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REPORT FROM THE FACULTY

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Page 1: REPORT FROM THE FACULTY - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.eduufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/09/05/17/00001/02004_faculty_report.pdf · I am both honored and proud to introduce this Report From

REPORT FROM THE FACULTY

Page 2: REPORT FROM THE FACULTY - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.eduufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/09/05/17/00001/02004_faculty_report.pdf · I am both honored and proud to introduce this Report From

2 U F L A W

I am both honored and proud to introduce this ReportFrom the Faculty at the Levin College of Law at theUniversity of Florida. UF’s law school has long been a verygood institution, but thanks to careful planning, hard workby our faculty, and support from our alumni and friends, itis getting stronger every year.

Among the most visible signs of our progress is a sub-stantial, ongoing construction project that will renovate,replace or build anew 150,000 square feet of academic spaceat the college. Our new classroom education towers, whichopened this fall, provide our students and faculty with 11spacious, state-of-the-art classrooms. The expansion and ren-ovation of our Legal Information Center, including our newreading room, rare book room and new or renovated class-rooms, will be completed next summer. The challenge ofinhabiting a facility under construction has been formidable,but we look forward to celebrating in the Fall of 2005 ourtop quality facilities and new technological capabilities.

We also have undertaken a close examination of ourorganizational structure and academic programs, and we arein the process of implementing a strategic plan articulatedby the faculty that builds upon our strengths. As is true atany law school, whether we achieve our aspirations will ulti-mately depend upon our faculty.

The pages that follow showcase a highly productive andenergetic community of scholars who are known and respect-ed for their research and law-reform efforts in both acade-mia and the legal profession. They have organized and ledconferences this year in such diverse areas as transformativemediation, law and technology, race and race relations, chil-dren and families, growth management, professionalism, and

global trade. Many of their books, treatises and articles aredefinitive works.

No less significant has been our ability to recruit manynew, outstanding colleagues. In the current year, for exam-ple, we have welcomed to our college former New YorkUniversity Tax Program Director Paul R. McDaniel, HarvardLaw School faculty member Diane M. Ring, and Mary JaneAngelo, former senior attorney for the U.S. EnvironmentalProtection Agency in Washington, D.C.

I am proud of the faculty’s many accomplishments, butwe aspire to accomplish much more. We are pleased thatour efforts to enhance faculty recruitment, retention andsupport will be assisted by newly installed University ofFlorida President Bernard Machen, who has identified facultydevelopment as a priority for his administration.

This is an exciting time to be part of the University ofFlorida Levin College of Law, but I firmly believe our bestyears are in our future.

— Robert H. Jerry, II, Dean, Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor

A Word From the Dean

The Fredric G. Levin College of Law■ With 1,200 students, 100 full-time faculty and some 40 adjuncts,

the Levin College of Law is the nation’s 12th largest law school,

with a broad and comprehensive curriculum that allows students to

focus on and demonstrate interest in specific areas through six J.D.

certificate programs and numerous joint degree programs. The

school’s strong clinical offerings provide quality experiential learning

experiences to students while delivering competent legal services to

indigent citizens.

■ The college’s LL.M. and S.J.D. in Graduate Tax and LL.M. in

Comparative Law, together with its specialized centers, institutes

and program areas (see page 12), enhance the school’s curriculum

and rich international offerings and strengthen its ties with other

programs and scholars around the globe.

■ The college and a number of its programs — particularly Graduate Tax and Environmental Law — are

consistently ranked among the best in the country.

■ More than 10 prospective students apply for each available seat (17.5 applied for every seat in Fall 2003 and 2004),

and recent classes are the most qualified in law school history. The quality of the student body also is reflected in its

activities, and student organizations such as Trial Team and Moot Court have placed at the top in regional and nation-

al competitions in recent years.

■ The school’s alumni and friends collaborate with faculty in new initiatives, and have been increasingly active in

fundraising and participation in school events. Their help enabled the college to begin construction in 2003 on a major

expansion and renovation project (see page 17) scheduled for completion in 2005. ❒

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Fa c u l t y O v e r v i e wThe Levin College of Law faculty — as

evidenced in the following list of significantscholarship since 2000 — have earned theirexcellent reputations through years of innova-tive research and writing and their leadershipand involvement with academic, professionaland legal organizations in this country andabroad. Many have made a profound impact onthe legal profession as it is studied and prac-ticed, and even in shaping policy on a globalscale.

UF law faculty also are focusing onimproving their already strong institution —from academic programs to facilities — to better prepare students for today’s legal envi-ronment, advance legal knowledge, fulfill thecollege’s public service mission, and make itscollective vision of joining the nation’s top lawschools a reality.

Under the leadership this year of new DeanRobert Jerry, faculty are following a strategicplan developed and approved in May 2002 thatis improving the student-teacher ratio, aug-menting skills training, better supporting andthereby enhancing faculty scholarship andteaching, and making dynamic changes in theschool’s institutional focus.

UF law’s faculty is larger than that ofmany schools, and frequently partners withleading private practitioners to keep courseofferings relevant. The college’s 59 full-timeand four affiliate tenured or tenure-track faculty includes 22 (37 percent) women, and10 (16 percent) minorities (five African-Americans, four Latinos/as, one NativeAmerican). In addition, 41 faculty support thecollege through clinical, research, writing,information and administrative programs, andabout 40 adjuncts teach in specialty areas andcourses such as patent and agricultural law.Student evaluations reflect high satisfactionwith professors (overall 4.20 rating, with fivedenoting “excellent”). Also:

■ Most faculty members graduated from out-standing law schools at or near the top of theirclasses, and were editors or members of theirrespective law reviews. More than 20 clerked at theappellate level (half in federal court) and two for theU.S. Supreme Court, and 35 were associates or part-ners at law firms (15 for five years or more). Morethan a dozen earned Ph.D.’s, 13 have LL.B. orLL.M.’s, 43 hold master’s degrees and sevenreceived Fulbright awards.

2004-05 Books & Casebooks■ Stuart R. Cohn: Florida Business Laws Annotated: Commentary, Casesand Forms, 2003-04 ed. (Westgroup)■ Thomas F. Cotter: Intellectual Property: Economic and Legal Dimensions ofRights and Remedies (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2004) (withBlair). ■ Michael K. Friel: Taxation of Individual Income, 7th ed. (LexisNexis, 2004)

(with Burke). ■ Michael W. Gordon: International Business Transactions: A Problem OrientedCoursebook, with Documents Supplement and Teacher’s Manual, 7th ed. (Westgroup 2004)(with Folsom & Spanogle); NAFTA: A Problem-Oriented Coursebook, with DocumentsSupplement and Teacher’s Manual, 2nd ed. (Westgroup, forthcoming late 2004/early 2005)(with Folsom, Lopez & Gantz); International Civil Dispute Resolution: A Problem-Oriented Coursebook, with Documents Supplement and Teacher’s Manual (Westgroup2004) (with Baldwin, Brand & Epstein); International Business Transactions in a Nutshell,7th ed. (Westgroup 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle); International Trade & Investment ina Nutshell, 3rd ed. (Westgroup 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle); Concise Hornbook onInternational Business (Westgroup, forthcoming early 2005) (with Folsom & Spanogle).■ Jerold H. Israel: White Collar Crime in a Nutshell, 3rd ed.(Westgroup, 2004) (with Podgor); Principles of Criminal Procedure:Investigation (Westgroup, 2004) (with LaFave & King); Principles ofCriminal Procedure: Post-Investigation (Westgroup, 2004) (with LaFaveand King); Criminal Procedure and the Constitution, 1999-2004 eds.(Westgroup) (with Kamisar & LaFave); Criminal Procedure Hornbook,4th ed. (Westgroup, 2004) (with Lafave & King).■ Christine A. Klein: Natural Resources Law: A Place-Based Book of Problems andCases (Aspen Publishers, forthcoming 2005) (with Cheever and Birdsong).■ Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky: Freedom of the Press: A Reference Guide to the U.S.Constitution (2004).■ Lawrence Lokken: Federal Taxation of Employee Compensation (Warren Gorham &Lamont, 2004) (with Bittker); Fundamentals of International Taxation (Warren Gorham &Lamont, 2004/2005 ed.) (with Bittker).

■ Pedro A. Malavet: America’s Colony: The Political and Cultural Conflictbetween the United States and Puerto Rico (NYU Press, 2004). ■ Martin J. McMahon, Jr.: 2004-1 Semi-Annual CumulativeSupplement and 2004-2 Semi-Annual Cumulative Supplements toFederal Income Taxation of Individuals, 3rd. ed. (Warren, Gorham& Lamont, 2002) (with Bittker & Zelenak); and Federal Income

Taxation, Cases and Materials, 5th ed. (Foundation Press, 2004) (withMcDaniel, Simmons & Abreu). ■ William H. Page: Kintner’s Federal Antitrust Law, (11 vols.) 2004 supple-ments (with Lapatka and Bauer).■ Juan Francisco Perea: Race and Races: Cases and Resources for a Diverse America,2nd ed. (forthcoming 2005) (with Delgado, Harris, Stefancic and Wildman).■ Don C. Peters: Paper-chasing Types: The Myers-Briggs and Law Study (forthcoming 2005).

■■ Christopher L. Peterson: Taming the Sharks: Towards a Cure for the HighCost Credit Market (Univ. of Akron Press, 2004). ■ David M. Richardson: Federal Tax Procedure (Textbook, forthcomingSummer 2005, Matthew Bender Graduate Tax Series) (with Borison andJohnson). ■ Sharon E. Rush: The Challenges of Teaching Race: Huck and the ColorLine (Rowman and Littlefield, 2005).

■ Katheryn Russell-Brown: Underground Codes: Race, Crime and RelatedFires (New York University Press, 2004).■ Michael L. Seigel: Improbable Events (Novel, forthcoming 2005).

■ Christopher Slobogin: Law and the Mental Health System:Civil and Criminal Aspects, 4th ed. (2004) (with Reisner & Rai).■ Stephen J. Willis: Electronic Teaching Materials for TaxExempt Organizations (Thomson West, 2004); FinancialCalculations for Lawyers (Book World Publishers, 2004).■ Michael Allan Wolf: Powell on Real Property (general ed., 17 vols.)(Mathew Bender). ❒

U F L A W 3

Report From the Faculty

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4 U F L A W

■ UF law faculty also are publishing more — and in more distinguished venues — than ever before, with 61 treatises,casebooks or similar major books in the past seven years. Theper capita rate for 2000-01 was 0.45, representing 25 books by 13faculty. From 1996-2003, the faculty authored 264 articles in lawreviews and specialty journals published by law schools, comparedto 141 such articles in the previous self-study period — almost a 90percent increase. Placement also improved, with 73 articles appear-ing in reviews published at the top 50 schools in U.S. News &World Report rankings (compared to 32 before, an increase of 130percent). Twenty-two appeared in reviews published by the top 25law schools in U.S. News rankings (compared to 16 previously, a27 percent increase). Statistics now being compiled regardingplacements in top law reviews indicate that this positive trend iscontinuing, with multiple placements in reviews at Harvard,UCLA, California, Minnesota, Northwestern, Vanderbilt andCornell, to list a few. In addition, a number of faculty are nowworking on books with contracts from Harvard, Cambridge andChicago.

I n f l u e n c e S i g n i f i c a n t a n d W i d e s p r e a dThe influence of faculty at the UF College of Law reaches far

beyond campus. As teachers, they shape future professionals,teachers, leaders and decision makers. And as researchers, scholars,writers and activists, their work impacts the study and practice oflaw, political agendas and policy making from the local to the glob-al level. To list a few examples drawn from diverse areas:

■ Associate Professor Cally Jordan was recently asked by theWorld Bank — at the request of the Vietnamese government — towork on the second stage of reforms to its corporate law. Jordanhelped prepare the first business enterprise legislation introduced inVietnam. Its business community attributes the stunning economicgrowth in Vietnam since 1999 (fourth fastest growing economy inthe world) in large part to this legislation.

■ Professor Winston P. Nagan, FRSA, Samuel T. Dell ResearchScholar, affiliate professor of anthropology, and founding directorof the Institute for Human Rights and Peace Development, hasserved as board chairman of Amnesty International USA, andworks to enhance understanding of governance and human rights inAfrica and other countries. He facilitated creation of the HumanRights and Peace Centre at Makerere University in Uganda, andhelps coordinate Southeastern European peace conferences.

■ Stephen C. O’Connell Professor Christopher Slobogin is wide-ly published and quoted by the media on mental health and searchand seizure issues, and was reporter for two American BarAssociation Task Forces — Non-Responsibility for Crime andTechnologically-Assisted Physical Surveillance — which producedstandards adopted by the ABA House of Delegates. He also draftedcommentary for the three Recommendations currently proposed bythe ABA Task Force on Mental Disability and the Death Penalty,and is chairing the Florida Committee on Implementation of theABA’s Moratorium on the Death Penalty. In Virginia, he draftedlegislation — subsequently passed — concerning evaluation ofpeople with mental disability who are charged with crime.

■ Research and scholarship by the school’s top-ranked GraduateTax faculty (also see page 14) continues to impact the study andprofession of tax law. The work of Professor Patricia E. Dilley, for

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U F L A W 5

example, was referenced in the Virginia Tax Review as “semi-nal in the area of Social Security tax thinking,” and her workis cited in leading journals and by top tax faculty nationwide.

■ Professor Jeffrey Davis, as reporter for the SpecialCommittee on Post-Judgment Remedies of the BusinessSection of The Florida Bar, was principal draftsman ofFlorida’s new and highly creative Judgement Lien Law, F.S.55.200 et. seq. Davis continues to be deeply involved in refin-ing and further developing the law. In June 2004, at the annu-al meeting of The Florida Bar, Davis and Associate Dean forInternational Studies/Professor Stuart Cohn became only thesecond and third recipients ever of the Business Section’sDistinguished Lifetime Service Award.

■ Center for Governmental Responsibility Director/DeanEmeritus/Professor Jon Mills was involved with a series ofcases in the Florida Supreme Court on constitutional and pri-vacy issues — including the controversial Dale Earnardt case.He now chairs a Florida Supreme Court Committee onPrivacy and Court Records aimed at developing a uniformstatewide policy to ensure this information is filtered out ofcourt records before it is placed in media like the Internet andbulk electronic access systems.

■ William H. Page, Marshall M. Criser Eminent Scholar inElectronic Communications & Administrative Law andAssociate Dean for Faculty Development, has recently studiedthe role of expert economic testimony in antitrust litigation, the

effects of state antitrust class actions on consumers, the limitsthat federal antitrust law places on state regulation, and legacy ofthe Microsoft antitrust case.

