sklansky taught at U.C. Berkeley and UCLA; he won campuswide teaching awards at both those institutions. Earlier he practiced labor law in Washington D.C. and served as an Assistant United States Attorney in Los Angeles. Norman W. Spaulding Nelson Bowman Sweitzer and Marie B. Sweitzer Professor of Law A nationally recognized scholar in the areas of professional responsibility and law and humanities, Norman W. Spaulding’s research focuses on the history of the American legal profession. In 2004 the Association of American Law Schools presented him with its Outstanding Scholarly Paper Prize for “Constitution as Counter-Monument: Federalism, Reconstruction and the Problem of Collective Memory,” which was published in the Columbia Law Review. In 2010 he served as the Covington & Burling Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2005, he was a professor of law at the UC Berkeley School of Law and an associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, where he did environmental litigation. Professor Spaulding, JD ’97, served as a law clerk to Judge Betty B. Fletcher (BA ’43) of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and Judge Thelton Henderson of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. 50 Faculty and Emeriti Jayashri Srikantiah Professor of Law and Director, Immigrants’ Rights Clinic An experienced clinical teacher and litigator, Jayashri Srikantiah is the founding director of the law school’s Immigrants’ Rights Clinic. Under her direction, students in the clinic have represented scores of immigrants facing deportation, including asylum-seekers, immigrants with prior criminal convictions, immigrant survivors of crime, and undocumented migrants with longstanding ties to the United States. Professor Srikantiah and clinic students have litigated cases in the immigration courts, the federal district courts, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the U.S. Supreme Court. Professor Srikantiah’s litigation successes include challenging the federal government’s immigration detention practices, uncovering the federal government’s use of processes to deport individuals without hearings, and limiting the immigration consequences of prior criminal convictions. In recognition of her work on behalf of immigrants’ rights, California Lawyer magazine named Professor Srikantiah one of its 2014 Attorneys of the Year. Professor Srikantiah’s research and scholarly work explores the role of administrative discretion in immigration decisionmaking in various areas, including human trafficking and immigration detention; and the pedagogy of law clinics that combine direct services work with impact litigation and advocacy. Her current research concentrates on developing teaching methods for clinics representing institutional clients, immigration detention, and the immigration consequences of crimes. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2004, Professor Srikantiah was the associate legal director of the ACLU of Northern California and a staff attorney at the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project. Professor Srikantiah has also worked as an associate at the law firm of Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin, and was a law clerk to Judge David R. Thompson of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Jeff Strnad Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law Jeff Strnad’s research is spread across the fields of taxation, public finance, finance, and empirical analysis. He has published leading works on the taxation of financial instruments and on the application of Bayesian empirical methods to law. Professor Strnad is an innovative teacher of quantitative methods, creating original courses in empirical analysis and game theory. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1997, he was a professor of law and economics at the California Institute of Technology and the John B. Milliken Professor of Taxation at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law. David M. Studdert Professor of Medicine (PCOR/CHP) and Professor of Law David M. Studdert is a leading expert in the fields of health law and empirical legal research. His scholarship explores how the legal system influences the health and well-being of populations. A prolific scholar, he has authored more than 150 articles and book chapters, and his work appears frequently in leading international medical, law, and health policy publications. Professor Studdert joined Stanford Law School faculty in a joint appointment as Professor of Medicine (PCOR/CHP) and Professor of Law. He will teach health law this spring. Before joining the Stanford faculty, Professor Studdert was on the faculty at the University of Melbourne (2007-13) and the Harvard School of Public Health (2000-06). He has also worked as a policy analyst at the RAND Corporation, a policy advisor to the Minister for Health in Australia, and a practicing attorney. Professor Studdert has received the Alice S. Hersh New Investigator Award from AcademyHealth, the leading organization for health services and health policy research in the United States. He was awarded a Federation Fellowship (2006) and a Laureate Fellowship (2011) by the Australian Research Council. He holds a law degree from University of Melbourne and a doctoral degree in health policy and public health from the Harvard School of Public Health. 51 Faculty and Emeriti Barton H. “Buzz” Thompson, Jr. Robert E. Paradise Professor of Natural Resources Law and Perry L. McCarty Director, Woods Institute for the Environment A leading expert in environmental and natural resources law and policy, Barton H. “Buzz” Thompson, Jr., JD/MBA ’76 (BA ’72), has contributed a large body of scholarship on environmental issues ranging from the future of endangered species and fisheries to the use of economic techniques for regulating the environment. He is the founding director of the law school’s Environmental and Natural Resources Program, Perry L. McCarty Director and senior fellow of the Woods Institute for the Environment, and a senior fellow (by courtesy) at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. In 2008, the Supreme Court appointed Professor Thompson to serve as the special master in Montana v. Wyoming (137 Original). Professor Thompson is chairman of the board of the Resources Legacy Fund and the Resources Legacy Fund Foundation, a California trustee for The Nature Conservancy, and a board member of both the American Farmland Trust and the Sonoran Institute. He previously served as a member of the Science Advisory Board for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1986, he was a partner at O’Melveny & Myers in Los Angeles and a lecturer at the UCLA School of Law. He was a law clerk to Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist ’52 (BA ’48, MA ’48) of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Joseph T. Sneed of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. George Triantis Associate Dean for Strategic Planning and James and Patricia Kowal Professor of Law George Triantis is an expert in the fields of contracts, commercial law, business law, and bankruptcy. He was the Eli Goldston Professor of Law at Harvard Law School before joining the Stanford faculty in 2011, and he currently serves on the Visiting Committee of Harvard Law. Among his contributions to legal scholarship, Professor Triantis pioneered the application of options theory to the study of contracts and commercial law, and authored a series of articles that develop principles of contract design. His recent publications concern the link between contract design and dispute resolution, the design of legal remedies in commercial contracts, the impact of bargaining power on contract design, and the forces of disruption and innovation in transactional legal practice. He is also the coauthor of the book Foundations of Commercial Law (Foundation Press, 2009). Triantis began his teaching career in 1989 as an assistant professor at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and Faculty of Management, and since then, was a member of the law faculties at Virginia, Chicago and Harvard. Ron Tyler Associate Professor of Law and Director, Criminal Defense Clinic Ron Tyler joined Stanford Law School in 2012 to direct the Criminal Defense Clinic after a 22 yearlong career as an assistant federal public defender with the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the Northern District of California. A dedicated defense attorney and nationally recognized expert, he has litigated at trial and appellate courts covering the full gamut of federal criminal cases. A founding member of the faculty of the Federal Trial Skills Academy and a faculty member of the Office of Defender Services Training Branch, he teaches regularly at seminars for criminal defense attorneys, investigators, and paralegals. He also teaches at the annual National Criminal Defense College in Georgia. He taught trial advocacy at UC Hastings College of the Law as an adjunct professor for many years. He is also active with several nonprofits including the American Civil Liberties Union, serving on its national board of directors. Professor Tyler received his BS in computer science and engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1981 and had a brief career in high tech before changing his career focus to public interest advocacy. He began law school as a Tony Patiño Fellow at Hastings College of the Law and earned his JD from UC Berkeley School of Law in 1989, where he served as notes and comments editor on the Ecology Law Quarterly. After law school, he clerked for U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn Hall Patel. 