UF Law - University of Florida Levin College of Law
Transcription
UF Law - University of Florida Levin College of Law
UF Law 2013 report from the faculty Faculty Scholarship & Spotlights | News briefs | Distinguished visitors T The law school at the University of Florida has leveraged more than $32 million of new giving in the Florida Tomorrow campaign to continue our forward momentum and expand our engagement worldwide. Despite the economic challenges of these times, we have appointed great faculty, hosted prestigious and insightful speakers, improved our facilities, successfully reduced school size without causing severe fiscal stress, matriculated a diverse student body with strong credentials and demonstrated leadership abilities, provided them with a highquality education, and achieved solid placement numbers in a very difficult market. In short, faculty, alumni and staff working together have transformed this school over the past few years, and I invite you to visit and see this for yourself if you are in the area. —Dean Robert H. Jerry, II, Levin Mabie & Levin Professor of Law university of florida levin college of law T The Levin College of Law Faculty uses its leadership skills in a variety of ways to meet the challenges facing legal education. As scholars, we are actively engaged in writing books, articles and briefs, expressing our expert opinions on critical issues. As teachers, we are committed to providing our students an intellectually rigorous curriculum that prepares them for the modern practice of law and helps them strengthen their own leadership skills. Our graduates are distinguished leaders in Florida and throughout the country. This year, Eugene Pettis (JD 85), became the first African-American president of The Florida Bar. National and world leaders visited campus and shared their insights on current issues from the Trayvon Martin shooting to same-sex marriage. As a faculty, we traveled throughout the United States and the world teaching, delivering papers and participating in conferences. Since 2010, we have had an impact in more than 60 countries throughout Africa, South America, Central America, Asia, Europe, Australia and even the French Polynesian Islands. You are invited to read this report and learn about our dynamic law school community and the many exciting things happening right here on campus. —Sharon E. Rush, Associate Dean for Faculty Development; 2013 report from the faculty in this report 3 messages from dean & associate dean 4 news briefs •UF Law brings five Florida governors together • Florida Supreme Court judges Moot Court • Professor wins ABA award in dispute resolution • UF Law wins ABA Law Student Tax Challenge • Life and death of racially restricted covenants • NYT’s Charles Blow discusses Trayvon Martin case • South African freedom fighter discusses human rights • Georgetown professor assesses wins and losses in healthcare case • Professor named outstanding tax attorney • UF Law grad first African-American Florida Bar president Irving Cypen Professor of Law 2 w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y 2013 repor t from the faculty 6 Distinguished guests •Former Justice John Paul Stevens offers taste of history • Justice Clarence Thomas returns for Criser Lecture 8 faculty scholarship •Publications from 2011-2013 9 13 17 21 25 faculty spotlights Grayson McCouch Darren Hutchinson Karen Burke Jason Nance Lyrissa Lidsky 27 college facts and media activity • More than 600 media hits in 2012-2013 3 U F L AW HA P P ENINGS , EVENTS & ACHIEVEMENTS uf law news briefs Five former Florida governors discuss the state’s past and its future Oct. 12, 2012. From left are Govs. Reubin Askew (JD 56), Bob Graham, Bob Martinez, Buddy MacKay (JD 61), moderator Ben Diamond (JD 03) and Gov. Charlie Crist. UF Law brings together five former governors F lorida’s environment, education, economic development and growth management were the primary topics of conversation on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012, when five former Florida Governors convened for the Florida Law Review’s Allen L. Poucher Legal Education Series. The panel discussion, “Florida’s Future: A Conversation with Florida Governors,” featured Govs. Reubin Askew (JD 56), Charlie Crist, Bob Graham, Buddy MacKay (JD 61) and Bob Martinez. The discussion was moderated by UF Law alum Ben Diamond (JD 03). The two-hour conversation ranged from economic development to the environment and education. “With a state moving as rapidly as Florida, we need to be thinking not just to the next election or the next decade, but for the next generations,” Graham said, “and the way in which we do that most fundamentally is an investment in education.” The Allen L. Poucher Legal Education Series was established by Betty K. Poucher in honor of her late husband, Allen L. 4 Poucher Sr. The Poucher Legal Education Series seeks to provide a venue for prominent legal, political and business leaders to discuss important issues facing our nation and world. The governors agreed that mindfulness of water management and the environment in Florida are among the most crucial issues facing Florida’s future. And Crist, who was governor during the 2010 BP oil spill, pointed out the lessons that can be learned from the incident. “What did we learn from the spill? Well, I think No. 1, the last thing you ever want to do is drill off the coast of Florida,” Crist said. “I think the greatest wakeup call of all time, in terms of how sensitive Florida is and how dependent we are on tourism as a very important part of our economy, was evidenced by the BP oil spill.” Florida Supreme Court judges Moot Court T he Florida Supreme Court sat en banc at UF Law to judge the Florida Moot Court Team during the 29th annual Raymer F. Maguire Jr. Moot Court Competition. It was the second time in three years that the entire Florida Supreme Court has come together in the Martin H. Levin Advocacy Center courtroom to judge the competition. The teams presented legal arguments based on questions about a police detective’s qualified immunity from a civil liability arising out of the arrest of an innocent man for a sex offense. Professor wins ABA award in dispute resolution L eonard Riskin, Chesterfield Smith Professor of Law, was honored with the ABA’s Section of Dispute Resolution award for Outstanding Scholarly Work on April 6 at the section’s 15th ann u a l spring conference in Chicago. Since coming Riskin to UF Law in 2007, Riskin has served as professor, mentor and director of the Initiative on Mindfulness in Law and Dispute Resolution. The ABA recognized his extensive work in alternative dispute resolution with a focus on the perspectives that lawyers bring to the work. A story in the February issue of the ABA Journal highlighted the mindfulness field and its growing acceptance in the legal field. Riskin began to write about and teach mediation in the early 1980s, and from that he became interested in mindsets lawyers use when addressing problems. Riskin is the third recipient of the ABA Dispute Resolution Section’s award for Outstanding Scholarly Work since its creation in 2011. Harvard Law School Professor Frank E.A. Sander and Georgetown University Professor Carrie Menkel-Meadow received the award in years past. UF Law wins ABA Law Student Tax Challenge U F Law claimed victory at the American Bar Association Law Student Tax Challenge as student teams placed first and third in the Orlando competition where 88 teams from 46 law schools nationwide participated. The Law Student Tax Challenge is a national tax-planning competition sponsored by the Young Lawyers Forum of the Section of Taxation. In the competition’s 12-year history, the Tax Challenge has become one of the largest tax competitions for law students in the U.S. UF Law’s Tax Moot Court had two of the six teams chosen to participate in the J.D. semifinals and two of the three teams chosen to advance to the finals. Top prize went to Stephanie Malen (3L) and Paul D’Alessandro Jr. (3L), coached w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y The UF Law tax moot court teams finished first and third in an 88-team field at the Tax Law ABA Challenge in Orlando. From left are coach and UF Law Professor Steven J. Willis, coach and visiting Assistant Professor Yolanda Jameson, coach and LL.M. Tax Candidate Adam Smith, Paul D’Alessandro Jr. (3L), Stephanie Malen (3L), Sara Heuer (3L) and KaLynn Ryker (3L). by Professor Steven J. Willis and by Madison Felder and Adam Smith, both LL.M. students. The third-place team was comprised of Sara Heuer (3L) and KaLynn Ryker (3L). It was coached by visiting Assistant Professor Yolanda Jameson. William & Mary, Harvard, Columbia, University of Oregon, Syracuse, Northwestern, Georgetown and the University of Virginia were among the law schools competing. Life and death of racially restrictive covenants U ntil the 1940s it was not uncommon for property deeds to include clauses that restricted the sale of property to whites only. In 1948, the Supreme Court ruled against these racially restrictive covenants, and the practice was outlawed in 1968 by the Fair Housing Act. But before the Supreme Court could declare these restrictions on property unconstitutional, the market rebelled. “In the early 20th century, African-Americans started to move to cities,” Yale Law School’s Carol M. Rose said at UF Law’s annual Wolf Family Lecture. “The hope was to escape the violence and oppression of the Southeast, so Cauca- 2013 repor t from the faculty sians began to take legal routes to get them out of their neighborhoods.” She went on to explain that though race-restriction laws were Constitution-proof, they were not property-proof. It became harder and harder to sneak a Caucasians-only clause into property contracts. “The pool of potential white buyers dried up,” Rose explained. “The only feasible buyers were minority members. This resulted in kind of an odd alliance between the white sellers and the black buyers: Both of them wanted to get rid of restrictive covenants.” NYT’s Charles Blow discusses Trayvon Martin case A man with a gun. A dead teen. A hoodie. These images have been burned into the minds of Americans as symbols of interracial crime, the use of deadly force and even crime reporting. The Feb. 26, 2012, shooting of a 17-year-old black teen walking home in a hoodie in Sanford, Fla., made national news after the shooter was released by police without charges. George Zimmerman was later charged with second-degree murder. The lecture and interdisciplinary panel discussions brought myriad questions about this case to light through a variety of interdisciplinary panels. The New York Times op-ed columnist Charles Blow highlighted the media’s role, and experts from nine University of Florida departments offered insight at the all-day event filmed by C-SPAN. The arguments that “the way he behaved, the things that he wore, suggested he was not worthy of life past Feb. 26 fall short,” Blow said. “There is nothing that you can wear that gives someone license to shoot someone in the chest.” Blow described the “cocoon” media consumers place themselves in. “People prefer to be affirmed in their beliefs than challenged,” he said. “I believe that is what we’ve seen in the Trayvon Martin case. People know what they want to believe and only listen to sources who confirm it.” of the lifelong battle he’s fought for human rights. The 78-year-old former justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa spoke March 26 about gay marriage. It was also the opening day of the U.S. Supreme Court’s hearing of arguments about two cases involving same-sex marriage. Even before he served on the Constitutional Court, Sachs was known as an advocate against racism, repression and apartheid. He was imprisoned, tortured and banned for his freedom fighting, but he wasn’t silenced. In 1988, a car bomb placed by South African security agents blew up when he opened his door, causing him to lose his right arm and vision in one eye. Sachs shared stories from his experience on the Constitutional Court and his thoughts about the opinion he wrote in a case that legalized same-sex marriage in South Africa in 2005. Sachs reasoned in that opinion that “the very constitution that protects the rights of same-sex couples to express their love and intimacy and commitment in the same way heterosexual couples do protects the rights of faith communities to