■ Research on legal dimensions of apology by AssociateProfessor Jonathan R. Cohen, Associate Director of theInstitute for Dispute Resolution, helped lead to new eviden-tiary rules in a number of states — including Florida —which previously excluded apologies (in medical malpracticeactions) and expressions of sympathy (in civil actions general-ly) from admissibility into evidence.

■ Faculty have been involved, pro bono, in scores of international, national, state and local endeavors —including the American Bar Association and Association of American Law Schools. Since 1996, faculty have servedas chairs of the ABA Committee on Teaching Taxation (TaxSection), Antitrust Committee (Administrative Law Section)and Ad Hoc Committee on Law School Outreach (CriminalJustice Section); co- or vice chair of the International LawSection, Food & Drug Law Committee (Administrative Law& Regulation Practice Section) and Committee onNegotiation (Section on Dispute Resolution); and as membersof many other committees and task forces. They also chairedAALS sections on Criminal Justice, Jewish Law, Property,Socioeconomics and the Law, and Tax, and served on others.

Note: Also see recent faculty accomplishments under“Specialty Areas,” beginning page 12. ❒

Focus on InterdisciplinaryScholarship

UF’s law school is home to one of thecountry’s largest concentrations of facultypublishing in Critical Legal Studies, aninterdisciplinary approach to the law.With the creation of the Center for theStudy of Race and Race Relations in thelate 1990s, the UF College of Law hasemerged on the forefront of Critical LegalStudies and Critical Race Theory, withbooks by six faculty — Katheryn Russell-Brown (pictured, from left), BertaHernandez-Truyol, Juan Perea, Michelle Jacobs, Nancy Dowd and Pedro Malavet — included in New York University Press’celebrated Critical America Series, more than any other school.

Faculty with significant scholarship in related areas also include Kenneth Nunn, Sharon Rush and Sherrie Russell-Brown, as well as many others who study the law and how it intersects with other disciplines. Dozens of other UF lawfaculty also have participated in scholarship that attempts to view law in the broader context of the social sciences andother academic disciplines, including Paul Magnarella (Anthropology); Thomas Cotter (Intellectual Property); JeffreyHarrison and William Page (Economics); Cally Jordan (Finance); Alyson Flournoy (Environmental Philosophy); ElizabethDale, Michael Wolf and Danaya Wright (History); Jonathan Cohen and Charles Collier (Philosophy); Robert Moffat(Philosophy & Sociology); Barbara Noah (Medicine); Mark Fondacaro and Christopher Slobogin (Psychology); Winston Nagan(Society & Policy Sciences); Nancy Dowd, Michelle Jacobs and Barbara Bennett Woodhouse (Families and Gender); BillChamberlin and Lyrissa Lidsky (Mass Media); Michael Seigel (Pragmatism & Philosophy); and Mark Fenster, MartinMcMahon, Sharon Rush and Walter Weyrauch (Society & Culture).

The college also draws on the University of Florida’s curricular strength in other ways, such as by teaming with UFspecialists on research and cross-disciplinary training, or by featuring guest presentations by UF experts. Students cantake courses in other colleges or earn joint degrees, which the college offers in nearly unsurpassed numbers. ❒

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THOMAS T. ANKERSENDirector, ConservationClinic and Costa RicaLaw Program; LegalSkills Professor■ “Bioregional andConservation Planning onCosta Rica’s Osa

Peninsula,” Futures J. (forthcoming 2004)(with Steven A. Mack). ■ “Inside thePolygon: Emerging Community TenureSystems and Forest Resource Extraction,”Working Forests in the Tropics: Conservationthrough Sustainable Management (ColumbiaPress, 2004) (Zarin & Schmink, eds.) (withGrenville Barnes). ■ “Applying ClinicalLegal Education to Community SmartGrowth: The University of FloridaConservation Clinic,” University Efforts toEncourage Smart Growth (Lincoln Institutefor Land Policy, 2004) (Knaap & Wiewel,eds.) (with Nicole Kibert). ■ “SharedKnowledge, Shared Jurisprudence: Learningto Speak Environmental Creole (Criollo),” 16Tulane Envt’l L. J. 807 (2003).

FLETCHER N.BALDWIN, JR.Chesterfield SmithProfessor; HonoraryFellow, Institute forAdvanced Legal Studies,University of London;Director, Center for

International Financial Crime Studies;Professeur au Centre de Droit dul’Entreprise, Montrpellier I■ “The Rule of Law, Terrorism, andCountermeasures, Including the USA PatriotAct of 2001,” 16 Fla. J. Int’l L. 43 (2004). ■ “The Rule of Law, Human Rights andProportionality as Components of the WarAgainst Terrorism: Is the USA Judiciary inSelf-Imposed Exile?” 7 J. Money LaunderingControl 218 (2004) (Univ. of London, HenryStewart Pub’l.). ■ “Terrorism and the USAPatriot Act 2001 — An Analysis,” MoneyLaundering, Asset Forfeiture, and FinancialCrimes (Oceana Publications, Inc., 2004). ■ “Le terrorisme et les mesures de rétorsionincluant le USA Patriot Act de 2001,” LaSemaine Juridique, Entreprise et Affaries(2003). ■ “USA Patriot Act of 2001 — AnAnalysis,” Money Laundering, AssetForfeiture, and Financial Crimes (OceanaPublications, Inc., 2002). ■ “MoneyLaundering Countermeasures with PrimaryFocus Upon Terrorism and the USA PatriotAct 2001,” 6 J. Money Laundering Control105 (2002). ■ “Organized Crime, Terrorism

and Money Laundering in the Americas,” 15Fla. J. Int’l L. 3 (2002). ■ “E-Commerce,Privacy and Financial Crimes: Threat orHype, Self-Preservation or Erosion ofConstitutional and Human Rights?,”Cybercrime and Security (OceanaPublications, Inc., 2001). ■ “ObservationsConcerning the Proposed Civil AssetForfeiture Reform Act 2000,” InternationalMoney Laundering, Asset Forfeiture, andFinancial Crimes (Oceana Publications, Inc.,2001). ■ “E-Commerce and FinancialCrimes,” Money Laundering, AssetForfeiture, and Financial Crimes (OceanaPublications, Inc., 2001). ■ “United Statesand Civil in Rem Forfeiture: The History andIts Ancient Roots,” 3 J. Money LaunderingControl 204 (2000). ■ “Organized Crime inthe Americas and Transnationally,” 13 Fla. J.Int’l L. 79 (2000).

DENNIS A. CALFEEAlumni Research Scholar,Professor■ Federal Estate and GiftTaxation and accompanyingInstructor’s Manual andStudy Problems (Warren,Gorham & Lamont, 8th ed.,

2002) (with Richard B. Stephens, Guy B.Maxfield, Stephen A. Lind and Robert B.Smith).

JONATHAN R. COHENAssociate Professor;Associate Director,Institute for DisputeResolution■ “Future Research onDisclosure of MedicalErrors,” 141 Annals of

Internal Medicine 481 (Sept. 21, 2004). ■ “In God’s Garden: Creation and Cloning in Jewish Thought,” The Human CloningDebate (4th and 3rd ed., Berkeley HillsBooks, 2004 & 2002) (Glenn McGee &Arthur Caplan, eds.). ■ “The Immorality ofDenial,” Tulane L. Rev. (forthcoming 2004).■ “A Taxonomy of Dispute ResolutionEthics,” Handbook of Dispute Resolution(Robert Bordone & Michael Moffitt, eds.)(forthcoming 2004). ■ “Toward Candor afterMedical Error: The First Apology Law,” 5Harvard Health Policy Rev. 1, 21 (Spring2004). ■ “The Ethics of Respect inNegotiation,” What’s Fair: Ethics forNegotiators 257 (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass,2004) (Carrie Menkel-Meadow & MichaelWheeler, eds.). ■ “Let’s Put Ourselves Out ofBusiness: On Respect, Responsibility and

Dialogue in Dispute Resolution,” 108 PennState L. Rev. 227 (2003). ■ “Adversaries?Partners? How about Counterparts? OnMetaphors in the Practice and Teaching ofNegotiation and Dispute Resolution,” 20Conflict Resolution Quarterly 433 (Summer2003). ■ “The Ethics of Respect inNegotiation,” 18 Negotiation J. 2 (2002). ■“Legislating Apology: The Pros and Cons,”70 U. Cinn. L. Rev. 3 (2002). ■ “WhenPeople Are the Means: Negotiating withRespect,” 14 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 739(2001). ■ “Apology and Organizations:Exploring an Example from MedicalPractice,” 27 Fordham U. L. J. 1447 (2000).

STUART R. COHNAssociate Dean forInternational Studies;Professor; Gerald A.Sohn Scholar; Director ofInternational andComparative LawCertificate Program

■ “The Non-Merger Virtual Merger: IsCorporate Law Ready For Virtual Reality?,”29 Del. J. Corp. L. 1 (2004). ■ “Poland andUnited States Business Laws: A Commentaryon Differing Historical and Doctrinal Bases,”3 Warsaw U. L. Rev. 20 (2004). ■ “CapitalMarket Development and Regulation,”United Nations Inst. for Training and Res.,(online course, Feb. 2004). ■ FloridaBusiness Laws Annotated: Commentary,Cases and Forms (2003-04 ed.). ■ SecuritiesCounseling for New and DevelopingCountries (Westgroup, 2003 and 2002 eds.). ■ “The Development of Micro-CapSecurities Markets,” Sub-Saharan Africa:New Approaches to Fostering EnterpriseGrowth (U.N. Institute for Training andResearch, 2002). ■ “Confidence Building inSub-Saharan Stock Markets,” Capital MarketDevelopment: The Road Ahead (U.N.Institute for Training and Research, 2000).

CHARLES W. COLLIERProfessor; AffiliateProfessor of Philosophy ■ “Affirmative Action andthe Decline of IntellectualCulture,” 54 J. Legal Educ.(2004). ■ “The HarshJudgment of History: The

Terrorist Worldview and Intellectual Values,”50:1 Dissent 62 (2003). ■ “The Wrath ofHistory,” 12 The Responsive Community 57(2002). ■ “Hate Speech and the Mind-BodyProblem: A Critique of PostmodernCensorship Theory,” 7 Legal Theory 203

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6 U F L A W

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U F L A W 7

Faculty Take Priority With New University ofFlorida President J. Bernard Machen

University of Florida President Dr. James Bernard Machenannounced an initiative this August designed to increase the numberof faculty, and bolster faculty salaries and research dollars. The UFFaculty Challenge aims to raise $150 million to give faculty the toolsthey need to enhance classroom instruction and conduct world-classresearch. The Challenge is part of a plan to make UF one of thenation’s premier research universities.

“In order for the University of Florida to reach its potential, wemust find ways to do a better job supporting our faculty,” Machensaid. “The purpose of this initiative is to build an endowment to provide forcompetitive salaries, so the university can attract and retain the best and brightest faculty and give them the tools they need to excel.”

By appealing to donors to support the challenge, the university intends toprovide more discretionary funds for faculty research, which could be used forequipment, studies or stipends for student research assistants. Gifts to theChallenge of $100,000 or more are eligible for state matching funds. In an effortto garner more support, for every gift of $1 million or more, Machen has pledgedto add $250,000 from a discretionary fund of private donations specifically forthe Faculty Challenge. These additions will follow state matching funds and willcontinue until the fund is exhausted.

The University of Florida Board of Trustees unanimously elected Machen asthe university’s 11th president Oct. 8, 2003. Dr. Machen, who previously servedas president of the University of Utah, assumed his new position Jan. 5, andquickly identified recruitment and retention of quality faculty members as a top priority.

Prior to Utah, Dr. Machen was provost and vice president for academic affairs and dean of the School of Dentistry atthe University of Michigan; assistant and associate dean in the School of Dentistry at the University of North Carolina atChapel Hill; and associate professor and professor at UNC-Chapel Hill. He attended Vanderbilt University and received hisdoctor of dental surgery degree from St. Louis University. He also has a master’s in pediatric dentistry and doctorate ineducational psychology, both from the University of Iowa. He is a diplomate of the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry,was president of the American Association of Dental Schools, and served on the Board of Trustees of the 2002 Salt LakeOlympic Committee. ❒

(2001). ■ Basic Themes in Law andJurisprudence (Anderson Publishing, 2000).■ “Law As Interpretation,” 76 Chic.-Kent L.Rev. 779 (2000).

THOMAS F. COTTERUF Research FoundationProfessor; Director ofIntellectual Property LawProgram■ “Accommodating theUnauthorized Use ofCopyrighted Works for

Religious Purposes Under the Fair UseDoctrine and Copyright Act Section,” 110(3), 22 Cardozo Arts & Entertainment L. J.43 (2004). ■ Intellectual Property: Economicand Legal Dimensions of Rights andRemedies (Cambridge University Press,forthcoming 2004) (with Roger D. Blair). ■“An Economic Analysis of EnhancedDamages and Attorneys’ Fees for WillfulPatent Infringement,” 14 Federal Circuit BarJ. (forthcoming 2004). ■ “AntitrustImplications of Patent Settlements InvolvingReverse Payments: Defending a RebuttablePresumption of Illegality in Light of SomeRecent Scholarship,” 71 Antitrust L. J. 1069(2004). ■ “Market Fundamentalism and theTRIPs Agreement,” 21 Cardozo Arts & Ent.L. J. (forthcoming 2004). ■ “Law,

Economics, and Intellectual Property,” (BookReview of William M. Landes & Richard A.Posner, The Economic Structure ofIntellectual Property Law,Antitrustsource.com (March 2004). ■“Gutenberg’s Legacy: Copyright,Censorship, and Religious Pluralism,” 91Cal. L. Rev. 323 (2003). ■ “Prolegomenon toa Memetic Theory of Copyright: Commentson Lawrence Lessig’s The CreativeCommons,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 779 (2003). ■“Refining the ‘Presumptive Illegality’Approach to Patent Settlements InvolvingReverse Payments: A Comment onHovenkamp, Janis, and Lemley,” 87 Minn. L.Rev. 1789 (2003). ■ “Written on the Body:Intellectual Property Rights in Tattoos,Makeup, and Other Body Art,” 10 UCLAEnt. L. Rev. 97 (2003) (with Angela M.Mirabole). ■ “Strict Liability and ItsAlternatives in Patent Law,” 17 BerkeleyTech. L. J. 799 (2002) (with Roger D. Blair).■ “Introduction to Symposium onIntellectual Property, Development, andHuman Rights,” 14 Fla. J. of Int’l L. 147(2002). ■ “Are Settlements ofPharmaceutical Patent Disputes Illegal PerSe?,” 47 Antitrust Bull. 491 (2002) (withRoger D. Blair). ■ “Rethinking PatentDamages,” 10 Tex. Intell. Prop. L. J. 1(2001) (with Roger D. Blair). ■ “The Elusive

Logic of Standing Doctrine in IntellectualProperty Law,” 74 Tul. L. Rev. 1323 (2000)(with Roger D. Blair). ■ “Pragmatism”(Update), in 4 Encyclopedia of the AmericanConstitution Supplement 1983 (2d ed. 2000)(Leonard W. Levy & Kenneth J. Karst, eds.).