52 Faculty and Emeriti Barbara van Schewick Professor of Law and Helen L. Crocker Faculty Scholar Barbara van Schewick is a Professor of Law and Helen L. Crocker Faculty Scholar at Stanford Law School, Director of Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society, and Associate Professor (by courtesy) of Electrical Engineering in Stanford University’s Department of Electrical Engineering Van Schewick’s research on the economic, regulatory, and strategic implications of communication networks bridges law, networking and economics. This work has made her a leading expert on network neutrality. Her book Internet Architecture and Innovation (MIT Press 2010, Paperback 2012) is considered to be the seminal work on the science, economics and policy of network neutrality. Her papers on network neutrality have influenced regulatory debates in the United States, Canada and Europe and have been cited by academics, stakeholders, regulatory agencies and other public entities worldwide. The FCC’s Open Internet Order, which adopted network neutrality rules in the US for the first time, relied heavily on her work. Van Schewick’s ideas have influenced reports on network neutrality and Quality of Service by the European Group of Regulators for Electronic Communications (BEREC). The German Commission of Experts on Research and Innovation, a Commission established by the German Government to provide scientific policy advice on these issues, adopted van Schewick’s recommendations on network neutrality and Quality of Service in its 2011 report to the German Government and recommended the adoption of network neutrality rules based on her work. Van Schewick has testified before the FCC in en banc hearings and official workshops, co-authored amicus briefs defending the FCC’s Order against Comcast and the FCC’s Open Internet Order, and submitted White Papers, ex parte letters and comments to network-neutrality-related proceedings in the US and in Europe. In 2007, van Schewick was one of three academics who, together with public interest groups, filed the petition that started the FCC’s network neutrality inquiry into Comcast’s blocking of BitTorrent and other peer-to-peer protocols. Her letters to the FCC regarding Verizon Wireless’ blocking of tethering applications and Verizon’s, AT&T’s and T-Mobile’s blocking of Google Wallet received widespread attention and motivated the FCC and members of Congress to formally or informally investigate these cases. Van Schewick received the Scientific Award 2005 from the German Foundation for Law and Computer Science and the Award in Memory of Dieter Meurer 2006 from the German Association for the Use of Information Technology in Law (“EDV-Gerichtstag”) for her doctoral work. In 2010, she received the Research Prize Technical Communication 2010 from the Alcatel-Lucent Stiftung for Communications Research for her “pioneering work in the area of Internet architecture, innovation and regulation.” Her work has been discussed by leading online and print publications including The New York Times, the Washington Post, Politico, BoingBoing, Wired or Ars Technica, and has been featured on radio and television in the US, Canada, Europe and Australia. Van Schewick holds a PhD in Computer Science, an MSc in Computer Science, and a BSc in Computer Science, all summa cum laude from Technical University Berlin, the Second State Exam in Law (equivalent of Bar Exam), summa cum laude, from the Higher Regional Court Berlin and the First State Exam in Law (equivalent of J.D.), summa cum laude, from Free University Berlin. Michael S. Wald Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor of Law, Emeritus Deeply devoted to the cause of children’s rights and welfare and a frequent expert advisor on youth and children’s legal issues nationwide, Michael S. Wald has had a distinguished career as an academic researcher and teacher. He is one of the leading national authorities on legal policy toward children, and he drafted the American Bar Association’s Standards Related to Child Abuse and Neglect, as well as major federal and state legislation regarding child welfare. Professor Wald has served as deputy general counsel for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services during the Clinton administration, executive director of the San Francisco Department of Human Services, and senior advisor to the president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. He is currently chair of the San Francisco Youth Council and the Faculty Scholars Program of the William T. Grant Foundation, and previously served as a Guggenheim Fellow. He has been a member of the Stanford Law School faculty since 1967. 53 Faculty and Emeriti Michael Wara Associate Professor of Law and Justin M. Roach, Jr. Faculty Scholar An expert on energy and environmental law, Michael Wara’s research focuses on climate and electricity policy. Professor Wara’s current scholarship lies at the intersection between environmental law, energy law, international relations, atmospheric science, and technology policy. Professor Wara, JD ’06, was formerly a geochemist and climate scientist and has published work on the history of the El Niño/La Niña system and its response to changing climates, especially those warmer than today. The results of his scientific research have been published in premier scientific journals, including Science and Nature. Professor Wara joined Stanford Law in 2007 as a research fellow in environmental law and as a lecturer in law. Previously, he was an associate in Holland & Knight’s Government Practice Group, where his practice focused on climate change, land use, and environmental law. Professor Wara is a research fellow at the Program in Energy and Sustainable Development in Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and a Center Fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment. Allen S. Weiner Senior Lecturer in Law and SCICN Co-Director Allen S. Weiner, JD ’89, is an international legal scholar with expertise in such wide-ranging fields as international and national security law, the law of war, international conflict resolution, and international criminal law (including transitional justice). His scholarship focuses on international law and the response to the contemporary security threats of international terrorism, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and situations of widespread humanitarian atrocities. He also explores the relationship between international and domestic law in the context of asymmetric armed conflicts between the United States and nonstate groups and the response to terrorism. In the realm of international conflict resolution, his highly multidisciplinary work analyzes the barriers to resolving violent political conflicts, with a particular focus on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Weiner’s scholarship is deeply informed by experience; he practiced international law in the U.S. Department of State for more than a decade advising government policymakers, negotiating international agreements, and representing the United States in litigation before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the International Court of Justice, and the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal. Senior Lecturer Weiner is director of the Stanford Program in International and Comparative Law and co-director of the Stanford Center on International Conflict and Negotiation. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 2003, Weiner served as legal counselor to the U.S. Embassy in The Hague and attorney adviser in the Office of the Legal Adviser of the U.S. Department of State. He was a law clerk to Judge John Steadman of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. Robert Weisberg Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law Robert Weisberg, JD ’79, works primarily in the field of criminal justice, writing and teaching in the areas of criminal law, criminal procedure, white collar crime, and sentencing policy. He also founded and now serves as faculty co-director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center (SCJC), which promotes and coordinates research and public policy programs on criminal law and the criminal justice system, including institutional examination of the police and correctional systems. Professor Weisberg was a consulting attorney for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the California Appellate Project, where he worked on death penalty litigation in the state and federal courts. In addition, he served as a law clerk to Justice Potter Stewart of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge J. Skelly Wright of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. In 1979, Professor Weisberg received his JD from Stanford Law School, where he served as President of the Stanford Law Review. Professor Weisberg is a two-time winner of the law school’s John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1981, Professor Weisberg received a PhD in English at Harvard and was a tenured English professor at Skidmore College. Drawing on that background, he is one of the nation’s leading scholars on the intersection of law and literature and co-author of the highly praised book Literary Criticisms of Law. 54 Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Marilyn Bautista, JD Jeanine Becker, JD Lecturer in Residence Binyamin Blum, LLB, JSM Richard Brand, JD Lecturer Visiting Assistant Professor Lecturer Senior Counsel, Kaiser Principal, J Becker Enter- Assistant Professor, Hebrew Partner, Arent Fox LLP Foundation Health Plan, prises University Faculty of Law Michael Asimow, JD Simao Avila, JD Visiting Professor of Law Lecturer Professor Emeritus, UCLA School of Law Inc. Jeffrey Brown, MBA Lecturer Senior Vice President, Finance and Corporate Strategy, Summit Power Ryan Bubb, MA, JD, PhD Jeremy Bulow, MA, PhD Visiting Associate Professor Professor, Graduate School of Law of Business, SU Affiliated Faculty Associate Professor, NYU M. Kate Bundorf, MBA, MPH, PhD Affiliated Faculty Associate Professor, School of Medicine, SU Viola Canales, JD Lecturer Lanhee Chen, MA, JD, PhD Lecturer Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, SU School of Law Diane Chin, JD Lecturer Assoc Dean for Public Service & Public Interest Law, SLS Expanding Access to Justice in CA Courts for Limited-English Bonnie Eskenazi, JD Lecturer Partner, Greenberg Glusker Allison Marston Danner, JD Michael Dickstein, JD Lecturer Judge, Santa Clara County Superior Court Principal, Dickstein Dispute Randee Fenner, JD Bertram Fields, LLB Siegfried Fina, JD, JSD Lecturer in Residence Co-Director, Moot Court Program, SLS Lecturer Laurent Cohen-Tanugi, LLM Lecturer Attorney, Laurent CohenTanugi Avocats Partner, Greenberg Glusker Lecturer Resolution/MEDiate Visiting Associate Professor of Law Associate Professor, Univ of Vienna School of Law; Co-director, Transatlantic Technology Law Forum, SU Lisa Douglass, JD Jennifer Eberhardt, PhD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Stanford Community Law Clinic; Director, Social Security Disability Project, SLS Associate Professor (by courtesy) of Law Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, SU Jay Finkelstein, JD David Forst, JD Lecturer Lecturer Partner, DLA Piper (US) Practice Group