follow their faiths in the way that they want to do.” South African freedom fighter talks human rights A lbie Sachs sat on a table at the front of the Chesterfield Smith Ceremonial Classroom wearing a goldpatterned shirt and a calm expres sion. His right sleeve hung empty beside his body — a casualty Albie Sachs, former justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, spoke at UF Law in March. News Briefs continued on page 26 5 U F L AW HA P P ENINGS , EVENTS & ACHIEVEMENTS distinguished guests Former Justice John Paul Stevens offers taste of history at UF Law A t 92, retired Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens is a walking, talking history lesson in American jurisprudence. Serving on the court from 1976 through 2010 and before that as a federal judge and antitrust lawyer from Chicago, Stevens has a lifetime of experience and legal wisdom to impart. This he readily did Feb. 5 in the Marcia Whitney Schott Courtyard of UF Law as the Marshall M. Criser Distinguished Lecturer. UF Law Professors Kenneth Nunn, John Stinneford and Danaya Wright engaged Stevens on myriad topics including proportionality in sentencing, applying history to decisions, changing technology, experiences and court opinions from his years as a justice. “You don’t at the time you’re working on a case always appreciate what its longrun impact will be,” Stevens observed before hundreds seated in the Marcia Whitney Schott Courtyard. Stevens was speaking of Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. — a case Stevens said he believed to be a routine case in 1984 when he wrote the majority opinion. In the years since, it has become Former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens speaks to UF Law Professors, from left, John Stinneford, Danaya Wright and Kenneth Nunn during the Marshall M. Criser Distinguished Lecture held Feb. 5 in the UF Law courtyard. Stevens, who also spoke at the inaugural one of the most widely cited cases in adminCriser Lecture at UF Law in 2008, addressed istrative law. Stinneford noted after the talk that Ste- his legacy as a Supreme Court justice when vens’ experience can serve as a cautionary Nunn suggested that his opinions seemed to grow more liberal over the years. tale: “To tell you the truth, I think I’m a good “This is a nice reminder that we should deal more conservative take even the mundane than people often assume events of our lives seriously, as they may turn out I feel very strongly “I think I’m a good because that judges should not be to have a bigger impact on our lives than we realize at deal more conserva- deciding certain issues,” he the time. tive than people of- said. “I’m sure I must have to a certain ex“Justice Stevens not ten assume because changed tent, but I don’t think I’ve only appears to have enI feel very strongly changed a tenth as much cyclopedic memory of his decisions during his term that judges should as the court in general has on the court, but he rememchanged.” He said Supreme Court bers his reasons for reach- not be deciding certain issues.” appointees beginning with ing the conclusions he did him were more conservaand also the countervailing —Justice John Paul Stevens tive than their predecessors. arguments that might have led him to decide differNunn said one of the most valuable things he ently,” Stinneford said. “As someone who can’t remember what I had for learned during Stevens’ visit was just how imbreakfast this morning, I found this very im- portant the actual facts of a case are for decision making on the Supreme Court. pressive.” Clarence Thomas returns to UF Law for Criser Lecture U nited States Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas made national news at UF Law in September 2012 when he dismissed U.S. News & World Report rankings and suggested that a law degree from an Ivy League school shouldn’t carry more weight than any other law degree. While those remarks – made during the Marshall M. Criser Distinguished Lecture in Law – garnered the most attention in the press, they were just a small portion of Thomas’ message to UF Law, which emphasized the importance of positivity and hard work. Thomas touched on legal topics, but he also mixed lighthearted humor with hard-won advice for students about the difficulties of law school, and insights into how his experiences growing up in the segregated South helped shape his worldview as an adult. “I found law school to be as clear as cement,” Thomas said in his opening remarks. “It was a very, very difficult experience.” He said that the law does eventually reach a point of clarity, but for him it wasn’t until years after he had earned his J.D. from Yale. “It’s one of the reasons I’ve asked during my visits to spend more time with students,” Thomas said, “to reassure students in many ways that (law school) isn’t always unclear; that it may be difficult and complex but at some point the clouds open and you begin to see things a little better. Maybe it’s experience, maybe it’s maturity. Maybe it’s just life.” This was Thomas’ second visit to UF Law – he delivered the Criser Lecture in 2010. Thomas dined with students, fielded numerous questions in a casual classroom atmosphere and spoke to hundreds gathered in the Marcia Whitney Schott Courtyard. Before heading back to Washington, the diehard Sooner fan took in Florida’s bludgeoning of Kentucky at the Swamp. “The students asked excellent and broadranging questions,” said UF Law Professor Amy Mashburn (UF JD 87), whose Introduction to Lawyering classes received visits from Thomas. “Justice Thomas was willing to answer all of them and was extremely warm and approachable.” His willingness to discuss his personal life before joining the Supreme Court put students at ease, and many were surprised at how easy it was to engage in a discussion with him, Mashburn said. A common thread in Thomas’ advice to students was that they should not allow rankings, prejudices, elitism or bad job prospects to define them. Mashburn said she also learned a few things from Thomas’ classroom visits, including the fact that commercial cases were largely disappearing from the Su- preme Court’s docket because of the prevalence of arbitration clauses. She also learned that he watches “Man vs. Food.” The Criser Lecture was structured as a “conversation” with UF Law students. Lauren Humphries (1L), David R. Maass (3L), Eric Netcher (3L) and Zack Smith (3L) shared the stage with Thomas in the Marcia Whitney Schott Courtyard at UF Law on Sept. 21, passing a microphone among the group as they asked questions of the justice. Smith, who is editor-in-chief of the Florida Law Review, said he and the other students met Thomas briefly before the lecture and, along with about 20 other law students, had lunch with him afterward. “Justice Thomas was very personable in these settings and was genuinely interested in talking to students and answering our questions,” Smith said. “I was impressed with his ability to recall everyone’s names and with the fact that he made a point to speak to everyone in the room.” Thomas, who graduated from Yale Law School, discussed how the most important mentors he’s had in his life weren’t the ones with the most formal education, but rather it was his family growing up, and the people he surrounds himself with every day. “I don’t know if you saw the movie ‘The Help,’ but that’s basically where I grew up,” he said. “That’s my family, that’s my neighborhood, those are the people who were the wisest people, they were good people … those people are wise because they’ve managed to get through life in a good way.” Those were the people who instilled in him a sense of hope and positivity, Thomas said, and it wasn’t until he was surrounded by privileged Ivy Leaguers that he was exposed to, and filled with, a sense of cynicism and negativity. When asked about advice for graduating law students, Thomas said to stay positive. “I can’t tell you to use my experience because I was decidedly negative when I got out of law school and quite bitter and even quite cynical – that’s why I try to THOMAS continued on page 26 6 w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y 2013 repor t from the faculty 7 faculty scholarship TENUREd & Tenure-TRACK Mary Jane Angelo University of Florida Research Foundation Professor; Alumni Research Scholar; Director, Environmental and Land Use Law Program The Law and Ecology of Pesticides and Pest Management (Ashgate, 2013) • “Assessing Risks to Endangered and Threatened Species from Pesticides” __ (with Committee on Ecological Risk Assessment under FIFRA and ESA), National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences (2013) • Co-Editor, Food, Agriculture, and the Environment: History, Law, and Sustainability (with Jason J. Czarnezki and William S. Eubanks II) and contributor of five chapters “An Overview of the Modern Farm Bill” (with Joanna Reilly-Brown), “The Environmental Impacts of Industrial Fertilizers and Toxic Pesticides” (with Seth Hennes), “The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act,” “Agriculture and the Clean Water Act” (with James F. Choate) and “Into the Future: Building a Sustainable and Resilient Agricultural System for a Changing Global Environment” (ELI Press, 2013) • “Progress Toward Restoring the Everglades: the Fourth Biennial Review,” (with Committee on Independent Scientific Review of Everglades Restoration Progress), National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences (2012) • “Survey of Florida Water Law” in Waters and Water Rights (Robert E. Beck, ed.) (Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.) (2012 update) • “Reclaiming Global Environmental Leadership: Why the United States Should Ratify Ten Pending Environmental Treaties” (with Rebecca Bratspies, David Hunter, John H. Knox, Noah Sachs, and Sandra Zellmer, Center for Progressive Reform White Paper No. 1201) (2012) • “Small, Slow and Local: Essays on Building a More Sustainable and Local Food System,” 12 Vt. J. Envtl. L. 1 (2011) • “Water Quality Regulations and Policy Evolution” (with Kati Migliaccio) in Water Quality, Concepts, Sampling, and Analysis (Yuncong Li and Kati Migliaccio, eds.) (CRC Press, 2011) ROGER D. BLAIR Affiliate Professor; Walter J. Matherly Professor, Department of Economics “The Economics of Class Actions,” in Oxford Handbook of International Antitrust Economics, (with Christine Durrance) (Roger D. Blair and D. Daniel Sokol, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, forthcoming, 2014) • “Bilateral Monopoly and Antitrust Policy,” in Oxford Handbook on International Antitrust Economics, (with Christina DePasquale) (Roger D. Blair and D. Daniel Sokol, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, forthcoming, 2014) • “Corporate Compliance: An Economic Approach,” Managerial and Decision Economics (with Thomas Knight) (forthcoming, 2013) • “Welfare Standards in U.S. and EU Antitrust Enforcement,” 102 Fordham L. Rev. 2497 (2013) • “The Rule of Reason and the Goals of Antitrust: An Economic Approach,” (with D. Daniel Sokol), 78 Antitrust L. J. 471 (2012) • “Franchise,” (with Hanny Lane), in Palgrave Encyclopedia of Strategic Management, (David Teece, ed.) (2012) • “Baseball’s Antitrust Exemption: History and Current Relevance,” (with Jessica S. Haynes), in Oxford Handbook of Sports Economics, (S. Shmanske and L. Kahane, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, 2012) • “Monopsony, Monopsony Power, and Antitrust Policy,” (with Jessica S. Haynes), in Research Handbook on the Economics of Antitrust Law, (Einer Elhauge, Edward Elgar Ltd., eds.) (2012) • “A Note on the Consequences of Monopsony When Goods are Jointly Produced In Fixed Proportions,” (with Jessica S. Haynes), in 40 Rev. of Industrial Organization 75 (2012) • Sports Economics, (Cambridge U. Press, 2011) • “An Interdisciplinary Approach to Teaching Antitrust Economics,” (with Christine Durrance), in The International Handbook on Teaching and Learning Economics, (G. Hoyt and K. McGoldrick, Aldershot, eds.) (Edward Elgar Press, 2011) • “The Efficiency Defense in the 2010 Horizontal Merger Guidelines,” (with Jessica S. Haynes) 39 Rev. of Industrial Organization 57 (2011) • “Considerations of Countervailing Power,” (with Christina DePasquale), 39 Rev. of Industrial Organization 137 (2011) This compilation includes printed and online scholarly publications from 2011 through 2013. A complete faculty list, faculty vitae