JEFFREY DAVISProfessor; Gerald A.Sohn Scholar■ “Ending the Nonsense:The In Pari DelictoDoctrine Has Nothing ToDo With What is Section541 Property of the

Bankruptcy Estate,” Emory BankruptcyDevelopments J. (forthcoming 2005). ■“Fixing Florida’s Execution Lien Law, PartTwo: Florida’s New Judgment Lien onPersonal Property,” 54 Fla. L. Rev. 119(2002).

PATRICIA E. DILLEYProfessor■ “Leverage, Linkage, andLeakage: Problems withthe Private Pension Systemand How They ShouldInform the Social SecurityReform Debate,” 58 Wash.

& Lee L. Rev. 1369 (2001). ■ “Taking Public

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Rights Private: The Rhetoric and Reality ofSocial Security Privatization,” 41 B. C. L.Rev. 975 (2000). ■ “Breaking the GlassSlipper: Reflections on the Self-EmploymentTax,” 54 The Tax Lawyer 65 (2000).

NANCY E. DOWDChesterfield SmithProfessor; Co-Director,Center on Children andFamilies ■ “Race, Gender, andWork/Family Policy,” 15Washington Univ. J. of L.

& Policy 219 (2004) (Symposium Issue, TheTenth Anniversary of the Family andMedical Leave Act). ■ Book Review, SandraBerns, Women Going Backwards: Law andChange in a Family Unfriendly Society,(2002), 12 Griffith L. Rev. 149 (2003). ■“Law, Culture and Family: TheTransformative Power of Culture and theLimits of Law,” 78 Chicago-Kent L. Rev. 785(2003). ■ Single Parent Adoption,” Familiesby Law: Adoption Reader (New YorkUniversity Press, 2003) (Naomi Cahn andJoan H. Hollinger eds.). ■ “From Genes,Marriage and Money to Nurture: RedefiningFatherhood,” 10 Cardozo Women’s L. J. 132(2003). ■ “Diversity Matters: Race, Gender,and Ethnicity in Legal Education,” 15 U.Fla. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 11 (2002) (withKenneth Nunn & Jane Pendergrast). ■Feminist Legal Theory: An Anti-EssentialistReader (ed., NYU Press, 2002) (withMichelle Jacobs). ■ “In Defense of Single-Parent Families,” Feminist Legal Theory: AnAnti-Essentialist Reader (NYU Press, 2002). ■ “Gender and Law,” The Oxford Companionto American Law 325 (Oxford UniversityPress 2002) (K. Hall, ed.). ■ “2001 AnnualInternational Survey of Family Law: UnitedStates,” 16 Int’l J. L., Society & Family 439(2002). ■ Redefining Fatherhood (NYUPress, 2000). ■ “Resisting Essentialism andHierarchy: A Critique of Work/FamilyPolicies for Women Lawyers,” 16 Harv.Blackletter L. J. 185 (2000). ■ Symposium,“Unbending Gender: Why Family and WorkConflict and What to Do About It,” PanelTwo: “Who’s Minding the Baby?,” 49 Amer.Univ. L. Rev. 901 (2000).

MARK A. FENSTERAssociate Professor■ “Taking Formalism,Regulatory Formulas:Exactions and theConsequences of Clarity,”92 Cal. L. Rev. (2004). ■ “The Symbols of

Governance: Thurman Arnold After LegalRealism,” 51 Buff. L. Rev. 1053 (2003).

JOAN D. FLOCKSDirector, Social PolicyDivision, Center forGovernmentalResponsibility; AssociateDirector, Center onChildren and Families■ “¡Viva Mexico! Mexican

Independence Day Festivals in CentralFlorida,” Southern Heritage on Display(University of Alabama Press, 2003) (with C.Ray, P. Monaghan, eds.). ■ “CollaborativeResearch with Farmworkers inEnvironmental Justice,” PracticingAnthropology 25(1): 6 (2003) (with P.Monaghan). ■ “Community-Based SocialMarketing: Involvement in HealthPrograms,” 33 J. Community DevelopmentSoc’y 1 (2002) (with F. L. Farmer, L. L.Clarke, C.A. Bryant, C. S. Romund and S.L.Albrecht).

ALYSON CRAIGFLOURNOYDirector, Environmentaland Land Use LawProgram; Professor■ “Section 404 at Thirty-Something: A Program inSearch of a Policy,” 55

Alabama L. Rev. 607 (2004). ■ “WetlandsRegulation at 30: A Program in Search of aPolicy,” Ala. L. Rev (2004). ■ “Building anEnvironmental Ethic from the Ground Up,”37 U. C. Davis L. Rev. 54 (2003) and 27Environs Env’tl L. and Policy J. 53 (2003). ■“Environmental Ethics and EnvironmentalLaw Scholarship,” The Jurisdynamics ofEnvironmental Protection: Change and thePragmatic Voice in Environmental Law(2003). ■ “In Search of an EnvironmentalEthic,” 28 Colum J. Envt’l L. 63 (2002). ■“Restoration Rx: An Evaluation andPrescription,” 42 Ariz. L. Rev. 187 (2000).

MICHAEL K. FRIELAssociate Dean andDirector, Graduate TaxProgram; Professor■ Taxation of IndividualIncome (LexisNexis, 7thed., 2004) (with MartinBurke). ■ Modern Estate

Planning (LexisNexis 2000-2001, 2nd. ed.,2002) (with Martin Burke and ElaineGagliardi). ■ Understanding Federal IncomeTaxation (LexisNexis, 2001) (with MartinBurke).

MICHAEL W. GORDONChesterfield SmithProfessor■ International BusinessTransactions: A ProblemOriented Coursebook, withDocuments Supplementand Teacher’s Manual, 7th

and 6th eds. (with Folsom & Spanogle,Westgroup 2004 and 2003). ■ NAFTA: AProblem-Oriented Coursebook, withDocuments Supplement and Teacher’sManual, 2nd ed. (with Folsom, Lopez &Gantz, Westgroup, forthcoming late 2004/early 2005). ■ International Civil DisputeResolution: A Problem-OrientedCoursebook, with Documents Supplementand Teacher’s Manual (Westgroup, 2004)(with Baldwin, Brand & Epstein. ■International Business Transactions in aNutshell, 7th ed. (with Folsom & Spanogle,Westgroup, 2004). ■ International Trade &Investment in a Nutshell, 3rd ed. (WestGroup 2004) (with Folsom & Spanogle). ■Concise Hornbook on International Business(Westgroup, forthcoming early 2005) (withFolsom & Spanogle). ■ “North AmericanIntegration,” 2004 Encyclopedia of Law &Society: American & Global Perspectives. ■“Some Observations on Procedural Tactics inCross-Border Tort Litigation,” 14 RevistaMexicana de Derecho Internacional Privadoy Comparado 43 (2003). ■ InternationalCivil Dispute Resolution: A ProblemOriented Coursebook, with accompanyingSupplement and Teacher’s Manual(Westgroup 2003) (with Baldwin, Brand &Epstein). ■ “A Civil Justice Reform in theAmericas: Lessons from Spain, Brazil,Guatemala and Mexico,” 16 Fla. J. Int’l L. 1(2003). ■ “Thinking About Cuba: Post-Castro Cuba Began a Decade Ago,” 15 Fla.J. Int’l L. 311 (2003). ■ Panel Discussion“Money Laundering, Cybercrime andCurrency Manipulation,” 11 United States-Mexico L. J. 220 (2003). ■ “Legal Culturesof Latin America and the United States:Conflict or Merger,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 115(2003). ■ International BusinessTransactions: Cases and Materials(Westgroup, 5th ed., 2002) (with Ralph H.Folsom & John A Spanogle). ■ “CommonLaw,” Legal Systems of the World (ABC-CLIO 2002, Herbert M. Krtizer ed.). ■“Professor Pedro Buys a Book: Mexico, theUnited States and E-Commerce” (panel discussion), 10 U.S.-Mexico L. J. (2002). ■International Business TransactionsHornbook (Westgroup, 2d. ed., 2001) (withRalph H. Folsom & John A. Spanogle). ■“Review of Jorges Vargas, Mexican Law: ATreatise for Legal Practitioners andInternational Investors,” 32 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 361 (2001). ■ Panel Discussion:

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“Mexican Lawyers Going North and U.S.Lawyers Going South: Interstate LegalPractice, NAFTA and U.S. State BarRegulations” 9 U.S.-Mexico L. J. 189 (2001).■ “Corporation Law,” Introduction to theLaw in the United States (Kluwer, 2nd ed.,2001) (David S. Clark & Tugrul Ansay eds.).■ International Business Transactions in aNutshell (Westgroup, 6th ed., 2000) (withRalph F. Folsom & John A. Spanogle) (trans-lated into Russian, Serbian, Bosnian andCroatian). ■ International Trade andInvestment in a Nutshell (Westgroup, 2nd ed.,2000) (with Ralph F. Folsom and John A.Spanogle). ■ “NAFTA Dispute Resolution asa Method of Avoiding National Courts,”Symposium Edition, 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 16(2000). ■ NAFTA: A Problem-OrientedCasebook (Westgroup, 2000) (with Ralph H.Folsom & David Lopez). ■ Handbook ofNAFTA Dispute Resolution (Two volumes,Transnational Publishers, 2000) (with RalphH. Folsom & John A. Spanogle). ■ “NAFTAand Financial Dispute Resolution,” Non-Judicial Dispute Settlement in InternationalFinancial Transactions (Kluwer, 2000)(Norbert Horn & Joseph Norton eds.). ■Panel Discussion: “Product Liability Claimson Both Sides of the Border,” 8 U.S.-MexicoL. J. 123 (2000). ■ “Forms of DisputeResolution in the North American Free TradeAgreement,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 16 (2000).

WAYNE O. HANEWICZ Assistant Professor■ “When Silence is Golden:Why the BusinessJudgment Rule ShouldApply to No-Shops inStock-For-Stock MergerAgreements,” 28 J. Corp.L. 205 (2003).

BERTA ESPERANZAHERNÁNDEZ-TRUYOLLevin Mabie and LevinProfessor; AssociateDirector, Center onChildren and Families■ “Law and Culture: ACross-Constitutive

Paradigm,” Albany L. Rev. (forthcoming2004). ■ “Las Olvidadas: Gendered inJustice/Gendered Injustice — Latinas,Fronteras, and the Law,” A Reader on Race,Civil Rights, and American Law: AMultiracial Approach 612 (Timothy Davis,Kevin Johnson, and George Martinez, eds.,Carolina Academic Press 2001) (withexcerpts from 1 J. of Gender, Race andJustice 353 [1998]). ■ “LatinaMultidimensionality and LatCritPossibilities: Culture, Gender, and Sex,” AReader on Race, Civil Rights, and American

Law: A Multiracial Approach 689 (TimothyDavis, Kevin Johnson, and George Martinez,eds., Carolina Academic Press 2001) (withexcerpts from 53 U. Miami L. Rev. 811[1999]). ■ “Traveling the Boundaries ofStatelessness: Global Passports andCitizenship,” Cleveland State L. Rev. (forth-coming 2004) (with Matthew Hawk). ■“Globalized Citizenship: Sovereignty,Security, and Soul,” Law and GlobalizationFrom Below (Boaventura de Sousa Santos &Cesar Rodriguez eds., 2004). ■ “CubanDemocracy Act of 1992,” Encyclopedia ofLatinos and Latinas in the United States(2004). ■ “Platt Amendment,” Encyclopediaof Latinos and Latinas in the United States(2004). ■ “The Rule of Law and HumanRights,” Fla. J. Int’l L. (2004). ■ “FamiliasSin Fronteras: Mujeres Unidas por suHistoria,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 321 (2003). ■ “Building Bridges V — Cubans WithoutBorders: Mujeres Unidas por su Historia,” 55Fla. L. Rev. 225 (2003). ■ “GlocalizingTerror,” 81 Or. L. R. 941 (2002). ■ “CubanEconomic Relations, Proceedings of theThird Annual Legal & Policy Issues in theAmericas Conference,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 94(2002). ■ Moral Imperialism: A CriticalAnthology (ed., NYU Press 2002). ■ “BothWork and Violence: Prostitution and HumanRights,” Moral Imperialism: A CriticalAnthology 183 (ed., NYU Press, 2002) (withJane Larson). ■ “Human Rights,Globalization, and Culture: CenteringPersonhood in International Narrative,”Moral Imperialism: A Critical Anthology 353(ed., NYU Press 2002). ■ “Latinas —Everywhere Alien: Culture, Gender, andSex,” Critical Race Feminism: A Reader(NYU Press, 2d ed., 2002, Adrienne Wing,ed.). ■ “Out of the Shadows: Traversing theImaginary of Sameness, Difference, andRelationalism — A Human Rights Proposal,”17 Wisc. Women’s L. J. 111 (2002). ■ “LatinaWomen of the Americas: Race, Gender,Ethnicity and Interdependent Human Rights,”Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Human Rightsin the Americas: A New Paradigm forActivism 85 (American University Press2001, Celina Romany, ed.). ■ “CrossingBorderlands of Inequality with InternationalLegal Methodologies — The Promise ofMultiple Feminisms,” 44 German Yearbookof Int’l L. 113 (2001). ■ “Breaking Cycles ofInequality: Critical Theory, Human Rightsand Family,” Justice in Critical Race Theory:Histories, Crossroads, Directions (Temple U.Press, 2001, Jerome McCristal Culp, Jr.,Angela P. Harris & Francisco Valdés, eds.). ■ “Building Bridges IV: Of Cultures, Colors,and Clashes — Capturing the International inDelgado’s Chronicles,” 4 Harv. Latino L.Rev. 115 (2001). ■ “On Becoming the Other:Cubans, Castro and Elian,” 78 Den. U. L.