Leader, Tax Group, Fenwick & West LLP 55 Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Laurence Franklin, JD/MBA Lecturer Adjunct Professor, Hong Kong Univ of Science and Technology Business School Steven Franklin, JD Lecturer Founding Partner, Gunderson Dettmer Stough Villeneuve Franklin & Hachigian, LLP Michelle Galloway, JD Mei Gechlik, JSD, MBA Tracy Genesen, JD Lecturer Of Counsel, Cooley God- Lecturer Lecturer Director, China Guiding General Counsel, Edrington ward, LLP Cases Project, SLS Americas Associate Professor (by courtesy) of Law Associate Professor, Computer Science, SU Michael Genesereth, PhD Benjamin Ginsberg, JD Amir Goldberg, MA, PhD Lawrence Goulder, PhD Jennifer Granick, JD Jonathan Greenberg, JD Thomas Griffith, JD Lecturer Affiliated Faculty Lecturer Assistant Professor, Graduate Lecturer Scholar in Residence Lecturer Partner, Jones Day Affiliated Faculty Professor, Department of Economics, SU Tim Hallahan, JD Adam Halpern, JD School of Business, SU Ariela Gross, JD, PhD Visiting Professor of Law Professor, USC Gould School of Law Margaret Hagan, MA, PhD, JD Lecturer Fellow, Stanford Center on the Legal Profession, SLS Lecturer Judicial Training Attorney, Director, Civil Liberties, SLS Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Lecturer Partner, Fenwick & West Admin Office of the Courts David Hayes, JD Jared Haynie, JD Distinguished Visiting Lecturer in Law Former Deputy Secretary, Department of the Interior Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Religious Liberty Clinic, SLS Luciana (Luci) Herman, PhD Lecturer 56 Todd Hinnen, JD Lecturer Partner, Perkins Coie Keith Humphreys, AM, PhD Affiliated Faculty Professor, School of Medicine, SU David Johnson, JD, JSM Danielle Jones, JD Lecturer Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Community Law Clinic, SLS Sean Kaneshiro, MLIS, JD Lecturer Reference Librarian, SLS Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Julie Matlof Kennedy, JD Lecturer Sallie Kim, JD Jason Kipnis, MS, JD Jeffrey Kobrick, JD David Larcker, MS, PhD Robin Lee, JD Lecturer Partner, GCA Law Partners LLP Lecturer Partner, WilmerHale Intellectual Property: Lecturer Professor (by courtesy) Partner, Cooke Kobrick & of Law Lecturer Partner, Cooley LLP Wu LLP Professor, Graduate School of Business, SU Stuart Lipton, JD Goodwin Liu, JD Lecturer Partner, Arnold & Porter LLP Lecturer Assoc Justice, Supreme Court of California Paul Lomio, JD, LLM, MLIS Suzanne Luban, JD Thomas Lue, JD Lecturer Corporate Counsel, Google Beth McLellan, JD A. Douglas Melamed, JD Jeanne Merino, JD Lecturer in Residence Herman Phleger Visiting Professor of Law Lecturer in Residence Dir, Legal Research and Writing Program, SLS Carly Munson, JD Linda Netsch, JD Jessica Notini, JD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Youth and Education Law Project Lecturer Lecturer Principal, Notini Mediation & Facilitation Svcs Lecturer Dir, Robert Crown Library, SLS Avishai Margalit, MA, PhD Diego Gil McCawley, LLB, JSM Visiting Professor of Law Professor Emeritus, Hebrew University Lecturer Teaching Fellow, Stanford Program in International Legal Studies Benoit Monin, MSc, PhD Richard Morningstar, JD Nader Mousavi, JD Herman Phleger Visiting Professor of Law U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan Lecturer Partner, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP Affiliated Faculty Professor, Graduate School of Business, SU José Maldonado, MD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Criminal Defense Clinic, SLS . Principal, Align Consulting LLC Assistant Professor (by courtesy) of Law Assistant Professor, Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Medical School, SU Shawn Miller, JD, PhD Lecturer Teaching Fellow, LLM Program in Law, Science, and Technology 57 Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Mariana Pargendler, LLB, LLM, JSD Visiting Professor of Law Professor, Fundação Getulio Vargas School of Law (Direito GV), San Paulo, Brazil Paul Pfleiderer, MPhil, PhD Professor (by courtesy) of Law Jef Pearlman, JD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Juelsgaard Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic, SLS Robert Pozen, JD, JSD Olin Visiting Professor of Law Senior Lecturer of Business Administration, Harvard Business School B. Howard Pearson, JD Lecturer Development Legal Counsel & Sr Philanthropic Advisor, SU Tom Rubin, JD Lecturer Chief Intellectual Property Strategy Counsel, Microsoft Corporation 58 Co-Director, Moot Court Program, SLS Lecturer Teaching Fellow, LLM Program in Environmental Law & Policy, SLS Rogelio Pérez-Perdomo, PhD Visiting Professor of Law Professor, Instituto de Estudios Superiores de Administraction, Venezuela Madhav Rajan, MS, MBA, PhD Jack Rakove, PhD Stephan Ray, JD Professor (by courtesy) Lecturer Lecturer Founder, Kewco LLC Professor (by courtesy) of Law of Law Professor, History, SU Professor, Graduate School of Business, SU of Business, SU Affiliated Faculty Professor, Graduate School of Business, SU Lecturer in Residence Vanessa Casado Perez, LLB, LLM John Quigley, JD/MBA, MPhil Professor, Graduate School Stefan Reichelstein, MS, PhD Lisa Pearson, JD, JSM Susan Robinson, JD Lecturer Associate Dean for Career Services, SLS Jacob Russell, JD Lecturer Teaching Fellow, LLM Program in Corporate Governance, SLS John Rodkin, MEng, JD, MBA David Rogers, JD Lecturer Lecturer Founder and CEO, Shopsanity Richard Salgado, JD Lecturer Senior Counsel, Law Enforcement and Information Security, Google, Inc. Rachael Samberg, JD, MLIS Lecturer Reference Librarian, SLS Michael Romano, JD Stephen Rosenbaum, Matthew Sanders, JD Ticien Sassoubre, PhD Lecturer JD, MPP Director, Three Strikes Project Lecturer Attorney at Law; Lecturer, UC Berkeley School of Law Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Environmental Law Clinic, SLS Lecturer Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Jeff Schox, JD Lecturer Founder, Schox Patent Group Stephanie Smith, JD Lecturer Senior Consultant, Flora Family Foundation Steven Smith, MPhil, LLB, JD, LLM Abraham Sofaer, LLB Jason Solomon, JD James (Jim) Sonne, JD Affiliated Faculty Lecturer Lecturer Partner, Jones Day Senior Fellow, Hoover Lecturer Special Assistant to the Dean, SLS Institution, SU Director, Religious Liberty Clinic, SLS . Stephan Sonnenberg, JD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic, SLS Leon Szeptycki, JD Affiliated Faculty Professor of the Practice and Executive Director, Water in the West, Woods Institute for the Environment, SU Roland Vogl, JD, JSM, JSD Lecturer Executive Director, Stanford Program in Law, Science and Technology, SLS. Lecturer Francis (Vic) Stanton, MA Clinical Supervising At- Affiliated Faculty torney, Organizations and Lecturer, Graduate School Transactions Clinic, SLS of Business, SU Michelle Sonu, JD Jory Steele, JD Sergio Stone, JD, MLS Alan Sykes, JD, PhD Lecturer Director, Pro Bono & Externship Program, SLS Lecturer Visiting Professor of Law Professor, NYU School of Law FCIL Librarian, Robert Crown Library, SLS Foreign & International Claret Vargas, PhD, JD Chantal Thomas, JD Beth Van Schaack, JD Principal, Dan Tan Law Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Environmental Law Clinic, SLS Visiting Professor of Law Professor, Cornell University Law School Visiting Professor of Law Professor, Santa Clara Law School Lecturer Executive Director, Stanford Human Rights Center, SLS Erika Wayne, JD, MS Lisa Weissman-Ward, JD Tess Wilkinson-Ryan, JD, MA,PhD Frank Wolak Brian Wolfman, JD Dan Tan, LLB, LLM Lecturer Lecturer Deputy Director, Robert Crown Library, SLS Alicia Thesing, JD Lecturer Clinical Supervising Attorney, Immigrants’ Rights Clinic, SLS . Visiting Assistant Professor of Law Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania Law School Professor (by courtesy) of Law Professor, Department of Economics, SU Edwin A. Heafey, Jr. Visiting Professor Supreme Court Litigation Clinic 59 Visitors, Lecturers, and Affiliated Faculty Glenn Wong, JD Lecturer Professor and Attorney, School of Management, University of Massachusets Katherine Wright, JD Lecturer in Residence Joseph Yang, JD, PhD James Yoon, JD Lecturer Founding Partner, PatentEsque Law Group, LLP Lecturer Partner, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Patti Zettler, JD Fellow and Lecturer in Law Center for Law and the Biosciences Jonathan Zittrain, JD Visiting Professor of Law Professor, Harvard Law School Academic and Research Fellows Jonathan Abel Albertina Antognini Abbye Atkinson Stephanie Bair Jeffrey Ball Fellow Thomas C. Grey Fellow Thomas C. Grey Fellow Fellow, Stanford Program in Scholar-in-Residence Lecturer, Federal Neuroscience and Society Steyer-Taylor Center for Constitutional Law Center Litigation and LRW Center for Law & the Biosciences Teaching Fellow LLM Program in Environmental Law & Policy Susan Leah Champion Stephen Comello Ashley Erickson Giancarlo Frosio Andrew Gilden Don Gourlie Research Fellow Fellow Intermediary Liability Thomas C. Grey Fellow Fellow Fellow Steyer Taylor Center Center for Ocean Solutions Fellow, CIS Lecturer, Federal Center for Ocean Solutions Three Strikes Project 60 Energy Policy and Finance Vanessa Casado Perez Litigation and LRW Margaret Hagan Joy Haviland Fellow, Stanford Center on Fellow the Legal Profession Three Strikes Project Chen (Esther) Hu Cathy Hwang Research Fellow, Professor Fellow Strnad Rock Centers Law Scholarly Activities Thea Johnson Thomas C. Grey Fellow Lecturer, Federal Litigation and LRW Dmitry Karshtedt Fellow Center for Law and the Biosciences Academic and Research Fellows Cortelyou Kenney Stephanie Kimbro Thomas C. Grey Fellow Fellow Lecturer, Federal Center on the Legal Litigation and LRW Profession Jon Koomey Robert H. Lee Pedro Leon Ruth Levine Research Fellow CodeX Fellow Fellow Fellow CIS Rock Center Megan Mach Molly Melius Mohammad Morovati Fellow Fellow Research Fellow, Professor Center for Ocean Solutions Center for Ocean Solutions Strnad Law Scholarly Activities Anshuman Sahoo Kristen Savelle Research Fellow Research Fellow Steyer Taylor Center Rock Center for Corporate Menesh Patel Jesse Port Sarah Mooney Reiter Fellow in the Law and Fellow Fellow Economics of Intellectual Center for Ocean Solutions Center for Ocean Solutions Lisa Wedding Justin Weinstein-Tull Fellow Thomas C. Grey Fellow Center for Ocean Solutions Lecturer, Federal Litigation Property and Antitrust Nicole Shanahan Michael Toth Fellow, CodeX Fellow Law Science & Technology Constitutional Law