and lists of publications are online at www.law.ufl.edu/uflaw-faculty. Angelo 8 Blair Brauner Burke Cohen Cohn w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y M My teaching and scholarship focuses on the processes of accumulating and managing wealth and transmitting it from one generation to the next. Keeping up with rapidly evolving estate planning practice poses a daunting task for lawmakers and law reformers. My current work focuses on “dynasty trusts,” which are widely promoted as a device for avoiding taxes and defeating creditors’ claims. On closer examination, I am concerned that settlors of dynasty trusts often fail to appreciate the tradeoffs involved, and I believe that the trust and estate bar has an important role to play in counseling clients about the long-term consequences of creating these trusts. Collier Dale 2013 repor t from the faculty Davis —Grayson McCouch, Gerald Sohn Professor of Law Dilley DiMatteo Dowd 9 Yariv Brauner Professor; Alumni Research Scholar, University of Florida Research Foundation Professor “United States” chapter, in Eduardo Baistrocchi (ed.), Resolving Tax Treaty Disputes: Global Theory and Practice (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming, 2013) • Book Review: Daniel N. Shaviro, Fixing U.S. International Taxation in the __ Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies __ (forthcoming, 2013) • “United States” chapter in Resolving Tax Treaty Disputes: Global Theory and Practice (Eduardo Baistrocchi, ed.), (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming, 2013) • “Taxation of Companies on Capital Gains on Shares under United States Law and Tax Treaties,” in Taxation of Companies on Capital Gains on Shares under Domestic Law, EU Law and Tax Treaties (Guglielmo Maisto, ed.) (IBFD, forthcoming, 2013) • “United States National Report to the 2013 IFA Annual Congress, Subject I: The taxation of foreign passive income for groups of companies” (with Mindy Herzfeld), in IFA, 98a Cahiers de Droit Fiscal International (2013) • “CCCTB and Fiscally Transparent Entities – A Third Countries’ Perspective,” in Corporate Income Taxation in Europe: The Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB) and Third Countries (Lang et.al., eds.) (Edward Elgar, 2013) • “The History of Israeli Tax Treaties” (with Shay Menuchin), in History of Double Tax Conventions (Reimer, et. al., eds.) (Linde, 2013) • “Beneficial Ownership in United States’ Tax Law,” in Beneficial Ownership (Lang et al., eds.) (Linde, 2013) • Editor and author of introduction (with Miranda Stewart), Tax, Law and Development (Edward Elgar, 2013) • “The Future of Tax Incentives” (book chapter), in Tax Law and Development (Yariv Brauner and Miranda Stewart, eds.) (Edward Elgar, 2013) • “Choice of Entity (?),” in David Gliksberg, Ed., The Arie Lapidot Book (The Harry and Michael Sacher Institute for Legislative Research & Comparative Law, Hebrew University, 2013) • Update to Art. 5 of the OECD Model, in the IBFD Permanent Establishment Online Database (2013) • “The Flight Attendants’ Cases,” report in Lang, et al., Tax Treaty Case Law around the Globe - 2012 (Linde, 2013) • Editor, The Proper Tax Base: Structural Fairness from an International and Comparative Perspective (with Martin J. McMahon), and book chapter, “Formula Based Transfer Pricing” (A Volume in Honor of Paul R. McDaniel) (Kluwer Law International, 2012) • Editor, Tax Law and Development (with Miranda Stewart) (Edward Elgar, 2012) • “The Future of Tax Incentives” book chapter in Tax Law and Development (Yariv Brauner and Miranda Stewart, eds.) (Edward Elgar, 2012) • “Formulary Taxation and Transfer Pricing: the Good, the Bad, and the Misguided,” in The 2011 GREIT Annual Conference Proceedings (2012) • United States Report (with Christine Allie), in Lang et al. (Ed.), Tax Provisions in Non-Tax Agreements (Linde Verlag, 2012) • CCCTB and Fiscally Transparent Entities – A Third Countries’ Perspective (Linde, Vienna, Austria 2012) • Art. 5 of the OECD Model, in the IBFD Permanent Establishment Database (2012) • “Beneficial Ownership in United States’ Tax Law,” in Lang et. al., Beneficial Ownership (Linde, 2012) • Goosen case report, in Kemmerren et. al., Tax Treaty Case Law around the Globe - 2011 (Eucotax 2012) • Aloe Vera case report, in Kemmerren et. al., Tax Treaty Case Law around the Globe - 2011 (Eucotax 2012) • United States Report, in the 2011 Russia-Asia Annual Law Conference, Ural State University, Yekaterinburg, Conference Proceedings (2012) • U.S. International Taxation – Cases and Materials, (3rd Ed.) (with Reuven S. Avi-Yonah and Diane M. Ring) (Foundation Press, 2010) (including a Teacher’s Manual, 2011) • “The Meaning of ‘Enterprise,’ ‘Business’ and ‘Business Profits’ under United States Tax Treaties and Domestic Law” (with Allison Christians), in The Meaning of “Enterprise,” “Business” and “Business Profits” under Tax Treaties and EU Tax Law (Guglielmo Maisto, ed.) (IBFD, 2011) • “Policy Forum: Taxation of Corporate Groups — Lessons from the United States, 59(2) Canadian Tax J. 295 (2011) • Xiinx case report, in Lang et al., Tax Treaty Case Law around the Globe - 2010 (Linde, 2011) • Procter & Gamble Case report, in Lang et al., Tax Treaty Case Law around the Globe - 2010 (Linde, 2011) • “Why Does the United States Conclude Tax Treaties? And Why Does it not Have a Tax Treaty with Brazil?” (in Portuguese), in 26 Revista Direito Tributário Atual 109 (2011), and in the 2011 Bi-Annual IBDT International Tax Conference Proceedings (under the auspices of the University of Sao Paulo) Fenster Friel Harrison 10 Flournoy Germain KAREN C. BURKE Professor of Law; Richard B. Stephens Eminent Scholar Partnership Taxation (2d ed.) (with George Yin) (Aspen Law & Business, 2013) • Federal Income Taxation of Partners and Partnerships (4th ed.) (West Group, 2013) • “Passthrough Entities: The Missing Element in Business Tax Reform,” 40 Pepp. L. Rev. 1329 (2013) • “Notable Corporate Tax Articles of 2012” (with Barry), 139 Tax Notes 651 (2013) • “Reflections on Hernández-Truyol w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y Penalty Jurisdiction in Tigers Eye” (with Grayson McCouch), 136 Tax Notes 1581 (2012) • “Illusory Partnership Interests and the Anti-Antiabuse Rule” (with Grayson McCouch), 132 Tax Notes 813 (2011) • “Framing Economic Substance,” 31 Va. Tax Rev. 271 (2011) • Corporate Taxation (with George Yin) (Aspen Law & Business, 2011) Jonathan R. Cohen Professor; Associate Director, Institute for Dispute Resolution “Conflicts as Inner Trials: Transitions for Clients, Ideas for Lawyers,” 13 Cardozo J. of Conflict Resolution 393 (2012) • “Fostering RaceRelated Dialogue: Lessons from a Small Seminar,” 22 Univ. of Fla. J. of L. and Public Policy 407 (2012) • “The Path between Sebastian’s Hospitals: Fostering Reconciliation after a Tragedy,” 17 Barry L. Rev. 89 (2011) Stuart R. Cohn John H. and Mary Lou Dasburg Professor Securities Counseling for Small and Emerging Companies (West, 2011-12) • Florida Business Laws Annotated: Commentary, Cases and Forms (with Stuart D. Ames) (West, 2011-12) • “The New Crowdfunding Registration Exemption: Good Idea, Bad Execution,” 64 Fla. L. Rev. 1433 (2012) • Florida Business Laws Annotated: Commentary, Cases and Forms (with Stuart D. Ames) (West, 2010-11) Charles W. Collier Professor; Affiliate Professor of Philosophy “The Death of Gun Control: An American Tragedy,” 40 Critical Inquiry__ (forthcoming, 2014) • “Gun Control in America: An Autopsy Report,” 60:3 Dissent 81 (2013) • “An Inefficient Truth,”23:1-2 Critical Rev. Hutchinson Jerry 2013 repor t from the faculty 29-71 (2011) (Aspen Inst., 2011) Elizabeth Dale University of Florida Research Foundation Professor, 2013-2015; Professor of Law and Professor of History “From Opera to Real Democracy: Popular Constitutionalism & Web 2.0,”__ Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies 6 (London) (2013) • “Reconsidering the SeventeenthCentury: Legal History in the Americas,” in Blackwell Companion to American Legal History (Sally Hadden and Alfred Brophy, eds, Blackwell, 2013) • “Criminal Law and Justice in America,” in Blackwell Companion to American Legal History 422 (Sally Hadden and Alfred Brophy, eds.) (Blackwell, forthcoming, 2013) • “The Su Bao Case and the Layers of Everyday Citizenship in China, 1894-1904,” Multilayered Citizenship 110 (Willem Maas, ed.) (U. Penn. Press, 2013) • Criminal Justice in the United States 1789-1939, (Cambridge U. Press, 2011) • The Chicago Trunk Murder: Law and Justice at the Turn of the Century (Northern Illinois U. Press, 2011) • “Popular Sovereignty: A Case Study from the Antebellum Era,” Constitutional Mythologies: New Perspectives on Controlling the State 81 (Alain Marciano, ed.) (Springer, 2011) Jeffrey Davis Professor of Law; Gerald A. Sohn Research Scholar “Choosing Among Innocents: Should Donations to Charities be Protected from Avoidance as Fraudulent Transfers” 22 Univ. of Fla. J. of L. and Public Policy 407 (2012) Patricia E. Dilley Professor Social Security: The House that Roosevelt Built (with Panela Perun) Johnston King LARRY A. DiMATTEO Affiliate Professor; Huber Hurst Professor of Contract Law & Legal Studies, Warrington College of Business Administration Commercial Contract Law: Transatlantic Perspectives (Cambridge U. Press, 2013) • International Sales Law: A Global Challenge (Cambridge U. Press, 2014) • International Contracting: Law & Practice (3d ed.) (Wolters Kluwer Law International, 2013) • “Principle of Fair and Equitable Decision-making in International Contract Arbitration and its Affinity to International Soft Law,” 2 Chinese J. Comp. L. ___ (Oxford University Press, 2013) • “Contract Stories: Importance of Contextual Approach to Law”, ___Washington L. Rev. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “CISG as Basis for Comprehensive International Sales Law”, 58 Villanova L. Rev. 691 (2013) • “CISG in National Courts,” International Sales Law: A Global Challenge (Cambridge U. Press, 2012) • “Contract Law as Core and Contract Law as Peripheral: Fifty Years of Contract Law Scholarship,” 50 American Bus. L.J. 1 (2012) • “The Curious Case of Transborder Sales Law” in CISG and Regional Private Law Unification (Sellier European Publishers, 2012) • “Transatlantic Perspectives: Fundamental Themes and Debates” in Commercial Contract Law: A Transatlantic Perspective (with Qi Zhou and Severine Saintier) (Cambridge U. Press, 2012) • “Parallel National and International Laws — Czech Law and the Proposed Common European Sales Law,” 3 Czech Yearbook of Public & Private International Law 207 (2012) • “Unifying International Sales Law,” in Commercial Contract Klein Lidsky 11 Law: A Transatlantic Perspective (Cambridge U. Press, 2012) • “Strategic Contracting” (with George Siedel and Helena Haapio), in Proactive Law, (DJØF Publisher: Copenhagen, DN, 2012) • “CISG in National Courts,” Global Challenge of International Sales Law (Cambridge U. Press, 2012) • “False Dichotomies in Commercial Contract Interpretation,” 11 J. Int’l Trade L. & Policy 27 (2012) • “Law in Context: Teaching Legal Studies through the Lens of Extra-Legal Sources,” (with Sandra Miller), 29 J. Legal Studies Educ. (2012) • “Interpretive Uncertainty: Methodological Solutions for Interpreting the CISG,” (with André Janssen), 2 Netherlands J. of Commercial Law 52 (2012) • “Justice, Employment, and the Psychological Contract,” (with Robert Bird and Jason A. Colquitt), in 90 Or. L. Rev. 449 (2011) • “The Scholarly Response to the Harmonization of International Sales Law,” 30 J. Law & Commerce 1 (2011) • “Cosmopolitanism and the Private Law Text,” 5 European Rev. of Private Law 669 (2011) • “The Transformation of American Business Organizations: The Ascendency of the Limited Liability Company,” 110 J. of Comp. L. 37 (2011) • “Critical Issues in the Formation of Contracts under the CISG,” 3 Belgrade L. Rev. 67 (2011) • “Comparative Efficiency in International Sales Law,” (with Daniel Ostas), 26 Am. U. Int’l L. J. 102 (2011) Nancy E. Dowd David H. Levin Chair in Family Law; Director, Center on Children and Families “Unfinished Equality: The Case of Black Boys,” ___ Ind. J. L. & Soc. Equality ___ (forthcoming, 2014) • Editor, Families, Law and Society book series (NYU Press, since 2009) • “What Men? The Essentialist Error of The End of Men,” 93 B.U. L. Rev. (2013) • “Asking the Man Question: Masculinities Analysis and Feminist Theory,” in Exploring Masculinities: Feminist Legal Theory Reflections, (Michael Thomson and Martha Fineman, eds.) (Ashgate, 2013) • “Conceptualizing Elder Law,” in Different Approaches to Elder Law: Introduction to the Norma Elder Law Research Environment (Ann Numhauser-Henning, ed) (Norma Elder Law Workshop Lund, 2013) • “A Review of Fifty Years of Family Law: Essays for Stephen Cretney,” 46 Fam. L. Q. 473 (2013) • “Sperm, Testosterone, Masculinities, and Fatherhood” 13 Nev. L. J. 101 (2013) • “Fatherhood and Equality: Reconfiguring Masculinities,” 45 Suff. L. Rev. 1049 (2012) • “Collaborative Law at Divorce in the United States,” in “Le ragioni degli altri”. Mediazione e famiglia tra conflitto e dialogo: una prospettiva comparatistica ed interdisciplinare (“The reasons of the others”. Mediation and family between conflict and dialogue: a comparative and interdisciplinary perspective) (Elena Urso, ed.) (2012) • “Masculinities and Law: Feminist Legal Theory Meets Masculinities Theory” (with Nancy Levit and Ann McGinley), in Masculinities and Law: A Multidimensional Approach (Frank Rudy Cooper and Ann McGinley, eds.) (NYU Press, 2012) • Justice for Kids: Keeping Kids Out of the Juvenile Justice System (editor and author of introduction) (NYU Press, 2011) Mark A. Fenster Professor; Cone, Wagner, Nugent, Hazouri & Roth Tort Professor “The Implausibility of Secrecy,” 63 Hastings L. J. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Disclosure’s Effects: WikiLeaks and Transparency,” 97 Iowa L. Rev. 753 (2012) • Online symposium, with response essays and author response, in 97 Iowa L. Rev. Bull. 51 et seq. (2012) • “The Transparency Fix: Advocating Legal Rights and Their Alternatives in the Pursuit of a Visible State,” 73 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 443 (2012) • “Failed Exactions,” 36 Vt. L. Rev. 623 (2012) • “Foreword,” to Victoria Pagán, Conspiracy Theories in Ancient Rome ((U. of Texas Press, 2012) • “Teoriziranje konspirativne politke,” 47 Dialogi: Revija Za Kulturoin Družbo 22 (2011 Translation into Slovenian of Chapter 2, Conspiracy Theories: Secrecy and Power in American Culture (ed.) (U. of Minnesota Press, 2009) Alyson Craig Flournoy Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs; Professor; Alumni Research Scholar “Incorporating Resilience and Innovation into Law and Policy: A case for preserving a natural resource legacy and promoting a sustainable future” (with Tarsha Eason, Heriberto Cabezas and Michael Gonzalez) in SocialEcological Resilience and Law (Ahjond S. Gamestani and Craig R. Allen, eds.) (Columbia Univ. Press, forthcoming, 2014) • “Wetlands Regulation in an Era of Climate Change: Can Section 404 Meet the Challenge?” (with Allison Fischman) 4 G.W. J. of Energy & Envt’l L. 67 (forthcoming, 2013) • “Three Meta-Lessons Government and Industry Should Learn from the BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster and Why They Won’t,” 38 B.C. Envtl. Aff. L. Rev. 281 (2011) Michael K. Friel Associate Dean and Director, Graduate Tax Program; Professor Understanding Federal Income Taxation (with Martin Burke) (4th Edition, 2013) (LexisNexis) • Modern Estate Planning (with Martin Burke and Elaine Gagliardi) (2012-13 updates to 5-volume treatise) (LexisNexis) • Taxation of Individual Income (with Martin Burke) (10th Edition, 2012) (LexisNexis) • Treatise, Modern Estate Planning (2nd ed.) (with Martin Burke and Elaine Gagliardi) (Matthew Bender LexisNexis, Annual Supp., 2009-11) claire m. germain Associate Dean for Legal Information; Clarence J. TeSelle Professor of Law “Worldwide Access to Foreign Law: International and National Developments Toward Digital Authentication,” 9 Comparative Law Journal of the Pacific- Journal de Droit Comparé du Pacifique 185 (2013) • “CISG: Translation Issues: Reducing Legal Babelism,” in Global Challenge of International Sales Law, (Larry DiMatteo, ed.) (Cambridge U. Press, 2013) • “Digitizing the World’s Laws,” in International Handbook of Information Management 181 (Richard Danner and Jules Winterton, eds.) J Joining the faculty of the University of Florida Levin College of Law has already enhanced my scholarship and teaching. The law school sits on the campus of one of the largest research institutions in the world. Already among the top public universities in the nation, the University of Florida will undoubtedly continue to improve upon its excellent reputation. The diversity and strength of graduate research programs at the University of Florida permit legal scholars to collaborate on projects with leading scholars in the social sciences, humanities, and physical sciences. I am excited about working in such a dynamic and intellectually stimulating environment. Luke 12 w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y —Darren Hutchinson, Professor of Law; Stephen C. O’Connell Chair Malavet 2013 repor t from the faculty Marian Mashburn McCouch McMahon 13 (Ashgate, 2011) • “The French Jury at a Crossroads,” (with Valerie P. Hans), 74 Chicago-Kent L. Rev. 101 (2011) Jeffrey L. Harrison Stephen C. O’Connell Chair “Private Antitrust Enforcement in the United States and the European Union: Standing and Antitrust Injury,” in Oxford Handbook of International Antitrust Economics, (Daniel Sokol and Roger Blair, eds.) (forthcoming, 2014) • Understanding Antitrust and its Economic Implications (with E.T. Sullivan) (LexisNexis, 6th ed.) (2013) • Law and Economics: Positive, Normative and Behavioral Perspectives (West Publishing, 3rd ed.) (2013) • “Hot News: Toward a Functional Approach,” (with Robyn Shelton) 34 Cardozo L. Rev. 1649 (2013) • “A Nihilistic View of the Efficient Breach” ___ Mich. St. L. Rev. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Complications in the Antitrust Response to Monopsony,” in Global Limits of Antitrust (Daniel Sokol & Ioannis Lianos, eds.) (Stanford U. Press, 2012) • “The Influence of Law and Economics Scholarship on Contract Law: Impressions TwentyFive Years Later,”68 N.Y.U. Ann. Surv. Amer. L. 1 (2012) • “Privacy, Copyright, and Letters,” 3 Elon College L. Rev. 161 (2012) • Law and Economics in a Nutshell (5th ed.) (West, 2011) • “Regulation, Deregulation, and Happiness,” 32 Cardozo L. Rev. 2369 (2011) • “Law and Happiness,” Book Review, 21 Fla. J. L. & Public Policy 413 (2011) Berta Esperanza HernándezTruyol Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families “Culture Clashes: Indigenous Populations and Globalization — The Case of Belo Monte,” in Ideology, Mills 14 Nagan Politics and Demands in Spanish Language, Literature and Film (Teresa Fernández Ulloa, ed.) (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012) • “Latina/o Indigenas” (with Dr. Devon Peña), in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latino/a Politics, Law and Social Movements (2012) • “Indigenous Hispanics Living in the Americas” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latino/a Politics, Law and Social Movements, (forthcoming, 2014) • Senior Editor, The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in Contemporary Politics, Law, and Social Movements (Deena Gonzalez & Suzanne Oboler, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, 2012) • “A Need for Culture Change: GLBT Latinas/os and Immigration,” 6 FIU L. Rev. 269 (2012) • “Revisiting Mothering? – A Mother’s Thoughts: A Response to Darren Rosenblum’s Unsex Mothering: Toward a Culture of New Parenting,” Harvard J.L. & Gender Online (2012) • “On Que(e) rying Feminism: Reclaiming the F Word,” (Kathryn Abrams, ed.), in Issues in Legal Scholarship, (Be. Press, 2011) • “Unsex CEDAW? No! SuperSex It!,” 20 Colum. J. of Gender & L. 195 (2011) • “Narratives of Identity: Nation, and Outsiders Within Outsiders: Not Yet a Post-Anything World,” 14 Harv. Latino L. Rev. 325 (2011) • “A Rose by Any Other Name, A Response to Libby Adler’s Gay Rights and Lefts: Rights Critique and Distributive Analysis for Real Law Reform,” Harv. Civ. Rts. – Civ. Liberties L. Rev. colloquium (2011) Darren Lenard Hutchinson Professor of Law; Stephen C. O’Connell Chair “‘Not Without Political Power’: Gays and Lesbians, Equal Protection, and the Suspect Class Doctrine,” 65 Ala. L. Rev.___ (forthcoming, 2014) • Sexual Politics and Social Change, in Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge (2nd Nance Noah Ed.) (Richard Delgado, ed.,) (2013) Robert H. Jerry, II Dean; Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor “Understanding Crop Insurance,” Critical Issues Volume, The New Appleman on Insurance (LexisNexis, forthcoming, 2013) • “Leadership and Followership,” 44 U. Tol. L. Rev. 345 (2013) • Understanding Insurance Law (5th ed.) (with Douglas R. Richmond) (LexisNexis, 2012) • “Bad Faith at Middle Age: Comments on Abraham, ‘Liability for Bad Faith and the Principle Without a Name (Yet)’,” 19 Conn. Insurance L.J. 13 (2012) • “Public Forum 2.1: Public Higher Education Institutions and Social Media” (with Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky), 14 Fla. Coastal L. Rev. 55 (2012) E. Lea Johnston Associate Professor; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center “Smoke and Mirrors: Model Penal Code § 305.7 and Compassionate Release,” 4 Wake Forest J. of L. & Pol’y ___ (forthcoming, 2014) • “Vulnerability and Desert: A Theory of Sentencing and Mental Illness,” 103 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 147 (2013) • “Theorizing Mental Health Courts,” 89 Wash. U. L. Rev. 519 (2012) • “Representational Competence: Defining the Limits of the Right to Self-Representation at Trial,” 86 Notre Dame L. Rev. 523 (2011) Shani M. King Professor; Co-Director, Center on Children and Families “Alone and Unrepresented: A Call to Congress to Provide Counsel for Unaccompanied Minors,” 50 Harv. J. Legis. 331 (2013) • “Owning Laura Silsby’s Shame: How The Haitian Child Trafficking Scheme Embodies The Western Disregard Nunn Olexa w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y for the Integrity of Poor Families,” 25 Harv. Hum. Rts. J. 1 (2012) • “Legal Representation of Dependent Children: A 2012 Report on Florida’s Patchwork System” (co-authored with Florida’s Children First Inc.) (2012) • “Latinas and Domestic Violence: Barriers to Institutional Resources,” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latino/a Politics, Law and Social Movements (Suzanne Oboler & Deena Gonzalez, eds.) (2012) • “The Family Law Canon in a (Post?) Racial Era,” 72 Ohio St. L. J. 575 (2011) • “Competing Rights and Responsibilities in Intercountry Adoption: Understanding a Child’s Right to Grow up in the Context of her Family and Culture” in Taking Responsibility, Law and the Changing Family (C. Lind, J. Bridgeman, H. Keating, eds., Ashgate Publishing) (2011) of Florida Water Law” in Waters and Water Rights (Robert E. Beck, ed.) (Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.) (entry and annual updates, 2005-2011) • A Review of the Use of Science and Adaptive Management in California’s Draft Bay Delta Conservation Plan (coauthor as member of Panel to Review California’s Draft Bay Delta Conservation Plan) (National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011) • “The Dormant Commerce Clause and Water Export: Toward a New Analytical Paradigm,” 35 Harv. Envtl L. Rev. 131 (2011) Christine A. Klein Chesterfield Smith Professor; Director, LL.M. in Environmental & Land Use Law Program “The Lesson of Tarrant Regional Water District v. Herrmann: Water Conservation, not Water Commerce,” in Center for Progressive Reform Blog (2013) • A History of Unnatural Disaster: Mississippi River Tragedies (with Sandra B. Zellmer) (NYU Press, 2013) • Natural Resources Law: A Place-Based Book of Problems and Cases (3d ed.)