Rev. 687 (2001). ■ “Latinas, Culture andHuman Rights: A Model for Making Change,Saving Soul,” 23 Women’s Rts. L. Rep. 21(2001). ■ “Mujeres De Las Américas —Race, Gender, Ethnicity and InterdependentHuman Rights,” Women, Race, Ethnicity, andInt’l Human Rights: Intersection in theAmericas (Ford Foundation, 2001). ■“Property, Wealth, Inequality and HumanRights,” 34 Ind. L. J. 1213 (2001). ■Afterword: “Back to the Future — Law andStatus in the 21st Century: Straightness asProperty,” 12 U. Fla. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 71(2001) (with Shelbi D. Day). ■ “Law,Culture, and Equality: Human Rights’Influence on Domestic Norms: The Case ofWomen in the Americas,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L.33 (2000). ■ “Foreword: Culture, Nation-hood, and the Human Rights Ideal” (withSharon Elizabeth Rush), 33 U. Mich. J. L.Reform 233 (2000), 5 Mich. J. Race & L. 817(2000). ■ “Nativism, Terrorism, and HumanRights — The Global Wrongs of Reno V.American-Arab Anti-DiscriminationCommittee,” 31 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev.521 (2000). ■ Book Review: “GenderPolitics in Global Governance,” (Mary K.Meyer and Elisabeth Prügl eds.), 94 Am. J.Int’l L. 209 (2000). ■ “Latindia II —Latinas/Os, Natives, and Mestizajes: ALatcrit Navigation of Nuevos Mundos,Nuevas Fronteras, and Nuevas Teories,” 33U. C. Davis L. Rev. 851 (2000). ■“Feminismes Sans Frontières: The CubanChallenge — Women, Equality, and Culture,”Global Feminism (NYU Press, 2000, A.Wing, ed.).

RICHARD H. HIERSAffiliate Professor,Professor of Religion■ “Institutional AcademicFreedom: A ConstitutionalMisconception. Did Grutterv. Bollinger Perpetuate theConfusion,” 30 J. of College

& Univ. L. 531 (2004). ■ “The Death Penaltyand Due Process in Biblical Law,” DetroitMercy L. Rev. (forthcoming 2004). ■“Biblical Social Welfare Legislation,” 17 J.of L. and Religion 49 (2002). ■ BookReview, “The Spirit of Biblical Law,” 1Wash. U. Global Studies L. Rev. 537 (2002).■ “Institutional Academic Freedom vs.Faculty Academic Freedom in PublicColleges and Universities: A DubiousDichotomy,” 29 J. College & Univ. L. 35(2002). ■ “Reverence for Life andEnvironmental Ethics in Biblical Law andCovenant,” Forum on Religion and Ecology(2001). ■ The Trinity Guide to the Bible(Trinity Press International, 2001).

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THOMAS R. HURSTProfessor, Samuel T. DellResearch Scholar■ “Coaches’ Liability forAthletes Injuries andDeaths,” 13 Seton Hall U.J. Sport L. 27 (2003) (withJames Knight). ■ Cases

and Materials on Unincorporated BusinessAssociations (Westgroup, 2nd ed., 2002)(with William A. Gregory). ■ “SecuritiesFraud and the Internet: Adopting ExistingRegulatory Schemes to Regulation inCyberspace,” 8 J. Financial Crime 226(2001). ■ “Payment of Student Athletes:Legal and Practical Obstacles,” 7 Vill. Sports& Ent’t L. J. 55 (2000). ■ “Teaching LimitedLiability Companies in the Basic BusinessAssociations Course,” 34 Ga. L. Rev. 773(2000).

JEROLD H. ISRAELEd Rood EminentScholar in Trial Advocacyand Procedure■ White Collar Crime in aNutshell, 3rd ed.(Westgroup, 2004) (withPodgor). ■ Principles of

Criminal Procedure: Investigation(Westgroup, 2004) (with Wayne LaFave &Nancy King). ■ Principles of CriminalProcedure: Post-Investigation (Westgroup,2004) (with Wayne LaFave and NancyKing). ■ “Seven Habits of a Highly EffectiveScholar,” 102 Mich. L. Rev. (No. 8, 2004). ■Criminal Procedure and the Constitution,2004 ed. (Westgroup, 1999-2004 eds.) (withYale Kamisar & Wayne LaFave). ■ CriminalProcedure Hornbook (Westgroup, 4th & 3d.eds., 2004 & 2000) (with Wayne Lafave &Nancy King). ■ White Collar Crime: Lawand Practice, 2nd ed. (Westgroup, 2003)(with Borman, Henning & Podgor). ■Statutory and Documentary Supplement toWhite Collar Crime (Westgroup, 2003) (withBorman, Henning & Podgor). ■ ModernCriminal Procedure (Westgroup, 10th & 9theds., 2002 & 1999) (with Yale Kamisar,Wayne LaFave and Nancy King). ■ “GrandJury,” 2 Encyclopedia of Crime and Justice737 (Westgroup, 2002, Joshua Dressler, ed).■ “Free-Standing Due Process and CriminalProcedure: The Supreme Court’s Search forInterpretive Guidelines,” 45 St. Louis U. L. J.303 (2001). ■ Criminal Procedure in aNutshell: Constitutional Limitations(Westgroup, 6th ed., 2001) (with WayneLafave). ■ Criminal Procedure Treatise(Westgroup, 2d ed., 2000) (with WayneLafave & Nancy King).

MICHELLE S. JACOBSProfessor■ Book review, “Piercingthe Prison Uniform ofDivisibility for BlackFemale Inmates,” 94 J.Crime & Criminology 101(forthcoming 2004). ■

Feminist Legal Theory: An Anti-EssentialistReader (NYU Press, 2002) (ed., with NancyE. Dowd). ■ “Requiring Battered WomenDie: Murder Liability for Mothers UnderFailure to Protect Statutes,” Feminist LegalTheory: An Anti-Essentialist Reader (NYUPress, 2002). ■ “Full Legal Representationfor the Poor: The Clash Between LawyerValues and Client Worthiness,” 44 How. L. J.257 (2001).

ROBERT H. JERRY, IIDean; Levin Mabie andLevin Professor■ “A Brief Exploration ofSpace: Some Observationson Law SchoolArchitecture,” Univ. ofToledo L. Rev. (forthcoming

2004). ■ Book Chapter, “Life and DisabilityInsurance,” Family Wealth Transfer (forth-coming 2005) (Grayson M. McCouch &William J. Turnier, eds.). ■ “The InsuranceAspects of Damages,” 2004 J. of DisputeResolution 107 (with Douglas R. Richmond).■ “Antitrust Implications of Insurers’Collaborative Standard Setting,” Geneticsand Life Insurance: Medical Underwritingand Social Policy, 195 (Mark A. Rothstein,ed., MIT Press 2004). ■ “The AntitrustImplications of Collaborative StandardSetting by Insurers Regarding the Use ofGenetic Information in Life InsuranceUnderwriting,” 9 Connecticut Insurance. L.J. 397 (2003). ■ Understanding InsuranceLaw XXXI, 1171 (3rd. ed.) (LexisPublishing, Inc., 2002). ■ Insurance Law:Cases and Materials, 3rd. ed. (LexisPublishing, Inc., 2001) (with Roger C.Henderson). ■ “Insurance,” OxfordCompanion to American Law (New York:Oxford University Press, 2002) (Kermit L.Hall et al., eds.). ■ “Insurance, Terrorismand 9/11: Reflections on Three ThresholdQuestions,” 9 Connecticut Insurance L. J. 95(2002). ■ “May Harvey Rest in Peace: Lakinv. Postal Life & Casualty InsuranceCompany,” 2 Nevada L. J. 292 (2002). ■“Insurance, Terrorism, and 9/11,” TortSource1, 6 (Vol. 5, No. 2, Winter 2003). ■“Cybercoverage for Cyber-Risks: Overviewof Insurers’ Responses to the Perils of E-Commerce,” 8 Connecticut Insurance L. J. 7(2001) (with Michele L. Mekel). ■ “TeachingTorts Without Insurance: A Second-BestSolution,” 45 St. Louis Univ. L. Rev. 857

(2001) (with David A. Fischer). ■ “TheInsurer’s Right to Reimbursement of DefenseCosts,” 42 Arizona L. Rev. 13 (2000)(reprinted at 50 Defense L. J. 699 (2001).

CLIFFORD A. JONESVisiting Lecturer, Centerfor GovernmentalResponsibility■ Book review, C. Hardingand J. Joshua, RegulatingCartels in Europe: A Studyof Legal Control of

Corporate Delinquency (Oxford Press,2003), “Sleeping With the Enemy: Tales ofYankee Power, Globalization, and theTransformation of Economy by Cartel in theEuropean Union,” 36 Geo. Washington Univ.Int’l L. Rev. (in press, 2004). ■ “ForeignPlaintiffs, Vitamins, and the ShermanAntitrust Act After Empagran,” (7/8) Eur. L.Reporter 270 (2004). ■ Competition Policy inthe Global Trading System (M. Matsushita,eds., The Hague: Kluwer International 2002).■ “Private Competition Law Enforcement inEurope: A Growth Market,” (C. Bauden-bacher, ed.) Neueste Entwicklungen ImEuropäischen Und InternationalenKartellrecht — Elftes St. GallerInternationales Kartellrechtsforum 2004.(Newest Developments In European AndInternational Competition Law — EleventhSt. Gallen International Competition LawForum (2004.) ■ “The New U.S. CampaignRegulations and Political Advertising,” J. ofPolitical Marketing, 3 (3) (2004) (with L.L.Kaid). ■ “Regulating Political Advertising inthe EU and USA: A Human RightsPerspective,” 4 (3) J. Public Affairs 244(2004). ■ “Exporting Antitrust Courtrooms tothe World: Private Enforcement in a GlobalAntitrust Environment,” 16 Loyola ConsumerL. Rev., 409 (2004). ■ “After McConnell:Candidate Advertising and CampaignReform,” Political Communication Report,”14 (Spring, 2004), 1 (with L.L. Kaid). ■“Private Antitrust Enforcement in Europe: APolicy Analysis and Reality Check,” 27 (1)World Competition L. & Economics Rev. 13(2004). ■ “Transfrontier Media, Law, andCultural Policy in the European Union,” NewFrontiers In International CommunicationTheory 157 (M. Semati, ed.) (Lanham, MD:Rowman & Littlefield 2004). ■ “Media andElection Regulation in the United States ofAmerica,” Media And Elections, 25(Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum &Associates, 2004, B. Lange & D. Ward, eds.)(with L. Kaid). ■ “Microsoft: Federalism andInternationalism in Antitrust,” The Future OfTransnational Antitrust — FromComparative To Common Competition Law259 (Berne: Staempfli Publishers, Ltd andThe Hague: Kluwer International, 2003) (J.

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Drexl, ed.) Munich Series on European andInternational Antitrust Law, No. 1. (with M.Jamison). ■ “A New Dawn for PrivateCompetition Law Remedies in Europe?Reflections from the USA,” EuropeanCompetition Law Annual 2001: EffectivePrivate Enforcement Of EC Antitrust Law 95(Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2003) (ClausDieter Ehlermann & Isabela Atanasiu, eds.).■ “Voting from the Bench: Media Analysisof Legal Issues in the 2000 Post-ElectionCampaign,” 46 American BehavioralScientist 642 (2003). ■ “Global Antitrust inthe Millennium Round: The Ways Forward,”Competition Policy In The Global TradingSystem 397, (The Hague: KluwerInternational 2002, C. Jones and M.Matsushita, eds.) (with M. Matsushita). ■ “Trilateralism in Private AntitrustEnforcement: Japan, the U.S.A., and theEuropean Union,” Competition Policy In TheGlobal Trading System 211 (C. Jones and M.Matsushita, eds., The Hague: KluwerInternational 2002). ■ “Come theMillennium (Round) — Competing Visionsof International Antitrust Policy in TheEuropean Union and The United States,”2000 Fordham. Corp. L. Inst. 31 (B. Hawk,ed., 2001). ■ “Television Without Frontiers,”19 Yearbook Of European Law 299 (P.Eeckhout and T. Tridimas, eds.) (Oxford:

Oxford U. Press 2000). ■ “Toward GlobalCompetition Policy — The ExpandingDialogue on Multilateralism,” 23 WorldCompetition L. & Econ. Rev. 95 (2000). ■“Soft Money and Hard Choices: TheInfluence of Finance Rules on CampaignCommunication Strategy,” PoliticalCommunication Ethics 179 (R. Denton, ed.)(Westport, CT: Praeger, 2000). ■ “MediaConcentration and Law: New Developmentsin Germany and the European Community,”Handbook of Global Legal Policy 313 (S.Nagel, ed.) (Marcel Dekker, 2000).

CALLY JORDANAssociate Professor■ Capital MarketIntegration in the EastAfrican Community (TheWorld Bank, FinancialSector Division, Finance,Private Sector and

Infrastructure, Africa Region, 2002) (with A.Alawode, Y. Kim and T. Endo). ■ “FinancialRegulatory Harmonization and theGlobalization of Finance,” Policy ResearchWorking Paper 2919 (The World Bank,Financial Sector Operations and PolicyDepartment, October 2002) (with G.Majnoni) (Reprint by African CapitalMarkets Forum, Nov. 2003). ■ “How

Effective are Capital Markets in ExertingGovernance on Corporations? RecentLessons from Emerging Markets,” FinancialSector Governance: The Roles of the Publicand Private Sectors (Brookings Press, 2002).■ “Comment on ‘An Alternative RegulatoryModel for Canada’: A View from Afar,”Queen’s University Annual Business LawSymposium 2001 (Carswell, 2002).

CHRISTINE A. KLEINProfessor■ “On Integrity: SomeConsiderations for WaterLaw,” 56 Alabama L. Rev.(2005). ■ “Survey ofFlorida Water Law,” Watersand Water Rights (Robert

E. Beck, ed., Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.,Rev. Vol. 6, forthcoming 2005). ■ NaturalResources Law: A Place-Based Book ofProblems and Cases (Aspen Publishers,forthcoming 2005) (with Federico Cheeverand Bret C. Birdsong). ■ “TheEnvironmental Commerce Clause:Disguising Pragmatism with Metaphor,” TheJurisdynamics of Environmental Protection:Change and the Pragmatic Voice inEnvironmental Law (Environmental LawInstitute, Jim Chen ed., 2003). ■ “TheEnvironmental Commerce Clause,” 27Harvard Environmental L. Rev. 1 (2003). ■ “Protecting Monumental LandscapesUnder the Antiquities Act,” 87 Cornell L.Rev. 1333 (2002). ■ “A Background Historyof Directional Drilling in Michigan,” 2002Michigan State University L. Rev. 173(2002). ■ “Dam Policy: The EmergingParadigm of Restoration,” 31 Env’tl L.Reporter 10486 (2001).

LYRISSA BARNETTLIDSKYProfessor; UF ResearchFoundation Professor■ Freedom of the Press: AReference Guide to theU.S. Constitution (2004). ■“Brandenburg and the

United States’ War on Incitement Abroad:Defending a Double Standard,” 37 WakeForest L. Rev. 1009 (2002). ■ “Cybergossipor Securities Fraud? Some First AmendmentGuidance in Drawing the Line,” 5 wallstreet-lawyer.com 15 (2001), reprinted atwww.ucdavis.bizlawjournal.edu (2002) (withMichael Pike). ■ “Silencing John Doe:Defamation and Discourse in Cyberspace,”49 Duke 855 (2000). ■ Book Review, “TheReasonable Woman and the ‘Warrior Code,’”Jurist: Books-on-Law (2000).