Center Governance and LRW Kristen Weiss Patti Zettler Danielle Zimmerman Erik Zimmerman Fellow Fellow Fellow Fellow Constitutuional Law Constitutuional Law Center Center Olin-Searle-Smith Fellow Olin-Searle-Smith Fellow Center for Ocean Solutions Center for Law and the Biosciences 61 Professional Library Staff Annie Chen Alba Holgado Sean Kaneshiro Paul Lomio Rachael Samberg BA Digital Course Management Coordinator Reference & E-Resources JD, LLM, MLIS Director, Law Library; Lecturer Sergio Stone MLS JD JD, MLIS Reference Librarian; FCIL Librarian; Lecturer Lecturer in Law in Law Acquisitions Librarian Ryan Tamares Catalog Librarian Librarian; Lecturer in Law in Law Erika V. Wayne George D. Wilson Sarah F. Wilson JD, MS Deputy Director, Law Library; JD, MLIS MLIS Reference Librarian Reference Librarian; Lecturer in Law Naheed Zaheer MSC, MLIS Access Services Librarian Archivist Library Staff Tatyana Bukina Birgit Calhoun Liping Chen Linda P. Cheng Lois H. Drews Mariko Hashimoto Cataloging Specialist Content Management Cataloging Specialist Acquisitions Assistant/ Daytime Loan Desk Access Services Assistant Receiving Specialist Specialist and FCIL Assistant Hilary Karp Kelly S. Kuehl Shuyan Connie Liang Sonia Moss Camelia Naranch Richard A. Porter Acquisitions Assistant/ Evening Loan Desk Stacks Manager Interlibrary Loan and Serials Specialist Faculty Borrowing Ordering Specialist Yun Jeff Qi Ian Singleton Diana Teasland Ian Tuttle George Vizvary Guofen Wan Faculty Borrowing & Lead Cataloging Specialist Access Services Assistant Serials Specialist: Bindery Course Reserves, Borrowing Library Privileges Specialist and Service & Reference Specialist Assistant to the Library Director Reference Specialist 62 Reference Coordinator Administrative Staff Pat Adan Elaine Adolfo Alexandra Albright Lynne Anderson Angela Antia Amy Applebaum Administrative Associate Associate Director, Center Research Fellow Administrative Associate Associate Director, Human Academic and Faculty Resources Affairs Officer for Internet and Society Adelina Arroyo Amanda Avila Jeffrey Ball Mary Baskauskas Stephanie Basso Philip Beasley-Murray Client Services Specialist/ Legal Assistant, Center for Scholar-in-Residence Senior Associate Director of Administrative Associate IT Analyst Office Administrator, Internet and Society, Fair Steyer-Taylor Center for Development Stanford Community Law Use Project and Cyberlaw Energy Policy and Finance Clinic Clinic Mills Legal Clinic Emily Berry JonJon Blanco Karen Blevins Adrianna Boghozian Kim Borg Carol Brill Case Writer IT Analyst Assistant Director of Alumni Research Fellow Associate Registrar Stewardship & Development Relations Communications Coordinator Kris Cachia Monique Cadena Nicole Cagampan Administrative Associate Legal Assistant, Mills Legal Admissions Specialist Catherine Brobston Frank Brucato Assistant Director of Senior Associate Dean for Guadalupe Buenrostro Development, Reunion Administration and CFO Legal Assistant, Stanford Clinic Community Law Clinic Office Administrator, Mills Mills Legal Clinic Legal Clinic Giving 63 Administrative Staff Jud Campbell Jodie Carian Krystle Chappell Diane T. Chin Leo Cho Kathleen Choi Executive Director, Content and Marketing Alumni Relations Assistant Associate Dean for Public Legal and Research Analyst Research Fellow Constitutional Law Center Manager Service and Public Interest Law, Lecturer Kyung Chong Virginia Clegg David Conand Catherine Coughlin Gisele Darwish Faye Deal Associate Director of Administrative Associate IT Analyst Development Coordinator Administrative Research Associate Dean for Coordinator Admissions and Financial Admissions Aid Judy Dearing Jackie Del Barrio Jillian Del Pozo Laura Demmer Aileen Devlin Elizabeth Di Giovanni Administrative Associate Associate Director, Program Director of Facilities and Associate Director of Alumni Research Fellow Director of International and Group Operations Relations Sharon Driscoll Evan Epstein Julia Erwin-Weiner Jason Estacio Randee Fenner Frank Feruch Associate Director of Executive Director, Rock Associate Dean for External Assistant Director of Director, Kirkwood Moot Front-End Web Developer Publications and Managing Center for Corporate Relations Facilities Court Program, Lecturer Editor, Stanford Lawyer Governance Magazine 64 Private Sector Advising Administrative Staff Allison Neumeister Fry Trish Gertridge Judy Gielniak Catherine Glaze Jennifer Granick Patsie Gray Director of Programs and Associate Director, Mills Associate Dean for Student Director of Civil Liberties, Executive Assistant to the Director, Alumni Relations Special Events Legal Clinic Affairs Center for Internet and Dean Society Jonathan Greenberg Joel Greene Jason Hegland Marah Katz Herbach Emily Hite Lecturer Scholar in Residence Accounting Assistant Director, Stanford Securities Director of Annual Giving Content and Communications Financial Aid Advisor Enforcement Analytics Alyson Hornsby Manager, Rock Center and Steyer-Taylor Center Kamal Hubbard Carreen Jensen Sabrina Johnson Lynda Johnston Aubrey Jones Catherine Josman SCAC Content Manager Development Associate Associate Dean for Legal Assistant, Research Fellow Director of Strategic Communications and Environmental Law Clinic Public Relations and Chief and Juelsgaard Intellectual Communications Officer Property and Innovation Initiatives & Special Projects Clinic Mills Legal Clinic Jason Juarez Megan Karsh Valarie Kaur Alain Kelder Jo Anne Larson Laura Laurion Copy Center & Mailroom Executive Director, Rule of Media and Strategy Fellow Senior Systems Engineer Private Sector Counselor Assistant Director, Private Associate Law Program Sector Programs 65 Administrative Staff Sarah Lawrence Cassey Limgenco Titi Liu Julian Low Manaf Mansure Alberto Martin Research Director, Front- Event Administrative Director of International Administrative Assistant, Assistant Director of Alumni Registrar End Realignment Project in Assistant Public Interest Initiatives, Office of the Registrar Relations Lecturer the Criminal Justice Center Melissa Maynard Leger Aleecia McDonald Jeanne Merino Nancy Millward Michelle Morris Kaylee Mosher Director of Privacy, Director, Stanford Legal Associate Director of Manager, Faculty Support Human Resources Recruiting Director, Center for Internet and Research and Writing Development, Corporate & Team Administrator Office of Career Services Society Program, Lecturer Foundation Relations Arren Moskowitz Deborah Mukamal Frank Muñiz Brenda Munoz Alexandria Murray Terry Nagel Copy Center Manager Executive Director, Stanford Senior Facilities Technician Legal Assistant, Assistant Director of Digital Associate Director of Media Immigrants’ Rights Clinic and Social Media Relations Criminal Justice Center and Organizations and Transactions Clinic Mills Legal Clinic Joe Neto Joanne Newman Juan Obregon Anna O’Neill Daniel O’Neill Maria O’Neill Creative Services Specialist Legal Assistant, Supreme Facilities Technician Admissions Assistant Facilities Technician Administrative Associate, Court Litigation Clinic and Youth and Education Law Project Mills Legal Clinic 66 Dean’s Office Administrative Staff Chidel Onuegbu Amanda Packel Joonwoo Park Holly Parrish Lisa Pearson Ashley Pickard Associate Director of Deputy Director, Rock Research Fellow Program and Research Director, Kirkwood Moot Legal Assistant, Social Student Affairs Center for Corporate Coordinator, Levin Center Court Program, Lecturer Security Disability Project Office Administrator, Mills Governance Legal Clinic Nicole Pitman AnaMaria Ponce Brenna Powell Michelle Pualuan Jenny Quan Meg Quist Director, Judicial Clerkships Administrative Associate Associate Director, Stanford Administrative Associate Web Graphic Design and Journal Manager Content Manager Center on International and Private Sector Advising Conflict and Negotiation Lucy Ricca Melissa Rios Susan C. Robinson Mila Ronquillo Arianna Rosales Juan-Carlos Sanchez Executive Director, Center Career Services Coordinator Associate Dean for Career Assistant Registrar Publications Manager Securities Class Action for the Legal Profession Services, Lecturer Clearinghouse, SCAC Director of Research and Technology Katie Sawyer Sandra Schuil Alicia Seiger Patricia Sheeler Julie Shi Marina Sleeper Associate Director, IT Analyst, Team Lead Deputy Director, Steyer Administrative Associate Assistant Director of Manager of Financial Stewardship Services Stewardship and Taylor Center for Energy Development Policy & Finance Communications 67 Administrative Staff Jason Solomon Deidre Sparks Chuck Spielman Jory Steele Clara Stoen Dale Stoker Special Assistant to the Private Sector Advisor Director of Budget DIrector, Pro Bono & Externship Communications Assistant Director of Management Programs, Levin Center for Coordinator Development, Reunion Dean Giving Public Service and Public Interest Law Jennifer Stroth Xiaojing Sun Rebecca Taylor Brittany Thayer Bao Tran Jennifer Trimble Associate Director of Online Co-Research Manager, China Research Associate, Content and Marketing Technical Services Manager Director, Human Resources Communications and Solar Project Renewing Communities Coordinator Rachel Ungar Claret Vargas Natalie Vatavuk Roland Vogl Anna Wang Jason Watson Administrative Associate Executive Director, Human Development Project Executive Director, Levin Chief Technology Officer Rights Center Manager Executive Director, Stanford Program in Law, Science & Technology and Transatlantic Technology Law Forum, Lecturer Identity Center for Public Service and Public Interest Law Kyle Weber Alexander Weiss Shaina White Jeff Wilcox Evelyn Wilkinson Lisa Woodcock Research Fellow Research Fellow Development Coordinator IT Analyst Executive Assistant, International Programs Office and Administrative Coordinator Manager, External Relations 68 Index by Last Name Abel, Jonathan … 60 Acevedo, Pablo … 1 Adams, Ben … 5 Adamson, Nicole … 11 Adan, Pat … 63 Adolfo, Elaine … 63 Albright, Alexandra … 63 Alderman, Maxwell … 16 Alexander, Janet … 26 Alschner, Wolfang … 1 Alsulaiti, Nouf … 1 Altimari-Brown, Cathrina … 16 Alvarado Munoz, Sebastian … 1 Amir, Adam … 5 Anderson, Lynne … 63 Anderson, Michelle … 26 Aneja, Abhay … 5 Antia, Angela … 63 Antognini, Albertina … 60 Antonacci, Claudia … 16 Anzaldua, Gina … 16 Apfel, Rachael … 16 Applebaum, Amy … 63 Aran, Yifat … 1 Arguelles, Adam … 16 Aris, Julian … 16 Aron-Gilat, Adi … 1 Arora, Nayha … 11 Arredondo, Philip … 11 Arriaga, Becca … 5 Arroyo, Adelina … 63 Artunduaga, Lina … 1 Asimow, Michael … 