(Aspen Publishers) (2013) • “Water Bankruptcy,” 97 Minn. L. Rev. 560 (2012) • “Compartmentalized Thinking and the Clean Water Act,” 4 George Washington J. Energy & Environmental L. 38 (2013) • Sustainable Water and Environmental Management in the California Bay-Delta (co-author as member of National Research Council Committee on Sustainable Water and Environmental Management in the California Bay-Delta) (2012) • “Survey Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky Professor; Stephen C. O’Connell Chair; Associate Dean for International Programs First Amendment Law: Cases and Materials (2d. ed.) (with Ronald Krotoszynski, Jr., Steven Gey, and Christina Wells) (Aspen, 2013) • “How Not to Criminalize Cyberbullying,” __ Mo. L. Rev. __ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Not a Free Press Court?,” 6 B.Y.U.L. Rev. 1819 (2012) • “U.S. Media Law Update,” 17 Media & Arts L. Rev. (2012) • “Recent Developments in the Law of Social Media,” in Communications Law in the Digital Age of 2012 (with Ron Nell Anderson Jones) (PLI) (2012) • “Public Forum 2.1: Public Higher Education Institutions and Social Media” (with Robert H. Jerry, II), 14 Fla. Coastal L. Rev. 55 (2012) • “Legal Pitfalls of Social Media Usage,” (with Daniel C. Friedel) in Social Media: Usage & Impact (Hana Noor Al-Deen and John Allen Hendricks, eds.) (2011) • “Incendiary Speech and Social Media,” 44 Texas Tech L. Rev. 1 (2011) • “Public Forum 2.0,” 91 Boston U. L. Rev. 1975 (2011) • “Government Sponsored Social Media and Public Forum Doctrine: Perils and Pitfalls,” 19 The Public Lawyer No. 2 (2011) • Mass Media Law: Cases and Materials (8th Page Rowe Riskin 2013 repor t from the faculty Rush ed.) (with Marc A. Franklin and David A. Anderson) (Foundation Press, 2011) Charlene Luke Professor “The Relevance Game: Congress’s Choices for Economic Substance Gamemakers,” 66 Tax Lawyer 551 (2013) • “The Role of Developed World Tax Incentives in Microfinance” in Tax, Law and Development 241 (Yariv Brauner & Miranda Stewart, eds.) (Edward Elgar, 2013) • “Managing the Next Deluge: A Tax Approach to Flood ‘Insurance’” (with Aviva Abramosky), 18 Conn. Ins. L. J. 1 (2012) • “The Role of Developed World Tax Incentives in Microfinance,” in Tax Law and Development (Yariv Brauner and Miranda Stewart, eds.) (Edward Elgar, 2012) • “What Would Henry Simons Do?: Using an Ideal to Shape and Explain the Economic Substance Doctrine,” 11 Hous. Bus. & Tax L. J. 108 (2011) Pedro A. Malavet Professor; Director, LL.M. in Comparative Law Program; Affiliate Professor of Latin American Studies “Cluster Introduction: Puerto Rico: Interrogating Economic, Political, and Linguistic Injustice,” 42 Cal. Western Int’l L. J. 101 (2012) • “National Minority,” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in Contemporary Politics, Law, and Social Movements (Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol & Suzanne Oboler, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, 2011) • “The Monroe Doctrine and American Territorial Expansion: How the Border Crossed Us,” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in Contemporary Politics, Law, and Social Movements (Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol & Suzanne Oboler, eds.) (Oxford U. Press, 2011) Russell-Brown Seigel 15 OMRI Y. MARIAN Assistant Professor of Law “Are Cryptocurrencies ‘Super’ Tax Havens?” 112 Mich. L. Rev. First Impressions ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Jurisdiction to Tax Corporations,” 54 B.C.L. Rev.___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Meaningless Comparisons: Corporate Tax Reform Discourse in the United States,” 32 Va. Tax Rev. 133 (2012) • “Taxation of Structured Debt in a Low Rate Environment,” (with Andrew D. Moin), 135 Tax Notes 323 (2012) • Global Perspectives on Income Taxation Law (with Reuven Avi-Yonah and Nicola Sartori) (Oxford U. Press, 2011) Amy R. Mashburn Professor; Director, Lawyering and Professionalism Program “Making Civility Democratic,” 47 Hous. L. Rev. 1147 (2011) GRAYSON M.P. McCOUCH Gerald Sohn Professor of Law Gratuitous Transfers (6th ed.) (with Mark Ascher, Elias Clark (deceased) & Arthur W. Murphy) (Thomson/West, 2013) • “Who Killed the Rule Against Perpetuities?” 40 Pepp. L. Rev. 1291 (2013) • “Reflections on Penalty Jurisdiction in Tigers Eye” (with Karen Burke), 136 Tax Notes 1581 (2012) • “Illusory Partnership Interests and the Anti-Antiabuse Rule” (with Karen Burke), 132 Tax Notes 813 (2011) • Federal Estate and Gift Taxation (10th ed.) (with Boris Bittker (deceased) & Elias Clark (deceased)) (Thomson/West, 2011) • Federal Estate and Gift Taxation (7th ed.) (with John K. McNulty) (Thomson/ West, 2011) Martin J. McMahon Jr. James J. Freeland Eminent Scholar “Recent Developments in Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2012,” (with Ira B. Shepard & Daniel L. Simmons),13 Fla. Tax Rev. 503 (2013) • Federal Income Taxation of Partnerships and S Corporations, (5th ed.) and Study Problems (with Paul McDaniel (deceased) and Daniel L. Simmons) (Foundation Press, 2012) • Co-editor, The Proper Tax Base: Structural Fairness From an International and Comparative Perspective – Essays in Honor of Paul McDaniel (with Yariv Brauner) and contributor of chapter, “Taxing Tax Expenditures” (Kluwer Law Int’l, 2012) • ”Now You See It, Now You Don’t: The Comings and Goings of Disregarded Entities,” 65 The Tax Lawyer 259 (2012) • ”Recent Developments in Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2011,” 12 Florida Tax Rev. 183 (with Ira B. Shepard and Daniel L. Simmons) (2012) • “Fundamental Principles of Consolidated Corporate Income Tax Returns,” 12 Fla. Tax Rev. ___ (2012) • “Understanding Consolidated Returns,” 12 Fla. Tax Rev. 125 (2012) • Annual Supplements (2010-12) to Federal Income Taxation of Business Organization (4th ed.) (with Paul McDaniel (deceased) and Daniel L. Simmons) (Foundation Press, 2006) • Annual Supplements (201012) to Federal Income Taxation of Partnerships and S Corporations (4th ed.) (with Paul McDaniel (deceased) and Daniel L. Simmons) (Foundation Press, 2006) • Annual Supplements (2010-12) to Federal Income Taxation of Corporations (3rd ed.) (with Paul McDaniel (deceased) and Daniel L. Simmons) (Foundation Press, 2006) • Annual Supplements to Federal Income Taxation, Cases and Materials (6th ed.) (with Paul McDaniel (deceased), Daniel L. Simmons and Gregg Polsky) (Foundation Press, 2008) • “Consolidated Corporate Income Tax Returns in the United States,” Svensk Skattetidning 597 (2011) • Federal Income Taxation of Individuals (3rd ed.) (with Boris I. Bittker (deceased) and Lawrence A. Zelenak) (Warren, Gorham & Lamont, 2002) semi-annual cumulative supplements (2010-2011) • “Recent Developments in Federal Income Taxation: The Year 2010,” 10 Fla. Tax Rev. 569 (with Ira B. Shepard and Daniel L. Simmons) (2011) • “Taxing Tax Expenditures,” 130 Tax Notes 775 (2011) JON L. MILLS Dean Emeritus; Professor; Director, Center for Governmental Responsibility “Privacy and Press Intrusions: New Media, Old Law,” The Right to Privacy in the Light of Media Convergence: Perspectives from Three Continents (Media Convergence Series No. 3) 88-113, Berlin, Germany: De Gruyter (Dieter Dörr & Russell Weaver, eds.) (2012) • “Crisis in the Courts: Reconnaissance and Recommendations,” (with Peter T. Grossi, Jr.) in Future Trends in State Courts 2012: Special Focus on Courts and Community, National Center for State Courts (C. Flango et. al, eds., 2012) • “Alternative Dispute Resolution in the United States: In Pursuit of a Lawyer’s True Function,” in Proceedings of the Brazil-U.S. Judicial Initiative, The Brazil Institute of the Woodrow Wilson Center (2011) WINSTON P. NAGAN Professor; Samuel T. Dell Research Scholar; Director, Institute of Human Rights and Peace Development; Affiliate Professor of Anthropology; Affiliate Professor of Latin American Studies; Affiliate Professor African Studies; Fellow, Royal Society of the Arts; Fellow, World Academy of Art and Science “Overview of Policy and Legal Conditions Concerning Recognition of Palestinian Statehood,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) in The Membership of Palestine in the United Nations Legal and Practical Implications (Mutaz M. Qafisheh, ed.) Cambridge Scholars Publishing (2013) • “Freedom Languished for Baha’is in Iran,” Washington Post, Feb. 25, 2013 • “The Right to Development,” Cadmus, Issue 6, Vol. 1(2013) • “The Emerging Restrictions of Sovereign Immunity: Preemptory Norms of International Law, the UN Charter and the Application of Modern Communications Theory,” (with Joshua L. Root) 38:2 N. C. J. Int’l & Com. Reg. 375-472 (2012) • Contextual-Configurative Jurisprudence: The Law, Science and Policies of Human Dignity, Vanderplas (2013) • “Why They Deny: Values, Human Rights, and the Persecution of Iran’s Bahai Community,” Education Under Fire (2013) • “Sovereignty in Theory and Practice,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) San Diego Int’l L. J., Vol. 13, No. 2 (2012) • “The Legal and Policy Implications of the Possibility of Palestinian Statehood,” (with Haddad) UC Davis Jo. Intl Law & Policy, Vol. 18, No. 2 (2012) • “Recognition of Palestinian Statehood: A Clarification I I have a longstanding interest in business tax reform and its implications for passthrough entities such as partnerships, limited liability corporations, and S corporations. Passthrough entities now account for roughly half of net business income, and choice-of-entity issues are increasingly important not only for tax specialists but for nearly all practitioners engaged in business planning. Any serious proposal to overhaul the corporate income tax should also give careful consideration to the treatment of passthrough entities. Sokol 16 w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y 2013 repor t from the faculty —Karen Burke, Professor of Law; Richard B. Stephens Eminent Scholar Stinneford Stinneford Tritt Willis 17 of the Interests of the Concerned Parties,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) 40:2 Ga. Jo. Intl. & Comp. Law 341-422 (2012) • “Simulated ICJ Judgment,” Cadmus, Volume I, Issue 4 (2012) • “New Paradigm for Global Rule of Law,” Cadmus, Vol. 1, Issue 4 (with Jacobs) (2012) • “The Global Values Discourse,” (with Jacobs) Eruditio, Vol. 1, Issue 1 (2012) • “Individuality, Humanism, & Human Rights,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) Eruditio, Vol. 1, Issue 1(2012) • “Nuclear Threats and Security,” Cadmus, Volume 1, Issue 5 (2012) • “Sovereignty and Nuclear Weapons: The Need for Real Sovereign Authority Rooted in the People’s Global Expectations about Survival and Security,” Cadmus, Vol. 1, Issue 5 (2012) • Configurative Jurisprudence: The Law, Science, and Policies of Human Dignity (Vandeplas Pub., 2012) • Editor-inChief, ERUDITIO (Issues 1-3) (J. of World Academy of Art & Science), http://eruditio.worldacademy.org/ • ”Inflated Federalism and Deflated International Law: Roberts CJ v. the ICJ,” in Global Jurist (2012) (with Benjamin Goodman) • “Overview of Policy and Legal Conditions Concerning the Recognition of Palestinian Statehood,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), __ Palestine Law and Human Rights Rev. __ (2013) • “Palestinian Independence vs. the Independence of Namibia: American Foreign Policy and the Required Palestinian Strategy in Relation to the Unites States Namibia and Palestine,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), __ Palestine Law and Human Rights Rev. __ (2013) • “Individuality, Humanism, & Human Rights,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), ERUDITO (2012) • “Individualism of Human Subjectivity,” (with Garry Jacobs), ERUDITIO (2012) • “New Paradigm for Global Rule of Law,” (with Garry Jacobs), CADMUS (2012) • Wolf 18 “Simulated ICJ Judgment: Revisiting the Lawfulness of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons,” CADMUS (2012) • “Law, Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear Energy,” (Excerpts published in the WAAS Newsletter, 2012) (with Aitza M. Haddad) (2012) • “Sovereignty in Theory and Practice,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) 13:2 San Diego Intl L. J. 429-520 (2012) • “The Holocaust and Mass Atrocity: The Continuing Challenge for Decision,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) ___ Mich. St. Int’l L. Rev. ___ (2013) • “Genocide & The Shoah (The Holocaust): Intellectual Tools for Education & Public Policy Decision,” (with Aitza M. Haddad) 12:1 Global Jurist Advances Article 5 (2012) • “The War on Terror and International Obligation: Humanitarian and Human Rights Issue,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), in Encyclopedia of Globalization (2012) • “The Legal and Policy Implications of the Possibility of Palestinian Statehood,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), in 18:2 U.C. Davis J. of Int’l L. & Policy 343-444 (2012) • “Protecting the Economic Patrimony of Indigenous Nations: The Case of the Shuar,” 46:2 J. of the Policy Sciences 143-159 (2012) • Nuclear Weapons and International Law, (with Aitza M. Haddad), Report to the American Branch of the International Law Association, published in the Asian Defense Rev. (Commander Jasjit