2004 Faculty PromotionsEarning promotions in 2004 were (from left) Sherrie Russell-Brown

(to associate professor), Tracy Rambo (senior lecturer), Iris Burke (senior lecturer), Mark Fenster (associate professor), Peggy Schrieber (senior lecturer),Alison Gerencser (senior lecturer), Pedro Malavet (professor), Danaya Wright(professor) and Leanne Pflaum (senior lecturer). Also promoted, but not pictured, were Anne Rutledge and Patricia Thomson (senior lecturers).

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Dawson Named Associate DeanProfessor George Dawson (right) began his appointment

in August 2004 as associate dean for academic affairs, apost he previously held 1996-2000. He replaced GraduateTax Program Associate Dean and Director Michael Friel, whostepped down from the position to return his attention fulltime to the college’s top-ranked Graduate Tax Program.

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Florida’s comprehensive J.D. curriculum prepares students fromaround the world for a broad range of traditional and non-traditionallegal careers. After completing first-year requirements, students tailorstudies to specific interests and career plans through advanced cours-es, seminars, certificate programs, joint degrees and study abroadopportunities. More than 100 courses and 30 seminars are offered eachyear in a variety of practice areas, including Children’s Law, CorporateLaw, Environmental and Land Use Law, Estates and Trusts Practice,Family Law, Intellectual Property Law, International and ComparativeLaw, Litigation, Media Law and Tax Law. Through the following

programs, centers and institutes, faculty complement and enrich thecurriculum and legal scholarship by concentrating in specific fields andpractice areas:

Center for Estate & Elder Law PlanningThe Center for Estate and Elder Law Planning, directed by

Professor C. Douglas Miller of the Graduate Tax faculty, integratesteaching, training, research, scholarship and public service, andadvances estate planning and elder law knowledge, professionalism,skills and policy by educating and training students and lawyers. Asthe newest UF law center, its goals are to sponsor institutes and sym-posia, develop an estate planning and elder law library and softwarecollection, and provide community service though judicial externshipprograms. It works closely with the Graduate Tax Program and UFCenter for Gerontological Studies.

The center also administers the highly successful CertificateProgram in Estates and Trusts Practice, which prepares students tocounsel clients on complex issues related to aging and the preservationand efficient disposition of assets. The curriculum covers elder law,estates and trusts, estate planning, probate and taxation of individualincome, and gratuitious transfers of property.

Center for Governmental ResponsibilityThe Center for Governmental Responsibility (CGR) — Florida’s

senior legal and public policy research institute — was founded in1972 and is directed by UF law Dean Emeritus Jon Mills, former speak-er of the Florida House of Representatives. Faculty and students con-duct grant and contract-funded research — often interdisciplinary innature — on issues relating to public policy development and imple-mentation at the local, state, federal and international level.

CGR faculty teach and research on topics including environmentallaw, water law, land use, ecosystem management, sustainable develop-ment, environmental justice, health law and policy, bioethics, povertylaw, family law, state and federal constitutional issues, emergingdemocracies, historic preservation, conflict resolution, comparativelaw, European community law, international trade law, and electionand campaign finance law. Faculty also direct externships in the publicpolicy arena, including at the Florida Supreme Court, and administer fellowships funded through The Florida Bar.

CGR’s specialized programs include the Conservation Clinic, CostaRica Summer Program, Center for American Law Studies at WarsawUniversity in Poland, Rule of Law in the Americas Program — whichoffers the annual Conference on Legal & Policy Issues in the Americas

Specialty AreasC E N T E R S , I N S T I T U T E S & C E R T I F I C A T E P R O G R A M S

Working to fulfill the Center for Governmental Responsibility’s public service mission are faculty and staff (from left, back) Thomas Ankersen,Barbara Noah, Jeffrey Wade, Ewa Gmurzynska, Richard Hamman, DirectorJon Mills, Joan Flocks, Stephen Powell, Clifford Jones and (seated) LauraCoates, JoAnn Klein, Barbara Sieger, Linda Baldwin, Lenny Kennedy andTimothy McLendon.

Environmental & Land Use Law FacultyBoost Program Into Top 20

UF law’s Environmental and Land Use Law Program hasaccelerated into the nation’s top 20 based largely on strongresearch and scholarship by program faculty. Director AlysonFlournoy and Associate Director James Nicholas head this distinctiveprogram, which offers one of the richest law curricula in theSoutheast and an outstanding array of extra-curricular opportuni-ties and special programs. The addition in recent years of facultyMichael Allan Wolf, Christine Klein, Mary Jane Angelo, Mark Fensterand Sherrie Russell-Brown has further deepened and expanded itscurricular offerings and research areas.

Michael AAllan WWolf's commentary on regulatory takings wasselected as one of the top ten articles on land use and environ-mental law in 2003, for example, and Christine KKlein is finishinga natural resources casebook. Richard HHamann has testified onwetlands legislation before Congress and spoken extensively onthe Florida Everglades; Mark FFenster’s abstract on takings lastyear was one of the articles most often looked at on SSRN; andTom AAnkersen helped found an environmental law clinic at theUniversity of Costa Rica. Danaya WWright’s testimony and expertwitness testimony has been impressive, and her scholarshipcited by courts.

About 10 students each semester earn a Certificate inEnvironmental and Land Use Law. Students also gain hands-onexperience through summer externships, the Conservation Clinic —in Florida and Costa Rica — and participation in the annualRichard E. Nelson Symposium on Local Government Law andEnvironmental/International Environmental Moot Court Teams.Students in the Environmental and Land Use Law Society producean annual public interest environmental conference featuring topspeakers/panelists. Their 2004 conference featured best-selling novelist/columnist Carl Hiassen and 400-plus participants. ❒

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— and International Trade Law Program, which, under the direction ofSteve Powell, a long-time federal trade negotiator and chief counsel, isdeveloping legal services for translation into global business strategies,creating courses to complement the international curriculum, and providing seminars and presentations on related topics.

Center for International Financial Crimes StudiesDirected by Chesterfield Smith Professor Fletcher N. Baldwin, Jr.,

the Center for International Financial Crime Studies provides globalstudies, consultation, training and education in anti-money launderingstrategies, hosts leading experts as classroom lecturers, and coordi-nates national and international conferences, held to date in NewYork, Washington, D.C., Miami, San Francisco, Aruba and Curacao. Thecenter also is actively involved with the annual InternationalSymposium on Economic Crime at Cambridge University, England, and

is working with the Institute for Advanced Legal Studies at theUniversity of London — where Baldwin is an Honorary Fellow — todevelop and strengthen knowledge in areas of international expertise.Baldwin also has participated in training law enforcement officers atthe Federal Law Enforcement Training Center’s Financial FraudInstitute, money laundering countermeasures at the Financial CrimesSummit in Sydney, Australia, the Law Society of Scotland’s Conferenceon Money Laundering and Terrorism in Glasgow, and money launderingseminars at Montpellier University, France, and was consultant to thegovernment of Indonesia’s Financial Intelligence Unit, Checchi andCompany Consulting, Inc.

Center for the Study of Race and Race RelationsThe Center for the Study of Race and Race Relations (CSRRR) is an

academic research and resource center whose mission is to create and

Center on Children & FamiliesThe Center on Children and Families (CCF) promotes quality advocacy, teaching and

scholarship in children’s law and policy, and has been identified as one of the top fivesuch centers in the country. Director Barbara Bennett Woodhouse is joined by a teamof UF faculty with expertise in criminal law, juvenile justice, psychology, conflict resolution and human rights (see picture at right).

The center also administers the Certificate in Family Law — with more than doublethe participants of any other program (20 students earned the new certificate in 2003,and another 50 enrolled) — and provides opportunities for students to work with systems for protecting children from abuse and neglect in the CCF Child Welfare Clinic,family law externships, and/or as children’s fellows, where they work on Friend of theCourt briefs and research papers, assist with CCF’s annual interdisciplinary conferenceand help build a library of children’s legal resources. CCF is active in internationalhuman rights work, works collaboratively with government and the judiciary on lawreform and professional education, and helps educate children regarding their rightsand responsibilities in a free society by hosting youth summits and other activities.

During the past year, CCF faculty and student fellows contributed in numerous ways to improve advocacy policy and law and deliver legal services to underserved populations. At the local level, Monique Haughton Worrell and her clinical studentsdeveloped and presented a pilot program to provide legal resources to Florida’s regional Child Protective Teams; faculty worked with the local Child Advocacy Centereducating child welfare professionals on children’s rights; Alison Gerencser and her students taught conflict resolution to incarcerated youth; and Joan Flocks served onSenator Gary Sipland’s Lake Apopka and Lake Jewell Commission on Health Issues, protecting children and families from environmental risks.

At the state level, Claudia Wright and her students participated with the Steering Committee on Children and Families in the Courts, createdby the Florida Supreme Court and Office of State Court Administrator to assist Florida’s judicial circuits with implementation of the UnifiedFamily Court. Wright also served on the Florida Bar Juvenile Rules Committee and Legal Needs of Children Committee. Christopher Sloboginchaired and Mark Fondacaro was a member of the ABA Death Penalty Moratorium Project for Florida, which is assessing operation of the juveniledeath penalty as part of a comprehensive assessment of the death penalty in Florida; and CCF continues to work with the Florida Supreme Courtand Eighth Circuit to provide education and training for the transition to a unified family court model.

At the national level, Woodhouse was vice chair of the ABA Subcommittee on the Rights of the Child and on the Policy Advisory Board of FirstStar — both of which are engaged in law reform and policy research — and testified at the Bi-Partisan Congressional Roundtable on Children andto the Children’s Bureau in Washington, D.C., while Sharon Rush was invited by several school boards and teachers’ groups to share her work onchildren and racial discrimination. CCF faculty and fellows also authored or co-authored amicus briefs in cases implicating rights of children andyouth, including juvenile criminal cases, adoption cases, and custody cases. Nancy Dowd and CCF fellows authored an amicus brief in a complexadoption case, and Slobogin and Woodhouse co-authored a brief to the U.S. Supreme Court on behalf of 50 child advocacy organizations, includ-ing the Child Welfare League of America and Children’s Defense Fund, in support of the upcoming case challenging the constitutionality of thejuvenile death penalty. CCF faculty also helped coordinate interdisciplinary conferences on children, culture and violence in 2003 and children,race and education in 2004.

At the international level, faculty are actively engaged with NGOs such as the United Nations and International Society of Family Law, andwork in and with other countries. Sherrie Russell-Brown, for example, trained African workers on their labor and health rights, and Woodhouseworked in Northern Ireland on an international project to study children in societies in transition and develop policies for protecting them.

The center was recently selected for one of three new shared faculty positions by the University of Florida Institute for Child and AdolescentResearch and Evaluation (ICARE), which acts as a hub to link UF faculty working on issues of importance to children and youth and stimulatecross-disciplinary collaboration. A search is underway for a candidate with both a J.D. and a Ph.D. and a record of achievement in vulnerable populations, children in transition and/or early childhood. ❒

Center on Children and Families faculty (from left)Berta Hernández-Truyol, Sharon Rush, Alison Gerencser,Director Barbara Bennett Woodhouse, Kenneth Nunn,Program Assistant Debbie Kelley, Mark Fondacaro, Co-Director Iris Burke, Christopher Slobogin, Co-DirectorNancy Dowd and Claudia Wright help deepen under-standing of this meaningful practice area. (AssociateDirectors Mae Clark, Joan Flocks, Jeffrey Grater, KarenKerouck, Monique Haughton Worrell, Don Peters,Sherrie Russell-Brown, Peggy Schrieber, WalterWeyrauch and Steve Willis not pictured.)

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foster communities of dialogue on race and race relations and promotehistorically- and empirically-based thinking, talking, research, writingand teaching on race. The Levin College of Law is one of only five lawschools in the nation housing a center devoted to the study of race.Under the direction of Professor Katheryn Russell-Brown and AssistantDirector Melissa Bamba, CSRRR hosted its fourth annual conference,“Rhyme, Rhetoric and Race: Exploring the Influence of Literature,Language & Lyrics on Race Relations,” in 2003; co-hosted the confer-ence, “Beyond Brown, an Interdisciplinary Look at Issues, Impacts &Challenges of Landmark Desegregation Case,” in March 2004; andlaunched an innovative Faculty Reading Initiative to encouragethoughtful discussion of race and racial issues in September 2004.

Institute for Dispute ResolutionUnder the direction of Trustee Research Fellow/Professor Don

Peters and Associate Directors Jonathan Cohen and Alison EcklesGerenscer, the Institute for Dispute Resolution encourages andenhances teaching, research and service in mediation, negotiation, col-lective bargaining and arbitration/international litigation. IDR trainsstudents to become mediators through actual proceedings involvingcounty civil disputes (such as landlord-tenant disputes or consumercases), thereby helping to prepare them to resolve issues for futureclients without going to trial. IDR also hosts and co-sponsors an annualconference with Upchurch Watson & White on high stakes mediationpractice, and has joined with the Florida Dispute Resolution Center tohold a highly successful transformative mediation symposium. Thesewell-attended and highly rated events blend theory and practice, andaward continuing legal and mediation education credits.

Peters also directs the Virgil Hawkins Civil Clinics — offering thePro Se Family Law Clinic, Full Representation Clinic, and GatorTeamchild/Juvenile Law Clinic — which provide quality, intensely super-vised, clinical learning experiences in family matters while deliveringcompetent legal services to those in need.

Institute for Human Rights, Peace & DevelopmentLed by Winston P. Nagan, former board chairman of Amnesty

International USA, this institute seeks to enhance understanding ofgovernance and human rights in Africa and other countries; facilitatecreation of the Human Rights and Peace Centre at Makerere Universityin Uganda, and assist with coordination of Southeastern Europeanpeace conferences.

Intellectual Property Law ProgramThe Intellectual Property Law Program enables the college to be

one of the few in the nation — and only one in the Southeast — tooffer a Certificate in Intellectual Property Law. More than 30 studentshave earned the certificate, and many more take a substantial numberof IP courses. UF Research Foundation Professor/Program DirectorThomas Cotter also coordinates an annual Law and TechnologyConference to share information on this fast-moving subject area withpractitioners. The third annual conference held in Orlando in February2004 brought more than 60 top practitioners in the field and academ-ic representatives to focus on issues of pressing interest, including cor-porate, transactional, licensing and international issues, “music wars,”and litigation. ❒

UF’s tax faculty is consistently ranked in the nation’s top two byU.S. News and World Report, which rates law school specialty areasbased on the reputation of faculty in thatspeciality. Joining the program this fall areformer New York University Tax ProgramDirector Paul R. McDaniel (at right, withGraduate Tax Program Associate Dean/Director Michael Friel) and Harvard LawSchool faculty member Diane M. Ring (pic-tured). Both have expertise in internation-al taxation, and are expected to be major players in development —with Professor Lawrence Lokken, Culverhouse Eminent Scholar inTaxation — of a LL.M. in International Tax Law during the comingyear.