55 Atkinson, Abbye … 60 Au, Ivan … 11 Avila, Amanda … 63 Avila, Simao … 55 Babcock, Barbara … 26 Bachar, Gilat Juli … 1 Bair, Stephanie … 60 Baker, Andrew … 16 Baker, Lauren … 16 Ball, Jeffrey … 60, 63 Ballesteros, Denise … 5 Ballou, Brendan … 11 Banker, James … 11 Bankman, Joseph … 26 Banks, Ralph Richard … 27 Barcena, Johann Carlos … 1 Barmore, Cyndi … 5 Barnes, Abigail … 11 Barnes, David … 16 Barros, André … 1 Barta, Marni … 11 Barton, James … 5 Baskauskas, Mary … 63 Basso, Stephanie … 63 Basu, Joy … 5 Baughan, Kasey … 16 Bautista, Marilyn … 55 Beasley-Murray, Philip … 63 Becker, Jeanine … 55 Belcher, Marta … 5 Benecke, Danielle … 1 Benedetto, Matthew … 11 Bengfort, Bethany … 11 Benitez, Patrick … 16 Bennetch, Paul … 16 BenOmran, Arwa … 5 Berardi, Elizabeth … 5 Berman, David … 5 Berry, Emily … 63 Berry, Thomas … 11 Bies, Katherine … 16 Binger, Jennifer … 11 Bittman, Carly … 5 Bixby, Lisa … 17 Blanco, JonJon … 63 Blevins, Karen … 63 Bloch, Alison … 5 Blum, Binyamin … 55 Bluming, Micah … 11 Bobier, Daniel … 11 Boghozian, Adrianna … 63 Bollard, Chris … 1 Bonaccorso, Salvatore … 5 Bonner, Afia … 17 Bonnette, Samuel … 11 Bonvoisin, Matthieu … 1 Borg, Kim … 63 Bourassa, Marcus … 11 Bowling, Adam … 11 Brand, Richard … 55 Brenc, William … 17 Brest, Paul … 27 Brill, Carol … 63 Brito Do Carmo, Brenda … 1 Brobston, Catherine … 63 Brodie, Juliet … 22, 27 Broholm, Sergio … 11 Brooks, Skylar … 5 Brown, Cameron … 17 Brown, Jeffrey … 55 Brucato, Frank … 23, 63 Bubb, Ryan … 55 Buchholz, Victoria … 11 Buenrostro, Guadalupe … 63 Buker, Charles … 11 Bukina, Tatyana … 62 Buley, Thomas … 11 Bulow, Jeremy … 55 Bundorf, M. Kate … 55 Busby, Karsten … 11 Bush, Kevin … 17 Buxton, Maria … 17 Byker, Samuel … 11 Cachia, Kris … 63 Cadena, Monique … 63 Cagampan, Nicole … 63 Cage, William … 11 Caldwell, Margaret … 27 Calhoun, Birgit … 62 Cambeiro, Nicole … 11 Campbell, Jud … 64 Campbell, Valerie … 11 Canales, Viola … 55 Cao, Charles … 11 Carian, Jodie … 64 Carlson, James … 17 Carter, Alex … 5 Casey, John … 5 Casper, Gerhard … 28 Castrellon, Mariana … 1 Catapano, Joseph … 11 Cavallaro, James … 28 Chabon, Sheli … 5 Champion, Susan … 60 Chandrachud, Abhinav … 1 Chang, Andrew … 17 Chapla, Claire … 11 Chappell, Krystle … 64 Chaturvedi, Eeshan … 1 Chediak, Grace … 17 Chen, Annie … 62 Chen, Lanhee … 55 Chen, Liping … 62 Cheng, Linda … 62 Cheng, Shuk Ting … 1 Chhabra, Nandi … 5 Chien, Shih-Chun … 1 Chin, Diane … 23, 55, 64 Chingcuanco, Leo … 5 Cho, Erin … 5 Cho, Jasmine … 17 Cho, Leo … 64 Choi, Kathleen … 64 Choi, Susie … 5 Chong, Agnes … 1 Chong, Kyung … 64 Chuchla, Grace … 11 Clark, Sarah … 17 Clegg, Virginia … 64 Cohen-Tanugi, Laurent … 55 Cohen, Joshua … 29 Cohen, William … 29 Cole, G. Marcus … 29 Comello , Stephen … 60 Conand, David … 64 Connolly, Jon … 5 Constable, Lucien … 17 Cordero-Salas, Maria Jose … 1 Corr, Casey … 5 Costello, Elizabeth … 17 Coughlin, Catherine … 64 Cowher, Kevin … 17 Cox, Abbee … 17 Craswell, Richard … 30 Crowley, Vincent … 5 Cuéllar, Mariano-Florentino … 30 Curran, Robert … 11 Daines, Kenneth … 17 Daines, Robert … 30 Dal Molin, Luca … 1 Daley, John … 11 Daneri, Maria … 1 Dang, Connie … 5 Darwish, Gisele … 64 Dauber, Michele … 31 Davidson, Taylor … 11 Davis, Peter … 17 de Armas, Carolina … 11 de Carvalho e Silva, Isabel … 1 Deal, Faye … 23, 64 Dearing, Judy … 64 Deetz, Christopher … 11 Del Barrio, Jackie … 64 Del Pozo, Jillian … 64 Delf, Maret … 5 Demmer, Laura … 64 Deporto, Isaiah … 17 Despain, Jason … 17 Devlin, Aileen … 64 Di Giovanni, Elizabeth … 64 Dicker, Jocelyn … 17 Dickson, John … 17 Dickson, Lance … 31 Dickstein, Michael … 55 Dippo, Samuel … 5 Dizon, Karlo … 12 Doctor, Vincent … 17 Dollin, Joseph … 1 Donohue III, John … 31 Dorff, DJ … 12 Dorfman, Doron … 2 Dos Santos, Joshua … 17 Douglas, Laura … 17 Douglass, Lisa … 55 Dragonetti, Jessica … 5 Dragstrem, Andrew … 12 Drdek, John … 12 Drews, Lois … 62 Driscoll, Sharon … 64 Dunn, Eric … 12 Dyal, Gary … 5 Eaton, Kevin … 17 Ebato, Shinsuke … 2 Eberhardt, Jennifer … 55 Edelman, Christopher … 5 Elinson, Gregory … 12 Elliott, Gina … 17 Elshamy, Ibrahim … 5 Ely, Nari … 12 Epstein, Evan … 64 Erciyas Bailey, Fazila Pinar … 12 Erickson, Ashley … 60 Erwin-Weiner, Julia … 23, 64 Eskenazi, Bonie … 55 Esser, Caroline … 5 Estacio, Jason … 64 Estela, Sara … 12 Evancie, Meredith … 17 Evans, William … 12 Ezell, Trevor … 17 Fachler, Boaz … 2 Falkenstien, Kate … 5 Fallenius, Viveca … 2 Fang, Zhao … 6 Faraji, Farbod … 6 Feng, Jun … 6 Fenner, Randee … 55, 64 Ferreira-Peralta, Luisa … 2 Feruch, Frank … 64 Fetrow, Kate … 17 Feuille, Connor … 12 Fields, Bertram … 55 Fields, Jaryn … 6 Fields, Michael … 12 Fina, Siegfried … 55 Finkelstein, Jay … 55 Finkelstein, Lauren … 6 Fischbein, Jason … 12 Fischer, Ilan … 12 Fischer, John … 17 Fisher, George … 32 Fisher, Jeffrey … 32 Flanders, Jordan … 6 Flanz, Scott … 6 Fomperosa Rivero, Alvaro … 2 Forst, David … 55 Foydel, Lizzy … 6 Francus, Michael … 17 Frank, Jon … 6 Frank, Rachel … 17 Franklin, Laurence … 56 Franklin, Marc … 33 Franklin, Steven … 56 Freedman, Maura … 6 Freeman Engstrom, David … 31 Freeman Engstrom, Nora … 32 Freeman, Richard … 6 Freidlin, Akiva … 12 Frenkel, Michael … 6 Fresa, Siddharth … 2 Fried, Barbara … 33 Friedland, Zoe … 17 Friedman, Lawrence … 33 Frosio, Giancarlo … 60 Fu, Yiye … 6 Fuentes, Claudio … 2 Galloway, Michelle … 56 Garcia Miron, Rolando … 2 Garcia, Cindy … 12 Garcia, Marta … 12 Gardner, Kaitlyn … 12 Gardner, Reid … 17 Garrett, Geoffrey … 6 Gasperetti, Matthew … 17 Gatanaga, Daisuke … 18 Gates, Sara … 18 Gechlik, Mei … 56 Genesen, Tracy … 56 Genesereth, Michael … 56 George, Jason … 6 Gertridge, Trish … 65 Gibson, Kevin … 18 Gielniak, Judy … 65 Gil McCawley, Diego … 2, 57 Gilden, Andrew … 60 Gilliam, Stephanie … 12 Gilson, Laura … 18 Gilson, Ronald … 33 Ginsberg, Benjamin … 56 Glaze, Catherine … 24, 65 Glock, Jana … 2 Gocke, Alison … 18 Goldberg, Amir … 56 Goldenhersh, Jeffrey … 12 Goldstein, Paul … 34 Gollaher, Lauren … 6 Gomez Palazzo, Ana-Maria … 18 Gonzalez, Juan … 18 Goral, Radoslaw … 2 Gordon, Robert … 34 Gosling, Michael … 6 Gould IV, William … 34 Gould, Benjamin … 6 Goulder, Lawrence … 56 Gourlie, Don … 60 Gourse, Alexander … 18 Grafft, Gordon … 12 Grammel, Shannon … 18 Granick, Jennifer … 56, 65 Graumlich, Alexa … 18 Gray, Lydia … 6 Gray, Patsie … 65 Greely, Hank … 35 Green, Amelia … 6 Green, Blair … 6 Greenberg, Jonathan … 56, 65 Greene, Joel … 65 Gressel, Amit … 6 Grey, Thomas … 35 Griffin, Richard … 18 Griffith, Shereen … 12 Griffith, Thomas … 56 Grimm, Andrew … 12 Gross, Ariela … 56 Grundfest, Joseph … 36 Gulley, Peyton … 6 Guo, Angela … 18 Gupta, Gagan … 12 Guttentag, Lucas … 36 Guttman, Marisol … 6 Guzman, Diana … 2 Haddock, John … 6 Hagan, Margaret … 56, 60 Halden, Virginia … 12 Hall-Partyka, Alice … 18 Hallahan, Tim … 56 Halpern, Adam … 56 Hamilton, John … 18 Hamilton, Pablo … 2 Hammonds, Amari … 18 Haney, Natasha … 6 Haney, Rachel … 18 Hanson, Elissa … 6 Harding, Lauren … 6 Harper, Ryan … 6 Hart, Sophie … 18 Hashimoto, Mariko … 62 Hassan, Shagran … 12 Hassan, Umberto … 2 Hausman, David … 6 Haviland, Joy … 60 Hayes, David … 56 Haynie, Jared … 56 Hayward, George … 18 Heath, Amy … 12 Hegland, Jason … 65 Heller, Thomas … 36 Hellman, Emily … 12 Henry, Matt … 6 Hensler, Deborah … 24, 37 Herman, Luciana … 56 Hernandez, Pablo … 18 Herndon, Stephen … 6 Herring, An-Li … 18 Hewlett, Benjamin … 12 Hietanen, Heidi … 2 Higgins, Matthew … 6 Hillenbrand, Michelle … 6 Hindrichs, Sieglinde … 12 Hinnen, Todd … 56 Hite, Emily … 65 Ho, Andrew … 6 Ho, Daniel … 37 Ho, Tiffany … 12 Holgado, Alba … 62 Hollander, Ryan … 18 Hollis, Kara … 12 Hong, Zuyun … 2 Hook, Elizabeth … 7 Hornsby, Alyson … 65 Horton, Desley … 2 Horton, Kaley … 12 Hovyadinov, Sergei … 2 Hu, Chen (Esther) … 60 Hu, Simon … 7 Huang, Ju-Ching … 2 Huang, Mengyu … 18 Huang, Pei-ju … 2 Huang, Tai-Jan … 2 Hubbard, Kamal … 65 Hudak, Jessica … 12 Hudson, Carl … 18 Hume, Lilah … 12 Humphreys, Keith … 56 Hustace, Kip … 7 Hwang, Cathy … 60 Indorf, Andrew … 18 Ireland, Kiel … 13 Ishida, Mikito … 2 Ishihara, Naoko … 2 Iyengar, Vikram … 7 Jabero, Sarah … 7 Jackson, Lindsey … 13 Janda, Sean … 18 Jang, Yeseung … 18 Jansen, Per … 7 Jeffries, Cari … 18 Jenkins, Brooke … 7 Jensen, Carreen … 65 Jensen, Erik … 37 Jensen, Kristopher … 18 Johnson, David … 56 Johnson, Eric … 13 Johnson, Krister … 13 Johnson, Sabrina … 24, 65 Johnson, Thea … 60 Johnston, Lynda … 65 Jones, Aubrey … 65 Jones, Brittany … 13 Jones, Danielle … 56 Jones, Elizabeth … 13 Jones, Nicholas … 13 Jordan, Annick-Marie … 18 Joseph, Leslie-Bernard … 7 Josman, Catherine … 65 Juarez, Christopher … 13 Juarez, Jason … 65 Jung, David … 13 Jwa, Anita S. … 3 Kambic, Andrew … 13 Kane, Daniel … 13 Kaneshiro, Sean … 56, 62 Kannappan, Deepa … 13 Karch, Ted … 13 Karl, Natalie … 18 Karlan, Pamela … 38 Karol, Ali … 7 Karp, Hilary … 62 Karsh, Megan … 65 Karshtedt, Dmitry … 60 Kasner, Alex … 7 Katz Herbach, Marah … 65 Kaur, Valerie … 65 Keenan, Gregory … 7 Kelder, Alain … 65 Keller-Lynn, Caroline … 13 Kelman, Mark … 22, 38 Kempner, Trevor … 7 Kennedy, Julie Matlof … 57 Kenney, Cortelyou … 61 Kenney, John … 13 Kercher, Rylee … 18 Kessler, Amalia … 38 Kessler, Daniel … 39 Khademi, Courtney … 13 Kider, Jack … 7 Kieschnick, Hannah … 18 Kildow, Cassandra … 13 Kim, Hyosang … 13 Kim, Sallie … 57 Kimbro, Stephanie … 61 Kipnis, Jason … 57 Kirkpatrick, Hugh … 18 Klausner, Michael … 39 Kleiner, Emma … 13 Klimke, Phillip … 13 Kobrick, Jeffrey … 57 Koch, William … 18 Kohmann, Mathieu … 3 Koomey, Jon … 61 Koski, William … 39 Koslap, Zach … 7 Kothari, Mansi … 7 Kouba, Grace … 13 Kramer, Larry … 40 Krebs, Shiri … 3 Krewer, Fay … 13 Kruth, Zach … 7 Kryczka, Heather … 13 Kuehl, Kelly … 62 Kurihara, Hiroyuki … 3 Kurihara, Hisako … 3 Kurtz, Peter … 13 Kushner, Andrew … 7 Kushner, Sarah … 18 Lakin, Sydney … 19 Lalchandani, Neel … 7 Lamy, Michelle … 7 Landon, Pilar … 13 Lao, Brian … 7 Larcker, David … 57 Larkin, Kimberly … 13 Larson, Jo Anne … 65 Larson, Lindsey … 7 Lash, Jeffrey … 13 Laupheimer, Madeleine … 13 Laurion, Laura … 65 Lawrence, Andrew … 7 Lawrence, Sarah … 66 LeBow, Elizabeth … 19 Lee, Austin … 13 Lee, Imani … 19 Lee, Jae Gul … 3 Lee, Percy … 7 Lee, Robert … 61 Lee, Robin … 57 Lee, Sujin … 3 Lefland, Samantha … 7 Lemley, Mark … 40 Leon, Nicole … 13 Leon, Pedro … 61 69 Lerman, Celia … 3 Levin, Robyn … 19 Levine, Ruth … 61 Lewis, Adam … 19 Lewis, Chris … 7 Li, Lisa … 7 Li, Yang … 3 Li, Yinmei … 7 Liang, Shuyan Connie … 62 Lieder, Jeannie … 13 Limgenco, Cassey … 66 Linder, Ann … 19 Lipton, Stuart … 57 Liska, Kristin … 13 Littlebird, Sarracina … 13 Liu, Goodwin … 57 Liu, Stephen … 19 Liu, Titi … 66 