Singh, Editor and Director of the center for Air Power Studies (New Delhi)) (2012) • “The Political Economy of the Drive to the Bottom,” editorial, The Gainesville Sun (April 18, 2011) • “Human Rights, Liberty & Socio-Economic Justice: Economic Theory and the Ascent of Private Property Values,” 1(2)CADMUS (April 2011) • “Transformation to Democracy in Egypt and U.S. Policy,” Editorial, The Gainesville Sun, Jan. 31, 2011 • “International Courts,” (with Wright Aitza M. Haddad), in Encyclopedia of Globalization (2011/2012) • “International Law and the War on Terror,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), in Encyclopedia of Globalization (2011/2012) • “Recognition of Palestinian Statehood,” (with Aitza M. Haddad), 40 Ga. J. of Int’l & Comp. L. 341 (2012) • “Human Rights and Employment,” 1 CADMUS 49 (2011) JASON P. NANCE Assistant Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families “Students, Security, and Race,” 63 Emory L.J. __ (forthcoming, ____) • “Fostering Safe, Resilient Learning Environments After Newtown,” 71 Educ. Leadership __ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Random, Suspicionless Searches of Public School Students’ Belongings: A Legal, Empirical, and Normative Analysis,” 83 U. Colo. L. Rev. 367 (2013) • “School Security Considerations After Newtown,” 65 Stan. L. Rev. Online 103 (2013) Lars Noah Professor “Turn the Beat Around?: Deactivating Implanted Cardiac-Assist Devices,” 39 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 1229 (2013) • “Whatever Happened to the ‘Frankenfish’?: The FDA’s Footdragging on Transgenic Salmon,” 65 Me. L. Rev. 606 (2013) • Law, Medicine, and Medical Technology: Cases & Materials (3d ed.) (with Teacher’s Manual) (Foundation Press, 2012) • “Truth or Consequences?: Commercial Free Speech vs. Public Health Promotion (at the FDA),” 21 Health Matrix 31 (2011) • Op-ed: “The Problem with the ‘Disease’ Label,” The New York Times (online), Nov. 28, 2011 Zheng Kenneth B. Nunn Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center “The Black Nationalist Cure to Disproportionate Minority Contact,” in Justice For Kids: Keeping Kids Out of the Juvenile Justice System (Nancy Dowd, ed.) (NYU Press, 2011) • “The ‘R-Word’: A Tribute to Derrick Bell,” 22 U. Fla. J. L. & Pub. Policy 431 (2011) MICHAEL T. OLEXA Affiliate Professor; Professor and Director, Center for Agricultural and National Resource Law “Equine ‘Lemon’ Law” (with Broome and Kuncl) ___ Drake J. Agri. L. ___(forthcoming, 2013) • “Current and Future Water Availability: Public Opinion in the Southern United States” (with Borisova, Evans, Smolen) 51:1 Journal of Extension article No. 1RIB7 (2013) • “Liability Basics and the Importance of Risk Management,” (with Zach Broome, Derrill McAteer and Gregory Steube), in Stored Product Protection (Kansas State Univ. Press, 2012) • “Legal Aspects of Pest Management and Pesticides,” (with Zach Broome), in Encyclopedia of Environmental Management (Sven Erik Jorgenson, ed.) (Taylor and Francis Group Pub., 2012) • “Opportunities for Improving Risk Communication During the Permitting Process for Entomophagous Biological Control Agents: A Review of Current Systems,” (with Paraiso Oulimathe, M.T.K. Kairo, S.D. Hight, N.C. Leppla, J.P. Cuda, and M. Owens), Bio Control. J. of the International Organization for Biological Control (2012) • “Cash, Crops, Chemicals and Cosmetics: A Mid-Green Eco-Labeling Approach,” (with R. Benjamin Lingle, Kimberly Stewart and Damian C. Adams), 8 J. of Food Law and Policy Baldwin w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y Gordon 2013 repor t from the faculty 223 (University of Arkansas School of Law) (2012) • ”A Grave Situation: Protecting the Deceased and Their Final Resting Places From Destruction,” (with Nancy Hodge, Tracey L. Owens and Caycee D. Hampton), 86 The Fla. Bar J. No.9 (2012) • “Protecting Equine Rescue from Being Put Out To Pasture: Whether Ranches Dedicated To Abused, Abandoned, and Aging Horses May Qualify for ‘Agricultural’ Classification Under Florida’s Greenbelt Law,” (with J. Cossey and Katherine Smallwood), 16 Drake J. of Agri. L. 69 (2011) • “Florida Agriculture: Still in the Crosshairs,” (with William Crispin and R. Benjamin Lingle), 85 The Fla. Bar J. 45 (2011) William H. Page Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar in Electronic Communications and Administrative Law; Professor “Objective and Subjective Theories of Concerted Action,” 79 Antitrust L.J. ___ (forthcoming 2013) • “Optimal Antitrust Penalties: A Synthesis,” in Oxford Handbook of International Antitrust Economics (Daniel Sokol and Roger Blair, eds.) (forthcoming, 2013) • 2 Kintner Federal Antitrust Law (with Joseph Bauer and John Lopatka) (LexisNexis, 3d ed., 2013); • “Antitrust, Innovation, and Product Design in Platform Markets: Microsoft and Intel,” (with Seldon J. Childers), in 78 Antitrust L. J. 363 (2012) •“Standard Oil and U.S. Steel: Predation and Collusion in the Law of Monopolization and Mergers,” 85 S. Cal. L. Rev. 657 (2012) • “A Neo-Chicago Approach to Concerted Action,” 78 Antitrust L. J. 173 (2012) • “Indirect Purchaser Suits After the Class Action Fairness Act: Reconciling Multilayer Interests in Antitrust Litigation,” Collective Actions: Enhancing Access to Justice and Reconciling Multilayer Interests 275 (Stefan Wrbka, ed.) (Cambridge U. Hiers Israel Press, 2012) • Kintner’s Federal Antitrust Law (11 vols.) Annual Supplements (with Joseph Bauer and John Lopatka) (LexisNexis, 2010-12) Leonard L. Riskin Chesterfield Smith Professor Dispute Resolution and Lawyers (with James E. Westbrook, Chris Guthrie, Richard Reuben, Jennifer Robbennolt & Nancy Welsh) (5th ed.) (West, forthcoming, 2014) • “Two (or More) Concepts of Mindfulness in Law and Conflict Resolution, ” in The WileyBlackwell Handbook of Mindfulness (Amanda Ie, Christelle Ngoumen and Ellen Langer, eds.) (Wiley-Blackwell) (forthcoming, 2014) • “Managing Inner and Outer Conflict: Selves, Subpersonalities, and Internal Family Systems,” 18 Harv. Negot. L. Rev. 1 (2013) • “The ‘Negotiation’ Within: Connecting and Managing Inner and Outer Conflict,” 18 Harv. Negot. L. Rev. ___ (2013) •“Eastern and Western Psychological Concepts of Mindfulness in Conflict Resolution and Law,” in The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Mindfulness (Amanda Ie, Christelle Ngoumen and Ellen Langer, eds.) (Wiley-Blackwell, forthcoming, 2013) • ”Awareness and The Legal Profession: An Introduction to the Mindful Lawyer Symposium,” 61 J. of Legal Educ. 634 (2012) Elizabeth A. Rowe Feldman Gale Term Professor in Intellectual Property Law; UF Research Foundation Professor; Director, Program in Intellectual Property Law Trade Secret Law in a Nutshell (with Sharon Sandeen) (West, forthcoming, 2013) • “Intellectual Property and Employee Selection,” 48 Wake Forest L. Rev. 25 (2013) • Co-Editor, Trade Secrets and Undisclosed Information (with Sharon Sandeen) and contributor Lokken Mazur 19 of one chapter, “Introduction” (with Sharon Sandeen) (Edward Elgar Publishing, forthcoming, 2013) • Cases and Materials on Trade Secret Law (with Teacher’s Manual) (with Sharon Sandeen) (West, 2012) • “Striking a Balance: When Should TradeSecret Law Shield Disclosures to the Government?” 96 Iowa L. Rev. 791 (2011) • “Patents, Genetically Modified Food, and IP Overreaching” 64 S.M.U. L. Rev. 859 (2011) Sharon E. Rush Associate Dean for Faculty Development; Irving Cypen Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families; Co-Founder, Center for the Study of Race and Race Relations “Federalism, Diversity, Equality, and Article III Judges: Geography, Identity and Bias,” 79 Mo. L. Rev. ____ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Doing Anti-racism: Toward an Egalitarian American Society,” Race, Gender, Sexuality, and Social Class: Dimensions of Inequality (S.J. Ferguson, ed.) (Sage Pub., forthcoming, 2013) (with Joe Feagin and Jacqueline Johnson) (reprinted from 29(1) Contemporary Sociology 95 (2000)) • “Talking About Race and Equality,” 22 U. Fla. J. L. & Pub. Policy 417 (2011) Katheryn Russell-Brown Chesterfield Smith Professor of Law; Director, Center for the Study of Race and Race Relations; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center “The Myth of Black Crime,” in Demystifying Crime and Criminal Justice (2d ed.) (Robert M. Bohm and Jeffrey T. Walker, eds.) (Roxbury Press, 2012) Michael L. Seigel Samuel T. Dell Term Professor of Law; Director, Criminal Justice Center; Director, Criminal Law Clinics “Prosecution of Public Corruption in the United States,” in Temas de Anticorrupção & Compliance (A Del Debbio, et al. eds., Elsevier Publishers, 2013) • White Collar Crime: Law, Procedure, Practice, and Theory (Aspen Pub., 2011) (with Teacher’s Manual, 2012) D. Daniel Sokol Associate Professor Merger Control under China’s AntiMonopoly Law, ___ N.Y.U. J. L. & Bus. ___ (forthcoming, 2014) • Editor, Oxford Handbook of International Antitrust Economics (with Roger Blair) and contributor of two chapters “Introduction” (with Roger Blair) and “Corporate Governance and Compliance” (with Rosa Abrantes-Metz) (Oxford U. Press forthcoming, 2014) • Editor, Handbook of Global Antitrust and Competition Law Compliance, (with Daniel Crane and Ariel Ezrachi) (Oxford University Press, forthcoming, 2014) and contributor of chapter “Overview” (with Daniel Crane and Ariel Ezrachi) • Editor, Competition and the Role of the State (with Thomas K. Cheng and Ioannis Lianos) and contributor of two chapters “Introduction” (with Thomas K. Cheng and Ioannis Lianos) and “What Drives Merger Control? How Government Sets the Rules and Play” (Stanford U. Press, forthcoming, 2014) • “Policing the Firm,” __ Notre Dame L. R. __ (forthcoming, 2014) • “Compliance, Detection, and Mergers and Acquisitions” (with Vivek Ghosal), 34 Managerial and Decision Economics 514 (2013) • “Understanding Corporate Compliance and Wrongdoing in Interdisciplinary Context,” 34 Managerial and Decision Economics 437 (2013) • Editor, Competition Law and Development (with Thomas K. Cheng and Ioannis Lianos) and contributor of two chapters “Introduction” (with Thomas K. Cheng and Ioannis Lianos) and “Prioritizing Cartel Enforcement in Developing World Competition Agencies” (with Andreas Stephan) (Stanford U. Press, 2013) • “Grading the Professor: Evaluating Bill Kovacic’s Contributions to Antitrust Engineering,” (with Christine Wilson and Joseph Nord), in New Frontiers of Antitrust: A Tribute to Bill Kovacic (Institute of Competition Law, 2013) •“Welfare Standards in U.S. and EU Antitrust Enforcement,” (with Roger Blair) 81 Fordham L. R. 2497 (2013) • “Josh Wright on Criminal and Complex Litigation,” Antitrust Source 2013 • “The Antitrust-Busters With Gavels,” (with Daniel Crane) Wall Street Journal (2013) • Editor, The Global Limits of Competition (with Ioannis Lianos) and contributor of two chapters “Introduction” (with Ioannis Lianos) and “AntiCompetitive Government Regulation” (Stanford U. Press, 2012) • “The Rule of Reason and the Goals of Antitrust: An Economic Approach,” (with Roger Blair) 78 Antitrust L. J. 471 (2012) • “Business Strategy Against Dominant Firms and the Choice of Public and Private Enforcement,” 85 S.Cal. L. Rev. 689 (2012) • “Cartels, Corporate Compliance and What Practitioners Really Think About Enforcement,” 78 Antitrust L. J. 201 (2012) • “Antitrust Energy,” (with Barak Orbach), 85 S. Cal. L. Rev. 429 (2012) • “Merger Control: Key International Norms and Differences” in International Research Handbook on Competition Law (with William Blumenthal) (Ariel Ezrachi, ed.) (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012) • “Explaining the Importance of Public Choice for Law,” 109 Mich. L. Rev. 1029 (2011) • “Antitrust Merger Efficiencies in the Shadow of the Law” (with James A. Fishkin), 64 Vand. L. Rev. En Banc 45 (2011) • “Detection and Compliance in Cartel Policy,” Global Competition Policy Antitrust Chronicle (2011) John F. Stinneford Associate Professor; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center Juvenile Life Sentences, 10 Ohio St. Peters J. Crim. L. ___ (2013) • “Punishment without Culpability,” 101 J. of Crim. L. & Criminology 653(2012) • “Rethinking Proportionality under the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause,” 97 Va. L. Rev. 899 (2011) Lee-ford Tritt Professor; Director, Center for Estate Planning and the Estate Planning Certificate Program; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families