According to Friel, the proposed degree reflects the increasingimportance of understanding and advising on international tax rules ina global economy with multinational businesses, rapid capital flows,U.S. clients with international dealings, and foreign clients with U.S.investments and businesses.

McDaniel, an expert in U.S. and international tax law and first per-manent holder of the James J. Freeland Eminent Scholar Chair inTaxation, was a visiting professor at UF in the 90s. He earned his B.A.from the University of Oklahoma; LL.B. (cum laude) from Harvard LawSchool; and Honorary Doctor of Laws from Uppsala University, Sweden.He has authored or co-authored more than 50 articles and eight bookson taxation; and has served as acting associate tax legislative counselin the Office of Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, and director of NewYork University’s Graduate Tax and International Tax Programs. Hehelped pioneer the concept of tax expenditures with the late StanleySurrey of Harvard, who explored these issues in Tax Expenditures.Before working with Surrey, he practiced in Oklahoma, then workedfor the government until the fall of 1970, when he joined the BostonCollege law faculty. He later joined the firm Hill and Barlow, where hewas a partner prior to joining the NYU faculty in 1993.

Associate Professor Diane Ring (right), whoseprimary interest is international tax law and rela-tions and taxation of financial instruments, was aHarvard assistant professor of law for severalyears, and national reporter for the 2004Conference on Double Nontaxation for theInternational Fiscal Association. Prior to enteringteaching, she was an associate with Caplin & Drysdale, Chartered, inWashington, D.C., working primarily in international tax and financialproducts for planning, audit, legislative and regulatory matters. Sheclerked for Judge Jon O. Newman, Federal Court of Appeals, SecondCircuit, New York, NY. Ring received her A.B. (anthropology, summacum laude, John Harvard Scholar, Harvard College Scholar andElizabeth Carey Agassiz Scholar) and J.D. (magna cum laude) fromHarvard, where she was an editor on the Harvard Law Review.

Graduate Tax Program faculty — Dennis A. Calfee, Patricia E.Dilley, Michael K. Friel, David M. Hudson, Lawrence Lokken, Martin J.McMahon Jr., Paul R. McDaniel, C. Douglas Miller, Michael A. Oberst,David M. Richardson, Diane M. Ring, and Steven J. Willis — are authorsof some of the most widely used textbooks and treatises, and havelectured at numerous conferences and institutes in the United Statesand abroad, occupied leadership positions in professional organiza-tions, and served as consultants to the Internal Revenue Service, con-gressional committees and other major public and private entities.

Graduate Tax students have outstanding academic credentials, and,in many cases, significant professional experience. More than 1,700students have earned their LL.M. in Tax from UF since the programbegan in 1974, and it was first in the nation to offer a Doctor ofJuridical Science (S.J.D.) specifically in taxation. Roughly two years old,UF’s S.J.D. program requires innovative research and writing, alongwith publication of a book or three law review articles.

The Graduate Tax Program also publishes the faculty-edited FloridaTax Review, one of the country’s leading tax journals. ❒

Fa c u l t y J o i n G r a d u a t e Ta x P r o g r a m , L L . M . i n I n t e r n a t i o n a l Ta x U n d e r

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JOSEPH W. LITTLEProfessor; AlumniResearch Scholar■ “Election Disputes andthe Constitutional Right toVote,” 13 U. Fla. J. L. &Pub. Policy 37 (2001). ■“Recreation Boating Law,”

Benedict on Admiralty (Matthew Bender,2001). ■ “Teaching Torts: Introduction to theLaw of Torts,” 45 St. Louis L. J. 715 (2001).■ “The Need to Revise the FloridaConstitutional Revision Commission,” 52Fla. L. Rev. 475 (2000).

LAWRENCE LOKKENHugh F. CulverhouseEminent Scholar inTaxation■ Federal Taxation ofEmployee Compensation(Warren Gorham &Lamont 2004) (with Boris

I. Bittker). ■ Fundamentals of InternationalTaxation (Warren Gorham & Lamont2004/2005 ed.) (with Boris I. Bittker). ■ “A Tax Lawyer’s Observations on ScaryNumbers, Politics, and Irresponsibility:Commentary on Shaviro’s RecklessDisregard,” 45 Boston College L. Rev.(2004). ■ “Does the U.S. Tax SystemDisadvantage U.S. Multinationals in the

World Marketplace?” 4 J. Tax’n GlobalTransactions 23 (Summer 2004). ■ Treatise,Federal Taxation of Income, Estates & Gifts,Vol. 4 (2003) (with Boris I. Bittker). ■ “Asthe World of Partnership Turns,” 56 S.M.U.L. Rev. 365 (2003). ■ “Foreign BaseCompany Sales and Services Income: AnOverreaching Anachronism or an EssentialElement of the Controlled ForeignCorporations Regime?” Tax’n Global Trans47 (Spring 2003). ■ Fundamentals ofInternational Taxation (Warren, Gorham &Lamont, 2001). ■ “Marking Up theBlueprint,” 26 Brooklyn J. Int’l L. 1493(2001). ■ “Capitalization: Complexity inSimplicity,” 91 Tax Notes 1357 (2001). ■Federal Taxation of Income, Estates & Gifts(Warren, Gorham & Lamont, Vol. 1, 2 and 3,1999, 2000 and 2002).

PAUL J. MAGNARELLAAffiliate Professor;Professor of Criminologyand Law; AffiliateProfessor ofAnthropology, AfricanStudies, and EuropeanStudies

■ Chapter, “The Consequences of the WarCrimes Tribunals and an InternationalCriminal Court for Human Rights inTransitioning Societies,” Human Rights and

Societies in Transition 119 (2004, ed.Horowitz and Schnabel, United NationsUniversity Press). ■ “International HumanRights: Roots of a Progression,” 19 J. ThirdWorld Studies 13 (2002). ■ Justice in Africa:Rwanda’s Genocide, Its Courts, and the UNCriminal Tribunal (Ashgate Pub., 2000). ■Guest editor, special issue of Human Rightsand Human Diversity, 13 Global Bioethics(2000). ■ “Achieving Human Rights inAfrica: The Challenge for the NewMillennium,” 4 African Studies Quarterly(electronic journal, 2000). ■ “PromotingPeace, Human Rights and National Security:Focus on Sub-Saharan Africa,” 1 SocialJustice, Anthropology, Peace and HumanRights 99 (2000). ■ “ComprehendingGenocide: The Case of Rwanda,” 13 GlobalBioethics 23 (2000). ■ “Turkey,” Countriesand Their Cultures (MacMillan, 2001, M.Ember & C.R. Ember, eds.).

PEDRO A. MALAVETProfessor■ “Afterword: OutsiderCitizenships andMultidimensional Borders:The Power and Danger ofNot Belonging,” Clev. St.L. Rev. (2004). ■

“Reparations Theory and Postcolonial PuertoRico: Some Preliminary Thoughts,” 13 La

International ProgramsThrough a number of diverse program initiatives and faculty efforts, the Levin College of Law

has long stretched beyond its immediate geographic borders to impact legal research, educationand policy around the globe. Many of the areas listed in the preceding pages — most notably theCenter for Governmental Responsibility, Environmental and Land Use Law Program, Center forInternational Financial Crimes Studies, and Institute for Human Rights, Peace and Development —have offered international activities for three decades, focusing specifically on the “Atlantic Rim,”an area encompassing North and South America, Europe and Africa. The school is affiliated with 60foreign countries, and offers initiatives in International Trade Law, a pioneering visiting foreignscholar research program, a history of emphasis on legal and policy issues in the Americas, and ahighly diversified faculty and student body. The faculty includes numerous experts in international

legal issues, including Fletcher N. Baldwin, Dennis Calfee, Michael Gordon, Cally Jordan, Lawrence Lokken, Paul Magnarella,Paul McDaniel, Jon Mills, Winston Nagan, Walter Weyrauch and Barbara Bennett Woodhouse.

Gerald A. Sohn Research Scholar/Professor Stuart Cohn (top, left) —- with assistance from an advisory board of leadinginternational practitioners — coordinates and supervises the International and Comparative Law Certificate Program, interna-tional study opportunities for students through universities of Leiden (Netherlands), Frankfurt (Germany), Montpellier(France), Warsaw (Poland) and Monash (Melbourne, Australia), student and faculty exchanges with foreign law schools, andprograms in Mexico, Brazil, Poland and elsewhere. American Bar Association-approved summer academic programs are avail-able at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, University of Costa Rica, and University of Montpellier, and comparativeenrichment courses are taught at the law school by faculty from around the world. Exchange programs havebeen established with Monash, Pontifica Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Leiden, Frankfurt,and Stellenbosch (South Africa). New programs to strengthen ties with Latin American and Caribbean coun-tries are under review, as is an LL.M. in Latin American and Caribbean Law.

Professor David Hudson (right) directs the LL.M. in Comparative Law Program for foreign law graduatesseeking to enhance their understanding of the American legal system. Nearly 80 attorneys from countriesincluding China, France, Germany, Poland, Japan, Italy, Uganda, Brazil, Turkey and the United Kingdom haveearned the degree since 1994. ❒

U F L A W 1 5

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Raza L. J. 387 (2002). ■ “Introduction:LatCritical Encounters with Culture,” North-South Frameworks, 51 Fla. L. Rev. 1 (2003).■ America’s Colony: The Political andCultural Conflict between the United Statesand Puerto Rico (NYU Press, 2004). ■ “TheAccidental Crit II: Culture and the LookingGlass of Exile,” 78 Den. U. L. Rev. 753(2001). ■ “Puerto Rico: Cultural Nation,American Colony,” 6 Mich. J. Race & Law 1(2001). ■ “Literature and Arts as Antisubord-ination, Praxis-Latcrit Theory and CulturalProduction: The Confessions of anAccidental Crit,” 33 U. Cal. Davis L. Rev.1293 (2000).

AMY R. MASHBURNProfessor■ Ethical Guidelines forSettlement Negotiations (asreporter, 2002, AmericanBar Association, LitigationSection publication). ■“The Criminal Defense

Lawyer’s Fiduciary Duty to Clients withMental Disability,” 68 Fordham L. Rev. 1581(2000) (with Christopher Slobogin).

DIANE H. MAZURUF Research FoundationProfessor■ “Is ‘Don’t Ask, Don’tTell’ Unconstitutional AfterLawrence? What It WillTake to Overturn thePolicy,” 15 Fla. J. L & Pub.

Pol’y 423 (2003). ■ “Why Progressives Lostthe War When They Lost the Draft,” 32Hofstra L. Rev. 553 (2004). ■ “Rehnquist’sVietnam: Constitutional Separatism and theStealth Advance of Martial Law,” 77 Ind. L.J. 701 (2002). ■ “Word Games, War Games,”98 Mich. L. Rev. 1590 (2000). ■ “Sex andLies: Rules of Ethics, Rules of Evidence, andOur Conflicted Views on the Significance ofHonesty,” 14 Notre Dame J. L. Ethics & Pub.Pol’y 679 (2000). ■ Book Review, 26 ArmedForces & Soc’y 670 (2000) (reviewing KellyFlinn, Proud to Be).

PAUL R. MCDANIELJames J. FreelandEminent Scholar inTaxation, Professor ■ Federal Income Taxation(with McMahon, Simmons,and Abreu) (FoundationPress: 5th ed., 2004). ■

“Trade Agreements and Income Taxation:Interactions, Conflicts, and Resolutions, 57Tax L. Rev. 275 (2004). ■ 2004 AnnualSupplements to Federal Income Taxation ofBusiness Organizations, Federal IncomeTaxation of Corporations, and FederalIncome Taxation of Partnerships and S

Corporations. ■ Federal Wealth TransferTaxation (with Repetti and Caron)(Foundation Press, 5th ed., 2003). ■ “TheU.S. Tax Treatment of Income Earned inDeveloping Countries,” 35 George Wash.Int’l L. Rev. 265 (2003). ■ “The Impact ofTrade Agreements on Tax Systems,” StaatenUnd Steuren (Heidelberg: C.F. Muller Verlag,2000) 1105, reprinted in 30 Intertax 166(2002). ■ “Trade and Taxation,” 26 BrooklynJ. of Int’l Law 1621 (2001). ■ “Reflectionson International Tax Law for the 21stCentury,” Canadian Tax Foundation, 2000World Tax Conference Report, 20:1 (2000).