Lo, Lincoln … 7 Lomio, Paul … 57, 62 Long, Darryl … 19 Long, Donna … 13 Lorick, Kori … 7 Lovett, Kimberly … 7 Low, Julian … 66 Lowell, Elizabeth … 7 Luban, Suzanne … 57 Lucich, Shoshana … 7 Lue, Thomas … 57 MacCoun, Robert … 41 Mach, Megan … 61 Mackebee, Greer … 7 Magill, M. Elizabeth … 22, 41 Maldonado, José … 57 Mallery, Mark … 7 Malone, Phil … 41 Mann, DeDe … 13 Manning, Molly … 19 Mansure, Manaf … 66 Margalit, Avishai … 57 Mariella, Holly … 14 Marinovich, Lucas … 3 Marquez, Nikki … 7 Marshall, Lawrence … 42 Marston Danner, Alison … 55 Martin, Alberto … 66 Martinez, Brandon … 19 Martinez, Janet … 42 Martinez, Jenny … 24, 42 Martinez, Jose … 19 Mason, Tiffany … 14 Maynard Leger, Melissa … 66 Mazzara, Philip … 8 Mazzurco, Vincent … 14 McBride, Katherine … 8 McClelland, Cary … 8 McClure, Samuel … 19 McConnell, Michael … 43 McDonald, Aleecia … 66 McElroy, Sean … 14 McEvoy, Patrick … 3 McGuire, Sean … 19 McIlroy, Ryan … 14 McKenna, Madeleine … 14 McKeon, Katherine … 19 McKinley, Ian … 8 McKoy, Megan … 19 McLamb, Christopher … 14 McLellan, Beth … 57 McMahon, Jake … 8 McPhee, Shae … 8 McPherson, Malia … 14 Medeiros, Christopher … 19 Meditsch, Mariana … 3 Medling, Nicholas … 14 Melamed, A. Douglas … 57 Melius, Molly … 61 Mello, Michelle … 43 Méndez , Miguel … 44 Menoud, Valérie … 3 Merino, Jeanne … 57, 66 Merryman, John … 44 Mestitz, Michael … 8 Meyer, Blake … 14 Meyler, Bernadette … 44 Middleton, Benjamin … 19 Middleton, Isaac … 14 Middleton, Jeff … 8 Miller, Elizabeth … 14 Miller, Matt … 8 Miller, Mollie … 19 70 Miller, Shawn … 57 Mills, David … 45 Mills, Laurel … 19 Millward, Nancy … 66 Mitchell, Jay … 45 Mizrahi, Tal … 3 Mobley-Ritter, Devon … 8 Molina, Enrique … 14 Mondel, Jonathan … 14 Monin, Benoit … 57 Montelongo, Al … 8 Montoya, Andria … 8 Moore, Riley … 8 Morantz, Alison … 45 Morillo, Michael … 8 Morningstar, Richard … 57 Morovati, Mohammad … 61 Morris, James … 19 Morris, Michelle … 66 Morrison, Jake … 8 Mosher, Kaylee … 66 Moskowitz, Arren … 66 Moskowitz, Yonatan … 8 Moss, Sonia … 62 Moura, Bernardo … 3 Mousavi, Nader … 57 Mpare, Clifford … 14 Mukamal, Deborah … 66 Mulupuru, Maithreyi … 3 Muñiz, Frank … 66 Munoz, Brenda … 66 Munson, Carly … 57 Murray, Alexandria … 66 Murray, Jordan … 8 Musayev, Olga … 19 Nadler, Roland … 8 Nagel, Terry … 66 Nagra, Ruhan … 14 Naranch, Camelia … 62 Nath, Snayha … 8 Neitzey, Christina … 19 Nelson, Brett … 8 Nelson, Ryan … 8 Nesbit, Daniel … 19 Neto, Joe … 66 Netsch, Linda … 57 Neumeister Fry, Alison … 65 Neuscheler, Jena … 14 Newman, Demoni … 19 Newman, Joanne … 66 Nguyen-Dang, Minh Olivier … 14 Nicholson, Timothy … 14 Nie, Qian … 3 Niedersculte, Bradley … 19 Noh, John … 19 Norman, Errol … 14 Notini, Jessica … 57 Nrtina, Elena … 3 Nuñez, Ana Cristina … 3 Nuyens, Benjamin … 19 O’Connell, Kevin … 19 O’Neill, Anna … 66 O’Neill, Daniel … 66 O’Neill, Maria … 66 O’Rourke, Tierney … 19 Obregon, Juan … 66 Ody, Elizabeth … 14 Ohlrogge, Michael … 8 Ohta, Michael … 19 Oliveira, Paula … 3 Olivella-Wright, Erin … 14 Olson, Hyrum … 14 Onuegbu, Chidel … 67 Ormsby, Cameron … 8 Ouellette, Lisa … 46 Oxley, Jennifer … 14 Oyediran, Cecilia … 8 Pacheco, Alex … 8 Packel, Amanda … 67 Page, Tucker … 8 Pail, Jonathan … 3 Pak, Joanna … 19 Palmer, Jenny … 8 Paredes, Gonzalo … 3 Pargendler, Mariana … 58 Park, Angela … 14 Park, Joonwoo … 67 Park, Kwan … 8 Parke, Caroline … 14 Parker, Ari … 19 Parker, Jeffrey … 19 Parr, Joshua … 19 Parrish, Holly … 67 Patel, Menesh … 61 Pauwels, Alexandre … 3 Pearlman, Jef … 58 Pearson, B. Howard … 58 Pearson, Lisa … 58, 67 Pedersen, Kjarom … 14 Perelman, Maya … 14 Pérez-Perdomo, Rogelio … 58 Perez, Christian … 8 Perez, Vanessa Casado … 58, 60 Perkins, Jason … 19 Perrone, Mariela … 4 Persily, Nathaniel … 46 Peters, Jesse … 20 Petersilia, Joan … 46 Pfleiderer, Paul … 58 Philippe, Arnaud … 3 Piarino, Alexandra … 14 Pickard, Ashley … 67 Pickard, Duncan … 20 Pifer, Brittany … 20 Pike, Andrew … 14 Pinto, Ashlee … 8 Pitman, Nicole … 67 Polcz, Sarah … 4 Polinsky, A. Mitchell … 47 Ponce, AnaMaria … 67 Port, Jesse … 61 Porter, Richard … 62 Porto, Anna … 20 Powell, Brenna … 67 Pozen, Robert … 58 Prasuhn, Amanda … 8 Premjee, Serena … 14 Priest, Chelsea … 8 Prior, Mark … 20 Pualuan, Michelle … 67 Pullano, Joseph … 14 Qi, Yun Jeff … 62 Qian, Michael … 14 Quan, Jenny … 67 Quigley, John … 58 Quinn, Brian … 14 Quist, Meg … 67 Rabin, Robert … 47 Raina, Neil … 14 Rajan, Madhav … 58 Rakove, Jack … 58 Ramirez, David … 15 Randall, Christopher … 15 Rasheed, Raza … 8 Raver, Jacob … 15 Ravi, Bhavishyavani … 4 Ravid, Itay … 4 Ray, Stephan … 58 Reaves, Stephany … 8 Recht, Brian … 8 Reed, Tess … 9 Rehnquist, Dana … 15 Reichelstein, Stefan … 58 Reicher, Dan … 48 Reiter, Sarah … 61 Reliford, Trey … 9 Renta Ramirez, Natalia … 9 Renz, Daniel … 15 Restrepo Cardona, Fernan … 4 Rhode, Deborah … 48 Ricca, Lucy … 67 Rice, Cassidy … 9 Rice, Jordan … 9 Rich, Kevin … 20 Richards, Stephen … 9 Rietfors, Matt … 9 Rios, Melissa … 67 Rios, Sophia … 9 Ritenour, Jordan … 20 Roach, Matthew … 4 Robbins, Zehava … 20 Roberts, Andrew … 20 Roberts, Nicole … 15 Robertson, Ashley … 15 Robertson, Shelby … 15 Robertson, Travis … 9 Robinson, Henry … 15 Robinson, Randall … 9 Robinson, Susan … 25, 58, 67 Rock, Mary … 20 Rodkin, John … 58 Rodriguez, Dalton … 9 Rodriguez, Hector … 20 Rogers, Brian … 9 Rogers, David … 58 Roibal, Lucia … 9 Rojas, Mikael … 9 Romano, Michael … 58 Ronca, Michael … 15 Ronquillo, Mila … 67 Rosales, Arianna … 67 Rosellini, Nicholas … 15 Rosenbaum, Stephen … 58 Rosenberg, Alexander … 20 Rubin, Amanda … 9 Rubin, Daniel … 20 Rubin, Michael … 15 Rubin, Tom … 58 Ruggiero, Carl … 9 Runsten, Melissa … 9 Russell, Racob … 58 Sachar, Alon … 15 Saetveit, Kristin … 9 Sahoo, Anshuman … 61 Salgado, Richard … 58 Salomon, Sarah … 9 Samberg, Rachael … 58, 62 Sanchez, Juan-Carlos … 67 Sanders, Matthew … 58 Sangal, Neal … 9 Sarlitto, John … 20 Sassoubre, Ticien … 58 Savelle, Kristen … 61 Sawyer, Katie … 67 Sayet, David … 15 Scelzo, Giulia … 15 Schacter, Jane … 49 Schatz, Jonathan … 9 Scheiner, Nick … 9 Schierenbeck, Alec … 9 Schneider, Lauren … 15 Schox, Jeff … 59 Schranz, Dorey … 15 Schroeder, Samuel … 4 Schuil, Sandra … 67 Schultz, Arturo … 20 Schupanitz, Andrew … 9 Schweizer, Greg … 9 Scorcio, Matthew … 15 Scott, Colin … 20 Scott, Kenneth … 49 Scott, Nicole … 15 Seaford, Artemis … 20 Seber, Steven … 9 Seelam, Vina … 15 Seiger, Alicia … 67 Sela, Ayelet … 4 Sellers, Matthew … 20 Seng, Daniel … 4 Shanahan, Nicole … 61 Shang, Bo … 4 Sharoni, Sari … 15 Sheeler, Patricia … 67 Shelly, Jacob … 9 Sheu, Vincent … 20 Shi, Julie … 67 Shi, Lu … 4 Shim, Sangmin … 4 Shirazyan, Sarah … 4 Siciliano, F. Daniel … 25, 49 Sidney, Nicholas … 9 Silverberg, Eric … 20 Singleton, Ian … 62 Sinnar, Shirin … 49 Sivas, Deborah … 50 Skitzki, Madeline … 20 Sklansky, David … 50 Skocpol, Michael … 15 Sladic, Courtney … 20 Slagter, Paulina … 15 Sleeper, Marina … 67 Smith, Eric … 20 Smith, Lillian … 20 Smith, Stephanie … 59 Smith, Steven … 59 Sofaer, Abraham … 59 Sollazzo, Erica … 20 Solomon, Jason … 59, 68 Sommers-Flanagan, Rylee … 15 Song, Zili … 4 Sonne, James (Jim) … 59 Sonnenberg, Stephan … 59 Sonu, Michelle … 59 Sood, Udit … 4 Sparks, Deidre … 68 Sparks, Nicholas … 15 Spaulding, Norman … 50 Spielman, Chuck … 68 Sprague, Charles … 15 Spriggs, Steven … 15 Srikantiah, Jayashri … 51 Stahl, Justin … 20 Standish, Nicholas … 15 Stanley, Rose … 15 Stanton, Aaron … 15 Stanton, Francis (Vic) … 59 Stateman, William … 20 Stearns, Ian … 9 Steele, Jory … 59, 68 Stein, Evan … 9 Stein, Risa … 20 Stevenson, Andy … 9 Stoen, Clara … 68 Stoker, Dale … 68 Stone, Sergio … 59, 62 Storslee, Mark … 9 Strnad, Jeff … 51 Stroth, Jennifer … 68 Stuart, Kaleisha … 9 Studdert, David … 51 Su, Pan … 4 Sullivan, Laura … 9 Sun, Xiaojing … 68 Swift, Chris … 9 Sykes, Alan … 59 Sze, Wesley … 10 Szeptycki, Leon … 59 Tai, Wangshu … 20 Takemoto-Chock, Mari … 20 Tamares, Ryan … 62 Tan, Dan … 59 Tandler, Jacquline … 15 Tannenbaum, Amy … 20 Tanner, Danijela … 4 Tarpey, Lauren … 20 Tata, Vivek … 15 Taufick, Roberto … 4 Taylor, Rebecca … 68 Taylor, Torryn … 20 Teachout, Brandon … 20 Teasland, Diana … 62 Tellioglu, Jill … 4 Terra Ibanez, Antoni … 4 Thanabalan, Matt … 15 Thayer, Brittany … 68 Thesing, Alicia … 59 Thomas, Chantal … 59 Thompson Ford, Richard … 32 Thompson, Barton H. “Buzz” … 52 Thompson, Margaret … 15 Thompson, Tres … 10 Threatt, James … 15 Timmons, Trent … 16 Tobias, Joe … 10 Todisco, Michael … 16 Tom, Naomi … 16 Tong, Laura … 10 Toth, Michael … 61 Toussaint, Scott … 16 Tran, Bao … 68 Trevor, Reece … 20 Triantis, George … 25, 52 Tribie, Gaelle … 10 Trimble, Jennifer … 68 Troyer, Caitlin … 21 Trujillo, Joey … 10 Tsou, Grace … 10 Tsurkov, Emma … 4 Tudor, Mackenzie … 21 Tully, Daniel … 21 Tungnirun, Arm … 4 Tuttle, Ian … 62 Twinem, Alexandria … 16 Tyler, Ron … 52 Uber, Swain … 10 Ugai, John … 21 Ungar, Rachel … 68 Vaden, Andrew … 10 Van Denover, Andrew … 10 Van Schaack, Beth … 59 van Schewick, Barbara … 53 Vargas, Claret … 59, 68 Vatavuk, Natalie … 68 Venzke, Cody … 10 Verdin, Matthew … 10 Verran-Lingard, Jessica … 10 Vial, Gonzalo … 4 Vidutis, Nida … 10 Villalobos, Stacy … 10 Vissers, Elizabeth … 21 Vittat-Adamson, Laura … 16 Vizvary, George … 62 Vogel, Rebecca … 10 Vogl, Roland … 59, 68 Vorobyeva, Olga … 4 Wakefield, Thomas … 10 Wald, Michael … 53 Wan, Guofen … 62 Wang, Anna … 68 Wang, Eric … 16 Wang, Jie … 10 Wang, Xin … 10 Wara, Michael … 54 Warner, George … 21 Warren, Em … 10 Watnick, David … 10 Watson, Jason … 68 Watson, Margo … 21 Wayne, Erika … 59, 62 Weber, Kyle … 68 Wedding, Lisa … 61 Weekes, Lori … 10 Weiland, Morgan … 10 Weiner, Allen … 54 Weinhardt, Matthaeus … 16 Weinstein-Tull, Justin … 61 Weinstock, Tamar … 21 Weisberg, Robert … 54 Weiss, Alexander … 68 Weiss, Kristen … 61 Weissenberg, Brian … 16 Weissman-Ward, Lisa … 59 Wells, Matthew … 21 Wessels, Ryan … 21 Whalen, Andrew … 10 Whitaker, Krista … 10 White, Shaina … 68 Wick, David … 21 Wilcox, Jeff … 68 Wilcox, Rachel … 10 Wilkinson-Ryan, Tess … 59 Wilkinson, Evelyn … 68 Williams, Ashley … 16 Williams, Jenna … 10 Wilson, George … 62 Wilson, Sarah … 62 Wolak, Frank … 59 Wolf, Joshua … 21 Wolfman, Brian … 59 Womble, Philip … 10 Wong, Glenn … 60 Woodcock, Lisa … 68 Wright, Katherine … 60 Wu, Chajin … 16 Wu, Michelle … 21 Xi, James … 21 Xu, Kevin … 21 Xu, Mengyi … 21 Yakima, Michael … 21 Yang, Joseph … 60 Yang, Tiffany … 10 Yao, Di … 4 Yiu, Vincent … 10 Yoon (Lecturer), James … 60 Yoon (Student), James … 21 Yoon, Christine … 16 Young, Emi … 16 Yu, Diana … 21 Zack, Lauren … 21 Zaheer, Naheed … 62 Zamora-Stevens, Donna … 21 Zanetis, Christopher … 21 Zettler, Patti … 60, 61 Zhang, Emily … 10 