The Law of Succession: Wills, Trusts, and Estates (with Danaya Wright and Patricia Stallwood-Kendall) (Foundation Press, forthcoming, 2013) • “The Limitations of an Economic Agency Cost Theory of Trust Law,” 32 Cardozo L. Rev. 101 (2011) • Florida Probate Code and Related Provisions (with D. Kelly Weisberg and Danaya P Public schools have a major impact on children, families, communities, and our nation. I combine my doctoral training in educational policy and empirical research methods, legal background, and practical experience as a public school teacher to examine the interface of law and education. Much of my scholarship involves studying the law that governs school administrators’ authority in public schools and how the law could be modified to support more positive educational outcomes, especially in populations that are underserved by our public education system. My most recent publications examine how student race, student socio-economic status, and various school crime and climate metrics affect the use of strict security measures in schools that has proliferated in response to highly-publicized acts of school violence and other social, legal, and political forces. Adkins 20 w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y 2013 repor t from the faculty Ankersen —Jason Nance, Assistant Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families Cupples Dekle Flocks 21 Wright) (Aspen Press, 2010-11) Steven J. Willis Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families “No Healthcare Penalty? No Problem: No Due Process,” (with Nakku Chun), in 38 Am J. Law and Medicine 516 (2012) • “Credits vs. Taxes: the Constitutional Effects on the Health Care Reform Debate” (with Nakku Chung), in Washington Legal Foundation Critical Legal Issues Working Paper Series, No. 176 (2011) Michael Allan Wolf Richard E. Nelson Chair in Local Government Law; Professor “Conservation Easements and the Nomenclature Problem,” 2013 Utah L. Rev. ___ and 33 Utah Envtl. L. Rev. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Strategies for Making Sea-level Rise Adaptation Tools ‘Takings-Proof,’” 28 J. Land Use & Envtl L. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “The Brooding Omnipresence of Regulatory Takings: Urban Origins and Effects,” ___ Fordham Urb. L. J. ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • The Supreme Court and the Environment: The Reluctant Protector (CQ Press/Sage, 2012) • “A Yellow Light for ’Green Zoning’: Some Words of Caution About Incorporating Green Building Standards into Local Land Use Law,” 43 Urban Lawyer 949 (2011) • General Editor, Powell on Real Property (quarterly updates) (Matthew Bender-LexisNexis, 2000-present) Danaya C. Wright Clarence J. TeSelle Endowed Professor The Law of Succession: Wills, Trusts, and Estates (with Lee-ford Tritt and Patricia Stallwood-Kendall) (Foundation Press, forthcoming, 2013) • Estates and Future Interests for the TwentyFirst Century (Foundation Press, forth- Gianni 22 Jackson coming, 2013) • “Policing Sexual Morality: Percy Shelley and the Expansive Scope of the Parens Patriae,” in The Law of Custody of Children, 8.2 Nineteenth Century Gender Studies (2012) • Book review: “J.R. Pole, Contract and Consent: Representation and the Jury in Anglo-American Legal History,” 52 Am. J. Legal Hist. 532 (2012) • “Theorizing History: Separate Spheres, the Public/ Private Binary and a New Analytic for Family Law History,” ___ Australia & New Zealand Law and History E-Journal (2012) • Florida Probate Code and Related Provisions (with Lee-ford Tritt & D. Kelly Weisberg) (Aspen, 2010-11) Wentong Zheng Assistant Professor “Competition Law in China,” in Research Handbook on Comparative Competition Law (John Duns, Brendan Sweeney and Arlen Duke eds., Edward Elgar, forthcoming 2014) • “Counting Once, Counting Twice: The Precarious State of Subsidy Regulation,” 49 Stan. J. Int’l L. 427 (2013) • “State-Owned-Enterprises as Market Participants: Lessons from Trade Law,” in Competition and the Role of the State (Ioannis Lianos and D. Daniel Sokol, eds.) (Stanford U. Press, 2013) • “State Capitalism and the Regulation of Competition in China,” in The Regulation of Competition: The Case of Asian Capitalism (Mike W. Dowdle, John S. Gillespie & Imelda Maher, eds.) (Cambridge U. Press, 2013) • “Structural Impediments to Global Antitrust Convergence: Lessons from China,” Concurrences 58 (2013) • “Reforming Trade Remedies,” 34 Mich. J. Int’l L. 151 (2012) • “Administrative Monopolies in China: An Overview and Recent Developments,” in International Antitrust Law & Policy, Annual Proceedings of the Fordham Pflaum Powell Competition Law Institute (Barry Hawk, ed.) (2011) • “Antimonopoly Law and Practice in China,” 10 Competition L. J. 337 (2011) (reviewing H. Stephen Harris et al., Anti-Monopoly Law and Practice in China, Oxford Univ. Press, 2011) • “Trade Remedies and Non-Market Economies: The WTO Appellate Body’s Report in United States — Definitive Antidumping and Countervailing Duties on Certain Products from China,” 15 American Society of International Law Insights (2011) emeriti faculty Fletcher N. Baldwin Jr. Chesterfield Smith Professor-Emeritus “Mission Creep in National Security Law,” (with Daniel Ryan Koslosky) 114 W. Va. L. Rev. 669 (2012) Michael W. Gordon John H. & Mary Lou Dasburg Professor-Emeritus International Business Transactions (11th ed.) (with Ralph H. Folsom, John A. Spanogle Jr., Peter L. Fitzgerald, and Michael Van Alstine) (West, 2012) Richard H. Hiers Affiliate Professor-Emeritus; Emeritus Professor of Religion “The Bible and Rugged Individualism,” 99:2 Reflections 67 (Yale Divinity School) (2012) • “Women’s Rights and the Bible: Implications for Christian Ethics and Social Policy, (with foreward by Lisa Sowle Cahill) (Wipf and Stock / Pickwick, 2012) • “Ancient Laws, Yet Strangely Modern: Biblical Contract and Tort Jurisprudence,” 88 U. Detroit Mercy L. Rev. 473 (2011) Ray w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y Jerold H. Israel Ed Rood Eminent Scholar-Emeritus in Trial Advocacy and Procedure Criminal Procedure and the Constitution, 2013 edition (with Kamisar, LaFave, King and Primus) (West, 2013) • 2013-14 Pocketparts to the 7-volume treatise, Criminal Procedure (2007) (with LaFave, King and Kerr) (West, 2013-14) • White Collar Crime (Hornbook series) (with Ellen Podgor, Peter Henning and Nancy King) • Supplements to Modern Criminal Procedure/ Advanced Criminal Procedure/ Basic Criminal Procedure (13th eds.) (with Kamsiar, LaFave, King, Kerr, and Primus) (West, 2013) • Modern Criminal Procedure, (13th ed.) (with Kamisar, LaFave, King, Kerr, and Primus) (West, 2012) • Advanced Criminal Procedure, (13th ed.) (with Kamisar, LaFave, King, Kerr, and Primus) (West, 2012) • Basic Criminal Procedure, (13th ed.) (with Kamisar, LaFave, King, Kerr, and Primus) (West, 2012) • Criminal Procedure and the Constitution, 2012 edition, (with Kamisar, LaFave, King, and Primus) (West, 2012) • 2012-13 Pocketparts for 7-volume treatise, Criminal Procedure (2007) (with LaFave, King, and Kerr) (West, 2012) • 2011 Supplement to the 12th editions of Modern/ Advanced/Basic Criminal Procedure (with Kamisar, LaFave, King, and Kerr) • 2011-12 Pocketparts to the 7-volume treatise, Criminal Procedure (2007) (with LaFave, King and Kerr) (West, 2011) • Criminal Procedure and the Constitution, 2011 edition (with Kamisar, LaFave, and Kerr) (West, 2011) Lawrence Lokken Hugh F. Culverhouse Eminent ScholarEmeritus in Taxation Fundamentals of International Taxation Reid 2013 repor t from the faculty (with Boris I. Bittker) (2010/2011 ed.) • “What Is this Thing Called Source?” 37 Int’l Tax J. 26 (2011) Diane H. Mazur Gerald A. Sohn Term ProfessorEmeritus “Judicial Deference Broke the Military,” 16 Green Bag 2d 461 (2013) • “The Constitutional Bond in Military Professionalism: A Reply to Professor Deborah N. Pearlstein, “ 90 Texas L. Rev. See Also 145 (2012) • Amicus Brief of the Palm Center in Support of Appellee Log Cabin Republicans (9th Cir., April 4, 2011) non-tenure-track faculty MARY E. ADKINS Director, Legal Writing and Appellate Advocacy; Master Legal Skills Professor Persuasive Analytical Legal Writing, Bahçeşehir Üniversitesi Hükük Fakültesi (Bahçeşehir University Law Faculty) Kazancı 125 (Turk.) (2011) • Rev. of Reubin O’D. Askew and the Golden Age of Florida Politics, by Martin A. Dyckman, 85 The Fla. Bar J. 60 (2011) THOMAS T. ANKERSEN Director, Center for Governmental Responsibility Conservation Clinic and Costa Rica Law Program; Legal Skills Professor “The Tiff Over TIF: Extending Tax Increment Financing to Municipal Maritime Infrastructure,” (with Samantha Culp and Marissa Faerber, XXXIV:3 Fla. Bar Envtl and Land Use L. Section Reporter 1 (2013) • “A Multidisciplinary Review of Current Sea Level Rise Research in Florida,” (with Anna Cathey Linhoss, Lisa Gardner Chambers and Kevin Wozniak, Technical Paper 193. Temple-Smith Outler U. of Fla. Institute for Food and Agricultural Sciences (2013) • “Florida’s Coastal Hazards Disclosure Law: Property Owner’s Perceptions of the Physical and Regulatory Environment, with Conclusions and Recommendations” (with Kevin Wozniak and Garin Davidson) (Executive Summary) (2012) • “Comprehensive Sea Grass Restoration In Southwest Florida: Science, Law And Eco-Regional Planning,” (with A.B. Lingle Hotaling), 4 Sea Grant Law And Policy J.l, 61 (2011) • “Large Woody Material: Science, Policy and Best Management Practices in Florida Streams,” (with Linhoss, Cameron A., Hall H., and Blair S.) 75 The Florida Scientist 157 (2012) • “Anchoring Away: Government Regulation and the Rights of Navigation in Florida,” (with R. Hamann and B. Flagg) (3rd Ed.), Sea Grant TP-180 (2011) • Special Editor and Introduction to the Special Issue: Focus on Florida, 4 Sea Grant Law and Policy J. 1 (2011) DEBORAH CUPPLES Senior Legal Skills Professor Grammar, Punctuation & Style: A Quick Guide for Lawyers and Other Writers (with Margaret TempleSmith) (West, 2013) • Legal Drafting: Litigation Documents, Contracts, Legislation, and Wills (with Margaret Temple-Smith) (West, 2012) George R. “Bob” Dekle Director, Criminal Prosecution Clinic; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center, Master Lecturer Abraham Lincoln’s Most Famous Case: The Almanac Trial (Praeger Publishing, forthcoming, 2014) • The Case against Christ: A Critique of the Prosecution of Jesus (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012) • Cross Examination Handbook: Persuasion, Strategies, and Techniques (with William S. Bailey and Ronald Wondracek 23 H. Clark) (Aspen, 2011) • The Last Murder: The Investigation, Prosecution, and Execution of Ted Bundy (Praeger Publishing, 2011) JOAN D. FLOCKS Director, Social Policy Division, Center for Government Responsibility; Affiliate Faculty with the Center for Latin American Studies “Pesticide Risk Perception and Biomarkers of Exposure in Florida Female Farmworkers,” (with Runkle J, Tovar-Aguilar JA, Economos E, Williams B, Muniz JF, Semple M, and McCauley L.) ___ J. Occupational and Environmental Medicine ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “Farmworker Pregnancy Health: Health Provider Perspective.” (with Kelley M, Economos J, and McCauley L.). ___ Workplace Health & Safety ___ (forthcoming 2013) • “Female Farmworkers’ Perceptions of Heat-Related Illness and Pregnancy Health, (with Thien Mac V, Runkle J, Tovar-Aguilar JA, Economos J, and McCauley L) 18 J. of Agromedicine ___ (forthcoming, 2013) • “I“Implementing a CommunityBased Social Marketing Project to Improve Agricultural Worker Health,” (with Clarke L, Albrecht S, Bryant C, Monaghan P, and Baker H) Clarke L, Albrecht S, Bryant C, Monaghan P, and Baker H) in Social Marketing (R.C.Lefebvre, ed.) (SAGE Publications, 2013) (Reprinted from 109:3 Environmental Health Perspectives 461 (2001)) • “The Environmental and Social Injustice of Farmworker Pesticide Exposure,” 19 Georgetown J. on Poverty L. & P. 255 (2012) • “Female Farmworkers’ Perceptions of Pesticide Exposure and Pregnancy Health,” (with Kelley M, Economos J, and McCauley, L.), 14 J. of Immigrant and Minority Health 626, (2012) • “Effectiveness of Public Health Nursing Case-Management on the Health of Women Receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: Findings from a Randomized 24 Controlled Trial using Community Based Participatory Research,” (with Kneipp SM, Kairalla JA, Lutz BJ, Pereira D, Hall AG, Beeber L, and Schwartz T.), 101 American J. of Public Health 1759 (2011) • “Environmental Justice Implications of Urban Tree Cover in Miami-Dade County, Florida,” (with Escobedo F, Wade J, Varela S and Wald C.), 4 Envtl Justice 125 (2011) MONICA GIANNI Visiting Assistant Professor in Tax “PFICs Gone Wild!” 29 Akron Tax J. __ (forthcoming, 2014) Joseph S. Jackson Senior Legal Skills Professor; Associate Director, Center on Children and Families “The Parentless Child’s Right to a Permanent Family” (with Lauren Fasig), 46 Wake Forest L. Rev. 1 (2011) • Amicus Briefs: D.M.T. v T.M.H., No. SC12-261 (pending in the Supreme Court of Florida) [involving parental rights of same-sex couple] Fla. Dept. of Children & Families v. In re Adoption of X.X.G. & N.R.G., 45 So. 3d 79 (Fla. 3d DCA 2012) [involving ban on gay adoption] LEANNE J. PFLAUM Master Legal Skills Professor Legal Writing by Design (2d. ed.) (with Teresa Jean Reid) (Carolina Academic Press, 2013) STEPHEN J. POWELL Senior Lecturer in Law; Director, International Trade Law Program “Beyond Labor Rights: Which Core Human Rights Must Regional Trade Agreements Protect?,” 12 Richmond J. Global L. & Bus. 91 (2012) • “Is the WTO Quietly Fading Away? The New Regionalism and Global Trade Rules,” (with Trisha Low) 9 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 261 (2011) • “Managing the rule of law in the Americas: an empirical portrait of the effects of 15 years of WTO, MERCOSUL, and NAFTA dispute resolution on civil society in Latin America,” (with Ludmila Mendonca Lopes Ribeiro), in 42 U. Miami Inter-Amer. L. Rev. 197 (2011) • “Global Laws, Local Lives: Impact of the New Regionalism on Human Rights Compliance” (with Patricia Camino Pérez) 17 Buff. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 117 (2011) SHALINI RAY Legal Skills Professor “Optimal Asylum,” 46 Vand. J. Transnat’l L. __ (forthcoming, 2013) TEREsA JEAN REID Master Legal Skills Professor; Assistant Director, Criminal Justice Center Legal Writing by Design (2d. ed.) (with Leanne J. Pflaum) (Carolina Academic Press, 2013) MARGARET TEMPLE-SMITH Senior Legal Skills Professor Grammar, Punctuation & Style: A Quick Guide for Lawyers and Other Writers (with Deborah Cupples) (West, 2013) • Legal Drafting: Litigation Documents, Contracts, Legislation, and Wills (with Deborah Cupples) (West, 2013) Law Librarians – Tenured and Tenure-Track Elizabeth Outler Assistant University Librarian; Associate Director; Adjunct Professor of Law Editor, “Law,” in Guide to Reference (American Library Association, 200912) Jennifer Wondracek Assistant University Librarian; E-Resources & Technology Librarian; Adjunct Professor of Law “M-Libraries 2: A Virtual Library in Everyone’s Pocket,” 103 Law Libr. J. 127 (2011) (reviewing Mohamed Ally and Gill Needham eds., M-Libraries 2: A Virtual Library in Everyone’s Pocket) (2010) w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y I I have been at the University of Florida for nineteen years now, but I am still grateful every day for the opportunity to teach and mentor the next generation of lawyers. My scholarship makes me a better teacher and mentor because, like my students, I am constantly learning. My current research focuses on free speech issues arising in social media contexts—issues that did not even exist ten years ago! It is exciting to be researching and writing in an area where new developments arise practically every day, and I hope I can convey that excitement to my students and inspire them to do work they love. —Lyrissa Lidsky, Professor; Stephen C. O’Connell Chair; Associate Dean for International Programs 2013 repor t from the faculty 25 levin college of law U F L AW HA P P ENINGS , EVENTS & ACHIEVEMENTS Georgetown professor assesses wins and losses in health care case A lthough the Supreme Court did not strike down the Affordable Care Act as he would have liked, Georgetown Law Professor Randy Barnett said victory was achieved “by the constitutional theories we prevented from being adopted by the Supreme Court.” Barnett represented the National Federation of Independent Business in its argument against the Affordable Care Act. He said five justices affirmed Barnett’s conception of the Commerce clause and the Necessary and Proper clause of the Constitution. He said this part of the ruling saved “the Constitution for the country.” The clauses, which give Congress the power to regulate commerce and “to make all laws which shall be necessary” to carry out its powers, were upheld when the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate was struck down by the court, according to Barnett. He said rather than a mandate requiring individuals to purchase health insurance, individuals will have the option to purchase insurance or pay a tax penalty. Analysts say that people who decline to purchase health insurance will see no difference whether it is called a “mandate” or a “tax.” “Only time will tell who really won the Obamacare case, but for now the constitutional scheme of limited and enumerated powers lives to fight another day,” he said. eugene pettis first african-american florida bar president Read about the sometimes-rocky rise of UF Law graduate Eugene Pettis (JD 85). Pettis this summer became the first African-American to serve as president of The Florida Bar, the second largest bar in the country with about 100,000 lawyers. More in the Spring 2013 issue of UF LAW magazine at http://www.law.ufl.edu/uflaw/. professor named outstanding tax attorney UF Law Professor Dennis Calfee (LLMT 75) was named the Gerald T. Hart Outstanding Tax Attorney of the Year by The Florida Bar Tax Section. Richard Comiter (JD 80, LLMT 81) also announced completion of the campaign to endow the Dennis A. Calfee Eminent Scholar Chair in Taxation. The section recognized Calfee in Gainesville on April 27 at its 35th annual meeting. THOMAS continued from page 7 counsel young people not to go there. It took a long time to overcome that,” Thomas said. Smith said one of the points he took away from the conversation with Thomas was that, “America is still a land of opportunity.” One of the most memorable moments in the lecture came in response to a question about Thomas’ thoughts on law school rankings and how attitudes toward the law school hierarchy can impact the legal profession. Thomas said he has never paid attention to law school rankings and doesn’t think it should matter when being considered for a clerkship or job which law school someone graduated from. 26 “There are smart kids everywhere,” he said, “they’re male, they’re female, they’re black, they’re white, they’re from the West, they’re from the South, they’re from public schools, they’re from public universities, they’re from poor families, they’re from sharecroppers, they’re from all over.” He said that while he isn’t biased against having Ivy Leaguers clerk for him, he intentionally seeks out those who aren’t from the nation’s most elite schools. Automatically excluding someone from consideration for a position based on the school they went to is the antithesis of what the United States is about, Thomas said. Thomas stressed the importance of a practical approach to the law. “Justice Thomas stressed that students should take practical courses and that professors should write articles on practical topics,” Smith said, “which can assist the practicing bar in arguing cases, and judges in deciding those cases.” Thomas also said that Supreme Court opinions should be accessible to the average person. “Without condescension we are obligated to make what we say about the Constitution and (the people’s) laws accessible to them,” he said. w w w . l a w . ufl . e du / ufl a w - f a c ul t y •Is one of the nation’s LARGEST LAW SCHOOLS, with nearly 1,100 students, more than 50 tenured/tenure-track faculty and 40-plus other full-time faculty who support the college through clinical, research, skills training and administrative programs. It offers J.D. certificate programs in Criminal Law, Environmental and Land Use Law, Estates and Trusts Practice, Family Law, Intellectual Property Law, and International and Comparative Law; an extensive array of joint degree programs; specialized centers, institutes and program areas; and strong clinical offerings. • Is a high-quality, comprehensive law school, with LEADING PROGRAMS in dispute resolution, GRADUATE TAXATION, ENVIRONMENTAL AND LAND USE LAW, and FAMILY LAW. The Graduate Taxation Program, which offers the LL.M. in Taxation, LL.M. in International Taxation and S.J.D. in Taxation, is widely and consistently regarded as one of the nation’s top programs. The Environmental and Land Use Law Program offers the nation’s first LL.M. in the closely related fields of environmental and land use law. •Has offered STRONG INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS for more than three decades, and many members of the faculty are experts in international legal issues. These programs and its LL.M. in Comparative Law Program for international lawyers expand the school’s curriculum and international offerings and strengthen its ties with programs and scholars around the globe. •Has a longstanding tradition of preparing its graduates for significant leadership roles. Its 20,000 living alumni include numerous leaders in law, business, government, public service and education at the state and national level. No other law school has produced as many presidents The UF Law faculty is comprised of highly accomplished scholars who bring remarkable experience and knowledge to the classroom. In 2012-2013, our faculty served as experts to the media more than 600 times and were quoted in these major outlets: •Associated Press •BBC News •NPR •Slate.com •NPR, All Things •Canadian Broadcasting Considered Corporation •NPR, Tell Me More •Huffington Post •The New York Times •Law.com •The Christian Science •The Los Angeles Times Monitor •The Miami Herald •Reuters •The Orlando Sentinel •BuzzFeed.com •The Florida Bar News •MSNBC •The Gainesville Sun •NBC News.com •The Tampa Tribune •The National Law •Naples Daily News Journal •Florida Times-Union •Forbes •Florida Trend •The Wall Street Journal •Palm Beach Post •Bloomberg News 2013 repor t from the faculty of the American Bar Association since 1973 — five including 201011 President Stephen N. Zack. Graduates are also represented by the majority of The Florida Bar presidents, including five of the last six: current president Eugene Pettis (JD 85), Gwynne Young (JD 74), Scott Hawkins (JD 83), Mayanne Downs (JD 87), and John G. White III (JD 79). Four governors of Florida and hundreds of state senators and representatives and Florida Cabinet members are UF Law graduates. Eleven graduates became college presidents, including at UF. More than a dozen have served as deans of law schools. UF Law is ranked fourth among public law schools and tied for seventh overall in terms of the number of law degrees granted to sitting federal judges as of 2012. More than 250 graduates serve as state appellate and trial judges in Florida, and many serve on the bench in other states as well. ADMINISTRATION Robert H. Jerry II; Dean; Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor of Law alyson craig flournoy; Senior Associate Dean, Academic Affairs lyrissa lidsky; Associate Dean, International Studies Sharon e. rush; Associate Dean, Faculty Development Michael K. Friel; Associate Dean and Director, Graduate Tax Program Rachel Inman; Associate Dean, Student Affairs claire M. germain; Associate Dean, Legal Information debra K. staats; Associate Dean, Administrative and Fiscal Affairs Michelle adorno; Assistant Dean, Admissions rob birrenkott; Assistant Dean, Career Development Debra D. Amirin; Director, Communications Lauren wilcox; Senior Director, Development and Alumni Affairs Send updates or corrections to Associate Dean for Faculty Development Sharon E. Rush, Levin College of Law, PO Box 117633, Gainesville, FL 32611-7633, or e-mail rush@ law.ufl.edu. The University of Florida is committed to nondiscrimination with respect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, gender, marital status, sexual orientation, national origin, political opinions or affiliations, and veteran status. 27 The Foundation for The Gator Nation Levin College of Law P.O. Box 117633 Gainesville, FL 32611-7633 Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Gainesville, FL Permit No. 94 www.law.ufl.edu/uflaw-faculty