MARTIN J. MCMAHON, JR.Clarence J. TeselleProfessor■ “Recent Developments

in Federal IncomeTaxation: The Year 2003,” 6Fla. Tax Rev. 445 (2004)

(with Ira B. Shepard). ■ Federal IncomeTaxation, Cases and Materials, 5th ed., andaccompanying Class Discussion Problems(with Paul McDaniel, Dan Simmons & AliceAbreu) (Foundation Press, 2004). ■Cumulative supplements to Federal IncomeTaxation of Individuals, 3rd ed. (Warren,Gorham & Lamont, 2002) (with Boris I.Bittker & Lawrence A. Zelenak); FederalIncome Taxation of Partnerships and SCorporations, 3rd. ed., and accompanyingStudy Problems (with Paul McDaniel & DanSimmons) (Foundation Press, 1999); FederalIncome Taxation of Corporations, 2nd ed.n,and accompanying Study Problems (withPaul McDaniel & Dan Simmons)(Foundation Press,1999); and FederalIncome Taxation of Business Organizations,3rd ed., and accompanying Study Problemsand Teacher’s Manual (with Paul McDaniel& Dan Simmons) (Foundation Press, 1999).■ Federal Income Taxation, Cases andMaterials, 5th ed. (with P. McDaniel, D.Simmons & A. Abreu) (Foundation Press,2004, in press). ■ “Recent Developments inFederal Income Taxation: The Year 2003,”Fla. Tax Rev. (2004, in press) (with Ira B.Shepard). ■ “The Matthew Effect andFederal Taxation,” Boston College L. Rev.(2004, in press). ■ “Privilege and the WorkProduct Doctrine in Tax Cases,” The TaxLawyer (2004, in press) (with Ira B.Shepard). ■ “Privilege and The Work ProductDoctrine in Tax Cases,” 23 ABA Tax SectionNews Quarterly 11 (Winter 2004). ■ 2003-1Semi-annual Cumulative Supplement and2003-2 Semi-annual Cumulative Supplementto Federal Income Taxation of Individuals,3rd ed. (Warren, Gorham & Lamont, 2002)(with Boris I. Bittker & Lawrence A.Zelenak); semi-annual cumulative supple-

ments since 2003. ■ 2003 Annual CumulativeSupplement to Federal Income Taxation ofPartnerships and S Corporations, 3rd ed.,and accompanying Study Problems(Foundation Press, 1999) (with P. McDaniel& D. Simmons); annual supplements since2000. ■ 2003 Annual CumulativeSupplement to Federal Income Taxation ofCorporations, 2nd. ed., and accompanyingStudy Problems (Foundation Press, 1999)(with P. McDaniel & D. Simmons); annualsupplements since 2000. ■ 2003 AnnualCumulative Supplement to Federal IncomeTaxation of Business Organizations, 3rd ed.,and accompanying Study Problems andTeacher’s Manual (Foundation Press) (with P.McDaniel & D. Simmons); annual supple-ments since 2000. ■ 2003 Annual CumulativeSupplement to Federal Income Taxation,Cases and Materials, 4th ed. (FoundationPress, 1998) (with P. McDaniel, H. Ault &D. Simmons); Annual supplements since1999. ■ “Recent Developments in FederalIncome Taxation: The Year 2002,” 6 Fla. TaxRev. 81 (2003) (with Ira B. Shepard). ■“Beyond a GAAR: Retrofitting the Code toRein In 21st Century Tax Shelters,” 98 TaxNotes 1721 (March 17, 2003). ■ FederalIncome Taxation of Individuals and accompa-nying Instructor’s Manual and StudyProblems (Warren, Gorham & Lamont, 3ded., 2002) (with Boris I. Bittker & LawrenceA. Zelenak). ■ “Capitalization of BenefitsExtending Substantially Beyond the TaxableYear,” 97 Tax Notes 257 (October 14, 2002)(with Boris I. Bittker & Lawrence A.Zelenak). ■ “Recent Developments inFederal Income Taxation: The Year 2001,” 6Fla. Tax Rev. 627 (2002) (with Ira B.Shepard). ■ “A Whirlwind Tour of theInternal Revenue Code’s At-Risk and PassiveActivity Loss Rules,” 36 Real PropertyProbate & Trust J. 673 (2002) (with Boris I.Bittker & Lawrence A. Zelenak). ■“Economic Substance, Purposive Activity,and Corporate Tax Shelters,” 94 Tax Notes1017 (February 25, 2002). ■ “RecentDevelopments in Federal Income Taxation:The Year 2000,” 5 Fla. Tax Rev. 47 (2001)(with Ira B. Shepard). ■ “Simplifying theInterest Deduction for Individual Taxpayers,”91 Tax Notes 1371 (2001). ■ “RandomThoughts on Applying Judicial Doctrines toInterpret the Internal Revenue Code,” 54SMU L. Rev. 195 (2001). ■ “RecentDevelopments in Business Taxation: WithEmphasis on Oil and Gas Taxation,” 52ndAnnual Inst. on Oil and Gas Law & Taxation(Matthew Bender, 2001) (with Ira B.Shepard). ■ “Recent Developments inBusiness Taxation: With Emphasis on Oiland Gas Taxation,” 51st Annual Institute onOil and Gas Law and Taxation 13-1(Matthew Bender 2000) (with Ira B.Shepard).

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Major Construction/Renovation ProjectExpands Library & Classroom Space

Construction is in progress to renovate and expand libraryand classroom space at the Levin College of Law, thanks to amajor 2001-03 effort that raised more than $22 million in privatesupport and state and University of Florida funds for the project.By the time construction ends in Summer 2005, the new LawtonChiles Legal Information Center — named in honor of the late1955 UF law graduate, Florida governor and U.S. Senator — willhave nearly doubled in size to become the largest academic lawlibrary in the Southeast and among the top 20 nationwide.

The law school community also will have access to greatlyexpanded and enhanced classroom facilities. Two three-story education towers — which were completed in time for use this fall —between and connecting Holland and Bruton-Geer Halls, together withother new classrooms and existing facilities, will provide seating forclose to the college’s entire current enrollment of 1,310. The new tow-ers (east tower at top right) feature 11 spacious classrooms, including aCeremonial Classroom (center photograph), which seats up to 160 forconferences, receptions and special sessions. All have wireless Internetaccess, and most offer desktop outlets for laptops and “smart podia”for use in presentations.

The LIC offers access to 3.5 million-plus volumes in UF libraries and43 million titles held by libraries throughout the world, and databasesthat provide access to federal and state laws, periodicals, news articlesand background materials. The 30-plus member staff, including aTechnology Services section, is headed by Clarence J. TeSelle Professor ofLaw and Associate Dean for Library & Technology Kathleen Price, whohas served as law librarian of congress and director of law libraries at NewYork, Duke and Minnesota universities. As the laboratory and social center ofthe law school, the LIC serves faculty and students, and cooperates with otherstate libraries to assist members of The Florida Bar and general public. Theexpanded 100,000 square-foot library will offer:• Access to information in all formats located anywhere in the world, with staff

able to deliver it to the desktops of faculty and students. The LIC collection ofmore than 600,000 volumes and volume equivalents will be housed on threelevels of the building in open stack displays, while an open reserve area willoffer students direct access to exams and study aids.

• Individual study carrels on two floors with ergonomic seating for more than300, with seating for an additional 300. Units will be equipped for wirelesscomputer use, with playback carrels available for review of taped classes,negotiations and trial skills.

• Thirteen conference rooms for team study and research.• Space for small student classes for training in new research databases and other software, as well as a student production lab and

faculty instructional technology lab for state-of-art media use.• A paneled rare book room with displays of faculty writings and special collections in a controlled environment. • A meditation/lactation room to meet the personal needs of a diverse law school community.• Renovated and updated faculty offices and classrooms in Holland Hall Law Center (named after former Florida Governor and U.S.

Senator Spessard Holland), with offices for visiting scholars on the second floor.• A new west entrance to the college, with a courtyard (last picture above) that provides entry to the Legal Information Center,

to classrooms surrounding the area, and to Bruton-Geer Hall. • Enhanced outdoor gathering and circulation areas with two semi-enclosed courtyards and an open green space to the northwest.

Ponikvar & Associates of Gainesville, which has specialized in college, university and institutional projects for the past 10 years,and Tsoi/Kobus & Associates of Boston, which recently completed work for Harvard Medical and Business schools, WashingtonUniversity, Boston College, Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Suffolk University Law School, Boston, provided architectural and designelements for the new facilities. ❒

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JON L. MILLSDirector, Center forGovernmentalResponsibility; Professor;Dean Emeritus■ “The Rewards ofCitizenship & Perils ofIdentity: How the Law

Defines You in the Globalized World,” Vol.III, No. 2 Warsaw Univ. L. Rev. 95 (2004). ■“Responding to Terrorism and AchievingStability in the Global Financial System:Rational Policy or Crisis Reaction?” Vol. 11,No. 4 Cambridge Univ. J. of Financial Crime(Henry Stewart Publications, UK, 2004). ■“Principles for Constitutions and Institutionsin Promoting the Rule of Law in LatinAmerica,” 16:1 Univ. Fla. J. of Int’l L.(2003). ■ “Responding to Terrorism andAchieving Stability in the Global FinancialSystem: Rational Policy or Crisis Reaction?”Cambridge Univ. J. of Financial Crime(Henry Stewart Publications, UK). ■ “Floridaon Trial: Federalism in the 2000 PresidentialElection,” 13.1 Stan. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 83(2002). ■ “Diversity in Law Schools: WhereAre We Headed in the Twenty-first Century,”33 U. Toledo L. Rev. 119 (2001). ■ “BeyondElection 2000: Law & Policy in the NewMillennium,” 13 U. Fla. J. L & Pub. Pol’y 69(2001). ■ “Legal Standards, PoliticalPressures: Redistricting in Florida, 1970-

2000,” Mapping Florida’s PoliticalLandscape 103 (2001) (with Richard Scher).■ “Internet Casinos: A Sure Bet for MoneyLaundering,” 19 Dickinson J. Int’l L. 77(2000). ■ “Setting a New Standard for PublicEducation: Revision 6 Increases the Duty ofthe State to Make ‘Adequate Provision’ forFlorida Schools, 52 Fla. L. Rev. 329 (2000)(with Timothy McLendon).

ROBERT C. L. MOFFATProfessor; AffiliateProfessor of Philosophy■ “Incivility as a Barometerof Societal Decay,” 1 Fla.Phil. Rev. 46 (2001). ■“Whining in the SpoiledSociety: Can Semiotics

Help Us Survive Prosperity,” The Law vs. thePeople (Peter Lang Publishers, 2000)(William Pencak, J. Ralph Lindgren, RobertaKevelson & Charles N. Yood, eds.).

WINSTON P. NAGANProfessor; Samuel T. DellResearch Scholar;Affiliate Professor ofAnthropology; Director,Institute of Human Rights& Peace Development;Director, Study AbroadProgram with Cape Town

University■ “The New Bush National Security Doctrineand the Rule of Law,” 22 Berkeley J. Int’l L.375 (2004) (with Craig Hammer). ■ “Racism,Genocide and Mass Murder: Toward a LegalTheory About Group Deprivations,” Nat’lBlack L. J. (2002). ■ “Conflict Resolutionand Democratic Transformation: Confrontingthe Shameful Past — Prescribing a HumaneFuture,” 119 South African L. J. 174 (2002).■ “Rule of Law: Lofty Ideal or HarshReality?” 8 J. Fin. Crime 347 (2001). ■ “TheInternational Law of Torture: From UniversalProscription to Effective Application andEnforcement,” 14 Harv. Hum. Rts. J. 87(2001). ■ “Lawyer Roles, Identity, andProfessional Responsibility in an Age ofGlobalism,” 13 Fla. J. Int’l L. 131 (2001). ■“Dean Kronman’s Diversity Narrative:Liberal Educational Ideology Versus SocialJustice,” 52 Fla. L. Rev. 897 (2000). ■“Sanctions, Black America and Apartheid:Vindicating the Promise of PeacefulChange,” Foreign Policy and the Black(Inter) National Interest (Albany StateU.N.Y. Press, 2000) (Charles P. Henry, ed.).■ “Human Rights and Revolution,” 1 SocialJustice: Anthropology, Peace and HumanRights 43 (2000).

Reviews & Journals Spotlight Legal Scholarship■ Faculty in the Levin College of Law’s Graduate Tax Program edit and publish The Florida Tax Review.

This innovative law review, which has become one of the country’s best, publishes articles on a widerange of timely and important tax law and policy issues. Articles are selected and edited by FacultyEditor Professor David Hudson (at right, standing), with assistance from a board of editors consistingof UF Graduate Tax Program faculty and tax scholars from other leading law schools. Recent issueshave included pieces on the need for progressivity, estate tax contingencies, bankruptcy tax reform,the Tax Court’s equitable powers, capital cost recovery, taxation of worldwide income, standards oftax review and recent developments in income taxation.

■ The Florida Law Review includes articles by legal scholars expert in various areas of the law andworks by students, and is published up to five times a year. In addition, the Review brings one ofAmerica’s preeminent legal scholars to the law school each spring as part of its DunwodyDistinguished Lecture in Law series to speak on a compelling contemporary legal or social issue. The2004 Dunwody Lecture in Law was given by Georgetown Professor Viet D. Dinh, who spoke on “Nationalism in the Age of Terror.”

■ The Florida Journal of International Law publishes four issues per year containing scholarly works with global perspectives byprofessors, practitioners and students on public and private international law topics. The journal also publishes the AnnualConference on Legal and Policy Issues in the Americas, which brings together practitioners, scholars and government officials todiscuss issues affecting North, Central and South America, including international trade and the Free Trade Area of the Americas,terrorism, financial crimes, and human rights issues. Recent articles have focused on subjects as varied as InternationalCommercial and Trade Law, Intellectual Property Law, Human Rights Law, Terrorism, War Crimes Tribunals, InternationalEnvironmental Law, and Maritime Law.

■ The Journal of Law & Public Policy is an interdisciplinary student publication devoted to public policy implications of legal issuesand to fostering discourse on judicial decisions, legislation, law reform, and other legal issues facing public policy decision-makers.Its members — which include University of Florida law students and joint-degree and other graduate students — publish threeissues a year and sponsor a spring symposium.

■ The Journal of Technology Law & Policy is a student-edited journal (also online) published twice a year devoted to the discussionof relevant technology issues, including patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, antitrust, and computer law. ❒

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JAMES C. NICHOLASAssociate Director,Environmental and LandUse Law Program;Affiliate Professor;Professor of Urban &Regional Planning■ “The Ups and Downs of

Growth Management in Florida,” 12 Fla. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y (2001). ■ “GrowthManagement and Smart Growth in Florida,”35 Wake Forest L. Rev. 645 (2000) (withRuth Steiner).

BARBARA A. NOAHResearch Associate,Center for GovernmentalResponsibility■ “Politicizing the End ofLife: Lessons from theSchiavo Controversy,” 58U. Miami L. Rev. (forth-

coming 2004). ■ “Paradoxes in DietarySupplement Risk Regulation,” 31 Am. J. L.& Med. (symposium, forthcoming 2005). ■ “Bioethical Malpractice: Risk andResponsibility in Human Research,” 7 J.Health Care L. & Pol’y 725 (2004). ■ “TheParticipation of Underrepresented Minoritiesin Clinical Research,” 29 Am. J. L. & Med.221 (2003). ■ “AIDS and AntiretroviralDrugs in South Africa: Public Health,Politics, and Individual Suffering,” 31 J. L.Med. & Ethics 144 (2003) (review). ■ “Life,Death, and Politics: The Long Good-Bye,” 3J. Phil. Sci. & L. (2003). ■ Law, Medicine,and Medical Technology: Cases & Materials(Foundation Press, 2002) (with Lars Noah).■ “The Invisible Patient,” 2002 U. Ill. L. Rev.121 (2002). ■ “Adverse Drug Reactions:Harnessing Experiential Data to PromotePatient Welfare,” 49 Cath. U. L. Rev. 449(2000). ■ “Adverse Drug Reactions inElderly Patients: Alternative Approaches forPostmarket Surveillance,” 33 J. Health L.383 (2000) (with David Brushwood).

LARS NOAHUF Research Foundation Professor■ “An Inventory ofMathematical Blunders inApplying the Loss-of-a-Chance Doctrine,” 70 Mo.L. Rev. (2005). ■ “Medical

Education and Malpractice: What’s theConnection?,” 15 Health Matrix (2005). ■“Ambivalent Commitments to Federalism inControlling the Practice of Medicine,” 53 U.Kan. L. Rev. (2004). ■ “A PostmodernistTake on the Human Embryo ResearchDebate,” 36 Conn. L. Rev. 1133 (2004). ■“Deputizing Institutional Review Boards toPolice (Audit?) Biomedical Research,” 25 J.