Zhang, Wanyu … 4 Zhang, Weizi … 21 Zhao, Yiyue … 21 Zhou, Grace … 21 Zimmerman, Danielle … 61 Zimmerman, Erik … 61 Zittrain, Jonathan … 60 Zuniga, Krisina … 10 Zurita, Keny … 10 Index by First Name Jonathan Abel … 60 Pablo Acevedo … 1 Ben Adams … 5 Nicole Adamson … 11 Pat Adan … 63 Elaine Adolfo … 63 Alexandra Albright … 63 Maxwell Alderman … 16 Janet Alexander … 26 Wolfang Alschner … 1 Nouf Alsulaiti … 1 Cathrina Altimari-Brown … 16 Sebastian Alvarado Munoz … 1 Adam Amir … 5 Lynne Anderson … 63 Michelle Anderson … 26 Abhay Aneja … 5 Angela Antia … 63 Albertina Antognini … 60 Claudia Antonacci … 16 Gina Anzaldua … 16 Rachael Apfel … 16 Amy Applebaum … 63 Yifat Aran … 1 Adam Arguelles … 16 Julian Aris … 16 Adi Aron-Gilat … 1 Nayha Arora … 11 Philip Arredondo … 11 Becca Arriaga … 5 Adelina Arroyo … 63 Lina Artunduaga … 1 Michael Asimow … 55 Abbye Atkinson … 60 Ivan Au … 11 Amanda Avila … 63 Simao Avila … 55 Barbara Babcock … 26 Gilat Juli Bachar … 1 Stephanie Bair … 60 Andrew Baker … 16 Lauren Baker … 16 Jeffrey Ball … 60, 63 Denise Ballesteros … 5 Brendan Ballou … 11 James Banker … 11 Joseph Bankman … 26 Ralph Richard Banks … 27 Johann Carlos Barcena … 1 Cyndi Barmore … 5 Abigail Barnes … 11 David Barnes … 16 André Barros … 1 Marni Barta … 11 James Barton … 5 Mary Baskauskas … 63 Stephanie Basso … 63 Joy Basu … 5 Kasey Baughan … 16 Marilyn Bautista … 55 Philip Beasley-Murray … 63 Jeanine Becker … 55 Marta Belcher … 5 Danielle Benecke … 1 Matthew Benedetto … 11 Bethany Bengfort … 11 Patrick Benitez … 16 Paul Bennetch … 16 Arwa BenOmran … 5 Elizabeth Berardi … 5 David Berman … 5 Emily Berry … 63 Thomas Berry … 11 Katherine Bies … 16 Jennifer Binger … 11 Carly Bittman … 5 Lisa Bixby … 17 JonJon Blanco … 63 Karen Blevins … 63 Alison Bloch … 5 Binyamin Blum … 55 Micah Bluming … 11 Daniel Bobier … 11 Adrianna Boghozian … 63 Chris Bollard … 1 Salvatore Bonaccorso … 5 Afia Bonner … 17 Samuel Bonnette … 11 Matthieu Bonvoisin … 1 Kim Borg … 63 Marcus Bourassa … 11 Adam Bowling … 11 Richard Brand … 55 William Brenc … 17 Paul Brest … 27 Carol Brill … 63 Brenda Brito Do Carmo … 1 Catherine Brobston … 63 Juliet Brodie … 22, 27 Sergio Broholm … 11 Skylar Brooks … 5 Cameron Brown … 17 Jeffrey Brown … 55 Frank Brucato … 23, 63 Ryan Bubb … 55 Victoria Buchholz … 11 Guadalupe Buenrostro … 63 Charles Buker … 11 Tatyana Bukina … 62 Thomas Buley … 11 Jeremy Bulow … 55 M. Kate Bundorf … 55 Karsten Busby … 11 Kevin Bush … 17 Maria Buxton … 17 Samuel Byker … 11 Kris Cachia … 63 Monique Cadena … 63 Nicole Cagampan … 63 William Cage … 11 Margaret Caldwell … 27 Birgit Calhoun … 62 Nicole Cambeiro … 11 Jud Campbell … 64 Valerie Campbell … 11 Viola Canales … 55 Charles Cao … 11 Jodie Carian … 64 James Carlson … 17 Alex Carter … 5 John Casey … 5 Gerhard Casper … 28 Mariana Castrellon … 1 Joseph Catapano … 11 James Cavallaro … 28 Sheli Chabon … 5 Susan Champion … 60 Abhinav Chandrachud … 1 Andrew Chang … 17 Claire Chapla … 11 Krystle Chappell … 64 Eeshan Chaturvedi … 1 Grace Chediak … 17 Annie Chen … 62 Lanhee Chen … 55 Liping Chen … 62 Linda Cheng … 62 Shuk Ting Cheng … 1 Nandi Chhabra … 5 Shih-Chun Chien … 1 Diane Chin … 23, 55, 64 Leo Chingcuanco … 5 Erin Cho … 5 Jasmine Cho … 17 Leo Cho … 64 Kathleen Choi … 64 Susie Choi … 5 Agnes Chong … 1 Kyung Chong … 64 Grace Chuchla … 11 Sarah Clark … 17 Virginia Clegg … 64 Laurent Cohen-Tanugi … 55 Joshua Cohen … 29 William Cohen … 29 G. Marcus Cole … 29 Stephen Comello … 60 David Conand … 64 Jon Connolly … 5 Lucien Constable … 17 Maria Jose Cordero-Salas … 1 Casey Corr … 5 Elizabeth Costello … 17 Catherine Coughlin … 64 Kevin Cowher … 17 Abbee Cox … 17 Richard Craswell … 30 Vincent Crowley … 5 Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar … 30 Robert Curran … 11 Kenneth Daines … 17 Robert Daines … 30 Luca Dal Molin … 1 John Daley … 11 Maria Daneri … 1 Connie Dang … 5 Gisele Darwish … 64 Michele Dauber … 31 Taylor Davidson … 11 Peter Davis … 17 Carolina de Armas … 11 Isabel de Carvalho e Silva … 1 Faye Deal … 23, 64 Judy Dearing … 64 Christopher Deetz … 11 Jackie Del Barrio … 64 Jillian Del Pozo … 64 Maret Delf … 5 Laura Demmer … 64 Isaiah Deporto … 17 Jason Despain … 17 Aileen Devlin … 64 Elizabeth Di Giovanni … 64 Jocelyn Dicker … 17 John Dickson … 17 Lance Dickson … 31 Michael Dickstein … 55 Samuel Dippo … 5 Karlo Dizon … 12 Vincent Doctor … 17 Joseph Dollin … 1 John Donohue III … 31 DJ Dorff … 12 Doron Dorfman … 2 Joshua Dos Santos … 17 Laura Douglas … 17 Lisa Douglass … 55 Jessica Dragonetti … 5 Andrew Dragstrem … 12 John Drdek … 12 Lois Drews … 62 Sharon Driscoll … 64 Eric Dunn … 12 Gary Dyal … 5 Kevin Eaton … 17 Shinsuke Ebato … 2 Jennifer Eberhardt … 55 Christopher Edelman … 5 Gregory Elinson … 12 Gina Elliott … 17 Ibrahim Elshamy … 5 Nari Ely … 12 Evan Epstein … 64 Fazila Pinar Erciyas Bailey … 12 Ashley Erickson … 60 Julia Erwin-Weiner … 23, 64 Bonie Eskenazi … 55 Caroline Esser … 5 Jason Estacio … 64 Sara Estela … 12 Meredith Evancie … 17 William Evans … 12 Trevor Ezell … 17 Boaz Fachler … 2 Kate Falkenstien … 5 Viveca Fallenius … 2 Zhao Fang … 6 Farbod Faraji … 6 Jun Feng … 6 Randee Fenner … 55, 64 Luisa Ferreira-Peralta … 2 Frank Feruch … 64 Kate Fetrow … 17 Connor Feuille … 12 Bertram Fields … 55 Jaryn Fields … 6 Michael Fields … 12 Siegfried Fina … 55 Jay Finkelstein … 55 Lauren Finkelstein … 6 Jason Fischbein … 12 Ilan Fischer … 12 John Fischer … 17 George Fisher … 32 Jeffrey Fisher … 32 Jordan Flanders … 6 Scott Flanz … 6 Alvaro Fomperosa Rivero … 2 David Forst … 55 Lizzy Foydel … 6 Michael Francus … 17 Jon Frank … 6 Rachel Frank … 17 Laurence Franklin … 56 Marc Franklin … 33 Steven Franklin … 56 Maura Freedman … 6 David Freeman Engstrom … 31 Nora Freeman Engstrom … 32 Richard Freeman … 6 Akiva Freidlin … 12 Michael Frenkel … 6 Siddharth Fresa … 2 Barbara Fried … 33 Zoe Friedland … 17 Lawrence Friedman … 33 Giancarlo Frosio … 60 Yiye Fu … 6 Claudio Fuentes … 2 Michelle Galloway … 56 Rolando Garcia Miron … 2 Cindy Garcia … 12 Marta Garcia … 12 Kaitlyn Gardner … 12 Reid Gardner … 17 Geoffrey Garrett … 6 Matthew Gasperetti … 17 Daisuke Gatanaga … 18 Sara Gates … 18 Mei Gechlik … 56 Tracy Genesen … 56 Michael Genesereth … 56 Jason George … 6 Trish Gertridge … 65 Kevin Gibson … 18 Judy Gielniak … 65 Diego Gil McCawley … 2, 57 Andrew Gilden … 60 Stephanie Gilliam … 12 Laura Gilson … 18 Ronald Gilson … 33 Benjamin Ginsberg … 56 Catherine Glaze … 24, 65 Jana Glock … 2 Alison Gocke … 18 Amir Goldberg … 56 Jeffrey Goldenhersh … 12 Paul Goldstein … 34 Lauren Gollaher … 6 Ana-Maria Gomez Palazzo … 18 Juan Gonzalez … 18 Radoslaw Goral … 2 Robert Gordon … 34 Michael Gosling … 6 William Gould IV … 34 Benjamin Gould … 6 Lawrence Goulder … 56 Don Gourlie … 60 Alexander Gourse … 18 Gordon Grafft … 12 Shannon Grammel … 18 Jennifer Granick … 56, 65 Alexa Graumlich … 18 Lydia Gray … 6 Patsie Gray … 65 Hank Greely … 35 Amelia Green … 6 Blair Green … 6 Jonathan Greenberg … 56, 65 Joel Greene … 65 Amit Gressel … 6 Thomas Grey … 35 Richard Griffin … 18 Shereen Griffith … 12 Thomas Griffith … 56 Andrew Grimm … 12 Ariela Gross … 56 Joseph Grundfest … 36 Peyton Gulley … 6 Angela Guo … 18 Gagan Gupta … 12 Lucas Guttentag … 36 Marisol Guttman … 6 Diana Guzman … 2 John Haddock … 6 Margaret Hagan … 56, 60 Virginia Halden … 12 Alice Hall-Partyka … 18 Tim Hallahan … 56 Adam Halpern … 56 John Hamilton … 18 Pablo Hamilton … 2 Amari Hammonds … 18 Natasha Haney … 6 Rachel Haney … 18 Elissa Hanson … 6 Lauren Harding … 6 Ryan Harper … 6 Sophie Hart … 18 Mariko Hashimoto … 62 Shagran Hassan … 12 Umberto Hassan … 2 David Hausman … 6 Joy Haviland … 60 David Hayes … 56 Jared Haynie … 56 George Hayward … 18 Amy Heath … 12 Jason Hegland … 65 Thomas Heller … 36 Emily Hellman … 12 Matt Henry … 6 Deborah Hensler … 24, 37 Luciana Herman … 56 Pablo Hernandez … 18 Stephen Herndon … 6 An-Li Herring … 18 Benjamin Hewlett … 12 Heidi Hietanen … 2 Matthew Higgins … 6 Michelle Hillenbrand … 6 Sieglinde Hindrichs … 12 Todd Hinnen … 56 Emily Hite … 65 Andrew Ho … 6 Daniel Ho … 37 Tiffany Ho … 12 Alba Holgado … 62 Ryan Hollander … 18 Kara Hollis … 12 Zuyun Hong … 2 Elizabeth Hook … 7 Alyson Hornsby … 65 Desley Horton … 2 Kaley Horton … 12 Sergei Hovyadinov … 2 Chen (Esther) Hu … 60 Simon Hu … 7 Ju-Ching Huang … 2 Mengyu Huang … 18 Pei-ju Huang … 2 Tai-Jan Huang … 2 Kamal Hubbard … 65 Jessica Hudak … 12 Carl Hudson … 18 Lilah Hume … 12 Keith Humphreys … 56 Kip Hustace … 7 Cathy Hwang … 60 Andrew Indorf … 18 Kiel Ireland … 13 Mikito Ishida … 2 Naoko Ishihara … 2 Vikram Iyengar … 7 Sarah Jabero … 7 Lindsey Jackson … 13 Sean Janda … 18 Yeseung Jang … 18 Per Jansen … 7 Cari Jeffries … 18 Brooke Jenkins … 7 Carreen Jensen … 65 Erik Jensen … 37 Kristopher Jensen … 18 David Johnson … 56 Eric Johnson … 13 Krister Johnson … 13 Sabrina Johnson … 24, 65 Thea Johnson … 60 Lynda Johnston … 65 Aubrey Jones … 65 Brittany Jones … 13 Danielle Jones … 56 Elizabeth Jones … 13 Nicholas Jones … 13 Annick-Marie Jordan … 18 Leslie-Bernard Joseph … 7 Catherine Josman … 65 Christopher Juarez … 13 Jason Juarez … 65 David Jung … 13 Anita S. Jwa … 3 Andrew Kambic … 13 Daniel Kane … 13 Sean Kaneshiro … 56, 62 Deepa Kannappan … 13 Ted Karch … 13 Natalie Karl … 18 Pamela Karlan … 38 Ali Karol … 7 Hilary Karp … 62 Megan Karsh … 65 Dmitry Karshtedt … 60 Alex Kasner … 7 Marah Katz Herbach … 65 Valerie Kaur … 65 Gregory Keenan … 7 Alain Kelder … 65 Caroline Keller-Lynn … 13 Mark Kelman … 22, 38 Trevor Kempner … 7 Julie Matlof Kennedy … 57 Cortelyou Kenney … 61 John Kenney … 13 Rylee Kercher … 18 Amalia Kessler … 38 Daniel Kessler … 39 Courtney Khademi … 13 Jack Kider … 7 Hannah Kieschnick … 18 Cassandra Kildow … 13 Hyosang Kim … 13 Sallie Kim … 57 Stephanie Kimbro … 61 Jason Kipnis … 57 Hugh Kirkpatrick … 18 Michael Klausner … 39 Emma Kleiner … 13 Phillip Klimke … 13 Jeffrey Kobrick … 57 William Koch … 18 Mathieu Kohmann … 3 Jon Koomey … 61 William Koski … 39 Zach Koslap … 7 Mansi Kothari … 7 Grace Kouba … 13 Larry Kramer … 40 Shiri Krebs … 3 Fay Krewer … 13 Zach Kruth … 7 Heather Kryczka … 13 Kelly Kuehl … 62 Hiroyuki Kurihara … 3 Hisako Kurihara … 3 Peter Kurtz … 13 Andrew Kushner … 7 Sarah Kushner … 18 Sydney Lakin … 19 Neel Lalchandani … 7 Michelle Lamy … 7 Pilar Landon … 13 Brian Lao … 7 David Larcker … 57 Kimberly Larkin … 13 Jo Anne Larson … 65 Lindsey Larson … 7 Jeffrey Lash … 13 Madeleine Laupheimer … 13 Laura Laurion … 65 Andrew Lawrence … 7 Sarah Lawrence … 66 Elizabeth LeBow … 19 Austin Lee … 13 Imani Lee … 19 Jae Gul Lee … 3 Percy Lee … 7 Robert Lee … 61 Robin Lee … 57 Sujin Lee … 3 Samantha Lefland … 7 Mark Lemley … 40 Nicole Leon … 13 Pedro Leon … 61 71 Celia Lerman … 3 Robyn Levin … 19 Ruth Levine … 61 Adam Lewis … 19 Chris Lewis … 7 Lisa Li … 7 Yang Li … 3 Yinmei Li … 7 Shuyan Connie Liang … 62 Jeannie Lieder … 13 Cassey Limgenco … 66 Ann Linder … 19 Stuart Lipton … 57 Kristin Liska … 13 Sarracina Littlebird … 13 Goodwin Liu … 57 Stephen Liu … 19 Titi Liu … 66 Lincoln Lo … 7 Paul Lomio … 57, 62 Darryl Long … 19 Donna Long … 13 Kori Lorick … 7 Kimberly Lovett … 7 Julian Low … 66 Elizabeth Lowell … 7 Suzanne Luban … 57 Shoshana Lucich … 7 Thomas Lue … 57 Robert MacCoun … 41 Megan Mach … 61 Greer Mackebee … 7 M. Elizabeth Magill … 22, 41 José Maldonado … 57 Mark Mallery … 7 Phil Malone … 41 DeDe Mann … 13 Molly Manning … 19 Manaf Mansure … 66 Avishai Margalit … 57 Holly Mariella … 14 Lucas Marinovich … 3 Nikki Marquez … 7 Lawrence Marshall … 42 Alison Marston Danner … 55 Alberto Martin … 66 Brandon Martinez … 19 Janet Martinez … 42 Jenny Martinez … 24, 42 Jose Martinez … 19 Tiffany Mason … 14 Melissa Maynard Leger … 66 Philip Mazzara … 8 Vincent Mazzurco … 14 Katherine McBride … 8 Cary McClelland … 8 Samuel McClure … 19 Michael McConnell … 43 Aleecia McDonald … 66 Sean McElroy … 14 Patrick McEvoy … 3 Sean McGuire … 19 Ryan McIlroy … 14 Madeleine McKenna … 14 Katherine McKeon … 19 Ian McKinley … 8 Megan McKoy … 19 Christopher McLamb … 14 Beth McLellan … 57 Jake McMahon … 8 Shae McPhee … 8 Malia McPherson … 14 Christopher Medeiros … 19 Mariana Meditsch … 3 Nicholas Medling … 14 A. Douglas Melamed … 57 Molly Melius … 61 Michelle Mello … 43 Miguel Méndez … 44 Valérie Menoud … 3 Jeanne Merino … 57, 66 John Merryman … 44 Michael Mestitz … 8 Blake Meyer … 14 Bernadette Meyler … 44 Benjamin Middleton … 19 Isaac Middleton … 14 Jeff Middleton … 8 Elizabeth Miller … 14 Matt Miller … 8 Mollie Miller … 19 72 Shawn Miller … 57 David Mills … 45 Laurel Mills … 19 Nancy Millward … 66 Jay Mitchell … 45 Tal Mizrahi … 3 Devon Mobley-Ritter … 8 Enrique Molina … 14 Jonathan Mondel … 14 Benoit Monin … 57 Al Montelongo … 8 Andria Montoya … 8 Riley Moore … 8 Alison Morantz … 45 Michael Morillo … 8 Richard Morningstar … 57 Mohammad Morovati … 61 James Morris … 19 Michelle Morris … 66 Jake Morrison … 8 Kaylee Mosher … 66 Arren Moskowitz … 66 Yonatan Moskowitz … 8 Sonia Moss … 62 Bernardo Moura … 3 Nader Mousavi … 57 Clifford Mpare … 14 Deborah Mukamal … 66 Maithreyi Mulupuru … 3 Frank Muñiz … 66 Brenda Munoz … 66 Carly Munson … 57 Alexandria Murray … 66 Jordan Murray … 8 Olga Musayev … 19 Roland Nadler … 8 Terry Nagel … 66 Ruhan Nagra … 14 Camelia Naranch … 62 Snayha Nath … 8 Christina Neitzey … 19 Brett Nelson … 8 Ryan Nelson … 8 Daniel Nesbit … 19 Joe Neto … 66 Linda Netsch … 57 Alison Neumeister Fry … 65 Jena Neuscheler … 14 Demoni Newman … 19 Joanne Newman … 66 Minh Olivier Nguyen-Dang … 14 Timothy Nicholson … 14 Qian Nie … 3 Bradley Niedersculte … 19 John Noh … 19 Errol Norman … 14 Jessica Notini … 57 Elena Nrtina … 3 Ana Cristina Nuñez … 3 Benjamin Nuyens … 19 Kevin O’Connell … 19 Anna O’Neill … 66 Daniel O’Neill … 66 Maria O’Neill … 66 Tierney O’Rourke … 19 Juan Obregon … 66 Elizabeth Ody … 14 Michael Ohlrogge … 8 Michael Ohta … 19 Paula Oliveira … 3 Erin Olivella-Wright … 14 Hyrum Olson … 14 Chidel Onuegbu … 67 Cameron Ormsby … 8 Lisa Ouellette … 46 Jennifer Oxley … 14 Cecilia Oyediran … 8 Alex Pacheco … 8 Amanda Packel … 67 Tucker Page … 8 Jonathan Pail … 3 Joanna Pak … 19 Jenny Palmer … 8 Gonzalo Paredes … 3 Mariana Pargendler … 58 Angela Park … 14 Joonwoo Park … 67 Kwan Park … 8 Caroline Parke … 14 Ari Parker … 19 Jeffrey Parker … 19 Joshua Parr … 19 Holly Parrish … 67 Menesh Patel … 61 Alexandre Pauwels … 3 Jef Pearlman … 58 B. Howard Pearson … 58 Lisa Pearson … 58, 67 Kjarom Pedersen … 14 Maya Perelman … 14 Rogelio Pérez-Perdomo … 58 Christian Perez … 8 Vanessa Casado Perez … 58, 60 Jason Perkins … 19 Mariela Perrone … 4 Nathaniel Persily … 46 Jesse Peters … 20 Joan Petersilia … 46 Paul Pfleiderer … 58 Arnaud Philippe … 3 Alexandra Piarino … 14 Ashley Pickard … 67 Duncan Pickard … 20 Brittany Pifer … 20 Andrew Pike … 14 Ashlee Pinto … 8 Nicole Pitman … 67 Sarah Polcz … 4 A. Mitchell Polinsky … 47 AnaMaria Ponce … 67 Jesse Port … 61 Richard Porter … 62 Anna Porto … 20 Brenna Powell … 67 Robert Pozen … 58 Amanda Prasuhn … 8 Serena Premjee … 14 Chelsea Priest … 8 Mark Prior … 20 Michelle Pualuan … 67 Joseph Pullano … 14 Yun Jeff Qi … 62 Michael Qian … 14 Jenny Quan … 67 John Quigley … 58 Brian Quinn … 14 Meg Quist … 67 Robert Rabin … 47 Neil Raina … 14 Madhav Rajan … 58 Jack Rakove … 58 David Ramirez … 15 Christopher Randall … 15 Raza Rasheed … 8 Jacob Raver … 15 Bhavishyavani Ravi … 4 Itay Ravid … 4 Stephan Ray … 58 Stephany Reaves … 8 Brian Recht … 8 Tess Reed … 9 Dana Rehnquist … 15 Stefan Reichelstein … 58 Dan Reicher … 48 Sarah Reiter … 61 Trey Reliford … 9 Natalia Renta Ramirez … 9 Daniel Renz … 15 Fernan Restrepo Cardona … 4 Deborah Rhode … 48 Lucy Ricca … 67 Cassidy Rice … 9 Jordan Rice … 9 Kevin Rich … 20 Stephen Richards … 9 Matt Rietfors … 9 Melissa Rios … 67 Sophia Rios … 9 Jordan Ritenour … 20 Matthew Roach … 4 Zehava Robbins … 20 Andrew Roberts … 20 Nicole Roberts … 15 Ashley Robertson … 15 Shelby Robertson … 15 Travis Robertson … 9 Henry Robinson … 15 Randall Robinson … 9 Susan Robinson … 25, 58, 67 Mary Rock … 20 John Rodkin … 58 Dalton Rodriguez … 9 Hector Rodriguez … 20 Brian Rogers … 9 David Rogers … 58 Lucia Roibal … 9 Mikael Rojas … 9 Michael Romano … 58 Michael Ronca … 15 Mila Ronquillo … 67 Arianna Rosales … 67 Nicholas Rosellini … 15 Stephen Rosenbaum … 58 Alexander Rosenberg … 20 Amanda Rubin … 9 Daniel Rubin … 20 Michael Rubin … 15 Tom Rubin … 58 Carl Ruggiero … 9 Melissa Runsten … 9 Racob Russell … 58 Alon Sachar … 15 Kristin Saetveit … 9 Anshuman Sahoo … 61 Richard Salgado … 58 Sarah Salomon … 9 Rachael Samberg … 58, 62 Juan-Carlos Sanchez … 67 Matthew Sanders … 58 Neal Sangal … 9 John Sarlitto … 20 Ticien Sassoubre … 58 Kristen Savelle … 61 Katie Sawyer … 67 David Sayet … 15 Giulia Scelzo … 15 Jane Schacter … 49 Jonathan Schatz … 9 Nick Scheiner … 9 Alec Schierenbeck … 9 Lauren Schneider … 15 Jeff Schox … 59 Dorey Schranz … 15 Samuel Schroeder … 4 Sandra Schuil … 67 Arturo Schultz … 20 Andrew Schupanitz … 9 Greg Schweizer … 9 Matthew Scorcio … 15 Colin Scott … 20 Kenneth Scott … 49 Nicole Scott … 15 Artemis Seaford … 20 Steven Seber … 9 Vina Seelam … 15 Alicia Seiger … 67 Ayelet Sela … 4 Matthew Sellers … 20 Daniel Seng … 4 Nicole Shanahan … 61 Bo Shang … 4 Sari Sharoni … 15 Patricia Sheeler … 67 Jacob Shelly … 9 Vincent Sheu … 20 Julie Shi … 67 Lu Shi … 4 Sangmin Shim … 4 Sarah Shirazyan … 4 F. Daniel Siciliano … 25, 49 Nicholas Sidney … 9 Eric Silverberg … 20 Ian Singleton … 62 Shirin Sinnar … 49 Deborah Sivas … 50 Madeline Skitzki … 20 David Sklansky … 50 Michael Skocpol … 15 Courtney Sladic … 20 Paulina Slagter … 15 Marina Sleeper … 67 Eric Smith … 20 Lillian Smith … 20 Stephanie Smith … 59 Steven Smith … 59 Abraham Sofaer … 59 Erica Sollazzo … 20 Jason Solomon … 59, 68 Rylee Sommers-Flanagan … 15 Zili Song … 4 James (Jim) Sonne … 59 Stephan Sonnenberg … 59 Michelle Sonu … 59 Udit Sood … 4 Deidre Sparks … 68 Nicholas Sparks … 15 Norman Spaulding … 50 Chuck Spielman … 68 Charles Sprague … 15 Steven Spriggs … 15 Jayashri Srikantiah … 51 Justin Stahl … 20 Nicholas Standish … 15 Rose Stanley … 15 Aaron Stanton … 15 Francis (Vic) Stanton … 59 William Stateman … 20 Ian Stearns … 9 Jory Steele … 59, 68 Evan Stein … 9 Risa Stein … 20 Andy Stevenson … 9 Clara Stoen … 68 Dale Stoker … 68 Sergio Stone … 59, 62 Mark Storslee … 9 Jeff Strnad … 51 Jennifer Stroth … 68 Kaleisha Stuart … 9 David Studdert … 51 Pan Su … 4 Laura Sullivan … 9 Xiaojing Sun … 68 Chris Swift … 9 Alan Sykes … 59 Wesley Sze … 10 Leon Szeptycki … 59 Wangshu Tai … 20 Mari Takemoto-Chock … 20 Ryan Tamares … 62 Dan Tan … 59 Jacquline Tandler … 15 Amy Tannenbaum … 20 Danijela Tanner … 4 Lauren Tarpey … 20 Vivek Tata … 15 Roberto Taufick … 4 Rebecca Taylor … 68 Torryn Taylor … 20 Brandon Teachout … 20 Diana Teasland … 62 Jill Tellioglu … 4 Antoni Terra Ibanez … 4 Matt Thanabalan … 15 Brittany Thayer … 68 Alicia Thesing … 59 Chantal Thomas … 59 Richard Thompson Ford … 32 Barton H. “Buzz” Thompson … 52 Margaret Thompson … 15 Tres Thompson … 10 James Threatt … 15 Trent Timmons … 16 Joe Tobias … 10 Michael Todisco … 16 Naomi Tom … 16 Laura Tong … 10 Michael Toth … 61 Scott Toussaint … 16 Bao Tran … 68 Reece Trevor … 20 George Triantis … 25, 52 Gaelle Tribie … 10 Jennifer Trimble … 68 Caitlin Troyer … 21 Joey Trujillo … 10 Grace Tsou … 10 Emma Tsurkov … 4 Mackenzie Tudor … 21 Daniel Tully … 21 Arm Tungnirun … 4 Ian Tuttle … 62 Alexandria Twinem … 16 Ron Tyler … 52 Swain Uber … 10 John Ugai … 21 Rachel Ungar … 68 Andrew Vaden … 10 Andrew Van Denover … 10 Beth Van Schaack … 59 Barbara van Schewick … 53 Claret Vargas … 59, 68 Natalie Vatavuk … 68 Cody Venzke … 10 Matthew Verdin … 10 Jessica Verran-Lingard … 10 Gonzalo Vial … 4 Nida Vidutis … 10 Stacy Villalobos … 10 Elizabeth Vissers … 21 Laura Vittat-Adamson … 16 George Vizvary … 62 Rebecca Vogel … 10 Roland Vogl … 59, 68 Olga Vorobyeva … 4 Thomas Wakefield … 10 Michael Wald … 53 Guofen Wan … 62 Anna Wang … 68 Eric Wang … 16 Jie Wang … 10 Xin Wang … 10 Michael Wara … 54 George Warner … 21 Em Warren … 10 David Watnick … 10 Jason Watson … 68 Margo Watson … 21 Erika Wayne … 59, 62 Kyle Weber … 68 Lisa Wedding … 61 Lori Weekes … 10 Morgan Weiland … 10 Allen Weiner … 54 Matthaeus Weinhardt … 16 Justin Weinstein-Tull … 61 Tamar Weinstock … 21 Robert Weisberg … 54 Alexander Weiss … 68 Kristen Weiss … 61 Brian Weissenberg … 16 Lisa Weissman-Ward … 59 Matthew Wells … 21 Ryan Wessels … 21 Andrew Whalen … 10 Krista Whitaker … 10 Shaina White … 68 David Wick … 21 Jeff Wilcox … 68 Rachel Wilcox … 10 Tess Wilkinson-Ryan … 59 Evelyn Wilkinson … 68 Ashley Williams … 16 Jenna Williams … 10 George Wilson … 62 Sarah Wilson … 62 Frank Wolak … 59 Joshua Wolf … 21 Brian Wolfman … 59 Philip Womble … 10 Glenn Wong … 60 Lisa Woodcock … 68 Katherine Wright … 60 Chajin Wu … 16 Michelle Wu … 21 James Xi … 21 Kevin Xu … 21 Mengyi Xu … 21 Michael Yakima … 21 Joseph Yang … 60 Tiffany Yang … 10 Di Yao … 4 Vincent Yiu … 10 James Yoon (Lecturer) … 60 James Yoon (Student) … 21 Christine Yoon … 16 Emi Young … 16 Diana Yu … 21 Lauren Zack … 21 Naheed Zaheer … 62 Donna Zamora-Stevens … 21 Christopher Zanetis … 21 Patti Zettler … 60, 61 Emily Zhang … 10 Wanyu Zhang … 4 Weizi Zhang … 21 Yiyue Zhao … 21 Grace Zhou … 21 Danielle Zimmerman … 61 Erik Zimmerman … 61 Jonathan Zittrain … 60 Krisina Zuniga … 10 Keny Zurita … 10