Legal Med. 267 (2004). ■ “Trends inAssisted Reproductive Technology,” 351 NewEng. J. Med. 398 (2004). ■ “SupervisingResearch with Human Subjects,” 29 Admin.& Reg. L. News (Summer 2004). ■ “AssistedReproductive Technologies and the Pitfalls ofUnregulated Biomedical Innovation,” 55 Fla.L. Rev. 603 (2003). ■ “Challenges in theFederal Regulation of Pain ManagementTechnologies,” 31 J. L. Med. & Ethics 55(2003). ■ “Triage in the Nation’s MedicineCabinet: The Puzzling Scarcity of Vaccinesand Other Drugs,” 54 S. C. L. Rev. 741(2003). ■ “Pharmacogenetics,” 348 New Eng.J. Med. 2042 (2003). ■ Law, Medicine, andMedical Technology: Cases and Materials(Foundation Press 2002) (with Barbara A.Noah). ■ “Medicine’s Epistemology:Mapping the Haphazard Diffusion ofKnowledge in the Biomedical Community,”44 Ariz. L. Rev. 373 (2002). ■ “The ComingPharmacogenomics Revolution: TailoringDrugs to Fit Patients’ Genetic Profiles,” 43Jurimetrics J. 1 (2002). ■ “Informed Consentand the Elusive Dichotomy BetweenStandard and Experimental Therapy,” 28 Am.J. L. & Med. 361 (2002). ■ “AttorneyGeneral’s Intrusion Into Clinical Practice,”346 New Eng. J. Med. 1918 (2002). ■“Standards for Medical Expert Testimony,”288 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2971 (2002). ■ “CivilJury Nullification,” 86 Iowa L. Rev. 1601(2001). ■ “A Miscarriage in the DrugApproval Process?: Mifepristone Embroilsthe FDA in Abortion Politics,” 36 WakeForest L. Rev. 571 (2001). ■ “RewardingRegulatory Compliance: The Pursuit ofSymmetry in Products Liability,” 88 Geo. L.J. 2147 (2000). ■ “Divining RegulatoryIntent: The Place for a ‘Legislative History’of Agency Rules,” 51 Hastings L. J. 255(2000). ■ “Interpreting Agency EnablingActs: Misplaced Metaphors in AdministrativeLaw,” 41 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1463 (2000).■ “Scientific ‘Republicanism’: Expert PeerReview and the Quest for RegulatoryDeliberation,” 49 Emory L. J. 1033 (2000). ■ “What’s Wrong with ‘ConstitutionalizingFood and Drug Law?,’” 75 Tul. L. Rev. 137(2000). ■ “Regulatory ImprovementLegislation: Risk Assessment, Cost-BenefitAnalysis, and Judicial Review,” 11 DukeEnv’l. L. & Pol’y For. 89 (2000) (with co-authors). ■ “Peer Review and RegulatoryReform,” 30 Envl. L. Rep. 10,606 (2000). ■ “One Decade of Food and Drug LawScholarship,” 55 Food & Drug L. J. 641(2000).

KENNETH B. NUNNProfessor; AssociateDirector, Center onChildren and Families■ “Minority Groups,”World Book Encyclopedia(2003). ■ “DiversityMatters: Race, Gender &

Ethnicity in Legal Education,” U. Fla. J. L.& Pub. Pol’y 11 (2003) (with Nancy Dowd& Jane Pendergrast). ■ “Race Crime and thePool of Surplus Criminality: Or Why the Waron Drugs was a War on Blacks,” 6 J. Gender,Race & Just. 381 (2002). ■ “Stereotyping,”World Book Encyclopedia (World Book Pub.Co., 2002). ■ “Racial Profiling,” World BookEncyclopedia (World Book Pub. Co. 2002).■ “The Child as ‘Other’: Race andDifferential Treatment in the Juvenile JusticeSystem,” 51 DePaul L. Rev. 679 (2002). ■“Rights Held Hostage: Race, Ideology andthe Peremptory Challenge,” A Reader onRace, Civil Rights, and American Law: AMultiracial Approach (Carolina AcademicPress, 2001, republication) (Timothy Daviset al. eds.). ■ “Racism,” World BookEncyclopedia (2001). ■ “The ‘DardenDilemma’: Should African AmericansProsecute Crimes?,” 68 Fordham L. Rev.1473 (2000). ■ “Law as a EurocentricEnterprise,” Critical Race Theory: TheCutting Edge 429 (Temple U. Press, 2d ed.,2000, republication) (Richard Delgado &Jean Stefancic eds.). ■ “The Trial as Text:Allegory, Myth and Symbol in theAdversarial Criminal Process — A Critiqueof the Role of the Public Defender and aProposal for Reform,” Order Under Law:Readings in Criminal Justice (Robert G.Culbertson & Ralph Weisheit, 2001).

WILLIAM H. PAGEAssociate Dean forFaculty Development;Marshall M. CriserEminent Scholar inElectronicCommunications andAdministrative Law

■ “Economic Authority and the Limits ofExpertise in Antitrust Cases,” 90 Cornell L.Rev. (forthcoming 2005) (with JohnLopatka). ■ Kintner’s Federal Antitrust Law,11 vols., 2004 supplements (forthcoming2005) (with John Lopatka and JosephBauer). ■ “Indirect Purchaser Class Actionsand the Consumer Interest,” 48 AntitrustBulletin 531 (2003) (with John Lopatka). ■“State Action and the Meaning of AgreementUnder the Sherman Act: An Approach toHybrid Restraints,” 20 Yale J. on Reg. 269(2003) (with John Lopatka). ■ “ThurmanArnold’s International Antitrust Legacy,” TheAntitrust Source, www.antitrustsource.com

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(July 2003) (review of Wyatt Wells, Antitrustand the Formation of the Postwar World,2002). ■ 2 Kintner’s Federal Antitrust Law:Practices Prohibited by the Sherman Act (2ded., 2002) (with Joseph P. Bauer). ■“Brunswick at 25: Antitrust Injury and theEvolution of Antitrust Law,” Antitrust (Fall2002) (with John Lopatka). ■ “The Price ofUnanimity: The D.C. Circuit’s IncoherentOpinion in Microsoft,” Microsoft, Antitrustand the New Economy: Selected Essays(Kluwer Acad. Press, 2002) (David S. Evans,ed.) (with John Lopatka). ■ “‘Obvious’Consumer Harm in Antitrust Policy: TheChicago School, the Post-Chicago School,and the Courts,” Post-Chicago Developmentsin Antitrust Law (Edward Elgar Pub. Co.2002) (Antonio Cucinotta, et al., eds.). ■“AT&T Litigation,” Oxford Companion toAmerican Law (Oxford Press 2002) (KermitL. Hall, ed.). ■ “Who Suffered AntitrustInjury in the Microsoft Case?” 69 Geo. Wash.L. Rev. 829 (2001) (with John Lopatka). ■“Monopolization, Innovation, and ConsumerWelfare,” 69 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 367 (2001)(with John Lopatka). ■ “Devising a MicrosoftRemedy That Serves Consumers, 9 Geo.Mason L. Rev. 691 (2001) (with JohnLopatka). ■ “Internet Regulation andConsumer Welfare: Innovation, Speculation,and Cable Bundling,” 52 Hastings L. J. 891(2001) (with John Lopatka). ■ “Antitrust andTrade Regulation,” Developments inAdministrative Law and Regulatory Practice1999-2000 (ABA Publications, 2001, JeffreyS. Lubbers, ed.) (with John Lopatka, StevenVieux & Thomas Arthur). ■ “Antitrust andTrade Regulation,” Developments inAdministrative Law and Regulatory Practice1998-99 (ABA Publications, 2000, Jeffrey S.Lubbers ed.) (with John Lopatka, MichaelBrockmeyer & Thomas Arthur). ■ “NetworkExternalities,” Encyclopedia of Law andEconomics, Vol. I (Boudwijn Bouckaert &Gerrit De Geest eds., 2000) (with JohnLopatka).

JUAN FRANCISCOPEREACone Wagner NugentJohnson Hazouri & RothProfessor■ Race and Races: Casesand Resources for aDiverse America (2nd ed.,

forthcoming 2005) (with Richard Delgado,Angela Harris, Jean Stefancic and StephanieWildman). ■ “Buscando America: Why EqualProtection Fails to Protect Latinos,” 117Harvard L. Rev. (2004). ■ “A Brief Historyof Race and the U.S.-Mexican Border:Tracing the Trajectories of Conquest,” 51UCLA L. Rev. 283 (2003). ■ “Killing MeSoftly with His Song: Anglocentrism and

Celebrating Nouveaux Latinas/os,” 55 Fla. L.Rev. 441 (2003). ■ Book Review: “ThinkingAbout Race and Races: Reflections andResponses,” 89 Cal. L. Rev. 1653 (2001)(with Richard Delgado, Angela Harris andStephanie Wildman). ■ “The New AmericanSpanish War: How the Courts and theLegislatures Are Aiding the Suppression ofLanguages Other Than English,” LanguageIdeologies: Critical Perspectives on theOfficial English Movement (NCTE, 2001)(Roseann Duenas Gonzalez & Ildiko Melis,eds.). ■ “Fulfilling Manifest Destiny:Conquest, Race, and the Insular Cases,”Foreign in a Domestic Sense: Puerto Rico,American Expansion and the Constitution(Duke Univ. Press, 2001) (Christina Burnett& Burke Marshall, eds.). ■ Book review,“Language, Policy and Identity Politics in theUnited States,” (), 21 J. Am. Ethnic History125 (2001). ■ “The Black/White BinaryParadigm of Race,” Critical Race Theory:The Cutting Edge (Temple U. Press, 2d ed.,2000) (R. Delgado and J. Stefancic, eds.) ■“Appreciating Richard Delgado andRodrigo,” 4 Harv. Latino. L. Rev. 37 (2000).■ Race and Races: Cases and Resources fora Diverse America (Westgroup, 2000) (withRichard Delgado, Angela Harris & StephanieWildman).

DON C. PETERSDirector, Institute forDispute Resolution;Director, Virgil HawkinsCivil Clinics; Professor;Trustee Research Fellow;Associate Director, Centeron Children and Families

■ Paper-chasing Types: The Myers-Briggsand Law Study (forthcoming 2005). ■ “It FeltLike He Was Inside My Skin: InterculturalLearning About Mediation in Haiti,” RutgersConflict Resolution J. (2004).

CHRISTOPHER L.PETERSON Assistant Professor■ Taming the Sharks:Towards a Cure for theHigh Cost Credit Market(Univ. of Akron Press,2004). ■ “Truth,

Understanding, and High Cost ConsumerCredit: The Historical Context of the Truth inLending Act,” 55 Fla. L. Rev. 807 (2003).

STEPHEN J. POWELLDirector, InternationalTrade Law Program■ “WTO and NAFTADispute Settlement forNorth AmericanAgricultural Trade,”International Agricultural

Trade Disputes: Case Studies in NorthAmerica 219 (forthcoming Calgary Press2004). ■ “The Place of Human Rights inWorld Trade Organization Rules,” 16 Fla. J.Int’l L. 1 (2003).

LEANNE J. PFLAUMSenior Legal SkillsProfessor■ Legal Writing By Design:A Guide to Great Briefsand Memos (CarolinaAcademic Press, 2001)(with Teresa Rambo).

M. KATHLEEN PRICEAssociate Dean, Library& Technology; ClarenceJ. TeSelle Professor■ “Finding U.S. Law on theInternet,” 40 (English); 40(Chinese), Roaming theVirtual Law Library: A

Guide to Online Sources for LegalResearchers (Liu and Yu ed. 2004). ■ JuliusMarke: In Memoriam,” 96 L. Lib’y J. 9(2004). ■ “The Search for Meaning in ‘Lawand Language,’” Language and the Law;Proceedings of a Conference, Tarleton LawLibrary, University of Texas School of Law,Dec. 6-8, 2001 (Robinson ed., 2003).

TERESA J. RAMBOSenior Legal SkillsProfessor■ Judicial Opinion Writing(Florida College ofAdvanced Judicial Studies,2002). ■ Legal Writing ByDesign: A Guide to Great

Briefs and Memos (Carolina Academic Press,2001) (with Leanne J. Pflaum).

DAVID M.RICHARDSONProfessor■ Textbook, Federal TaxProcedure (forthcomingSummer 2005, MatthewBender Graduate TaxSeries) (with Jerome

Borison and Steve Johnson). ■ “AuditAvoidance Through Temporary TaxpayerIntent Modification — Is Fred Corneel on toSomething...Or Not?,” 92 Tax Notes 277(2001). ■ “Statement of Standards of TaxPractice: Letter to a Former Student,” 87 TaxNotes 1143 (2000).

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DIANE M. RINGProfessor■ Federal Income Taxationof Corporate Enterprise(casebook, FoundationPress, forthcoming) (withBernard Wolfman). ■Comment on Griffith,

“Taxing Happiness,” B.C. L. Rev. (forthcom-ing 2004). ■ U.S. National Report on DoubleNontaxation — prepared for InternationalFiscal Association 2004 Conference (forth-coming in Cahiers de Droit FiscalInternational, Vol. LXXXIX 2004). ■ BookReview, “Solid Foundations for Tax Theory,Policy,” 31 Tax Notes Int’l 961 (Sept. 15,2003). ■ “One Nation Among Many: PolicyImplications of Cross-Border Tax Arbitrage,”44 B.C. L. Rev. 79 (2002). ■ “Prospects for AMultilateral Tax Treaty,” 26 Brooklyn J. Int’lL. 1699 (2001). ■ “On the Frontier ofProcedural Innovation: Advance PricingAgreements and the Struggle to AllocateIncome for Cross Border Taxation,” 21 Mich.J. Int’l L. 143 (2000).

SHARON E. RUSHIrving Cypen Professor;Associate Director,Center on Children andFamilies■ The Challenges ofTeaching Race: Huck andthe Color Line (Rowman

and Littlefield) (2005). ■ “Toto, I have a feel-ing we are still in Kansas,” Voices of theBrown Generation: Memories andReflections of Law Professors (M.W.Robinson & R.J. Bonnie, eds.) (2005). ■“Teaching Race Relations ‘Know-How,’”Southern Christian Leadership Magazine(2004). ■ “Lessons From and for DisabledStudents,” 8 J. Gender, Race & Justice 75(2004). ■ “Emotional Segregation: HuckFinn in the Modern Classroom,” 36 U. Mich.J. L. Reform 305 (2003). ■ “TheAnticanonical Lesson of Huckleberry Finn,”11 Cornell J. L. & Pub. Policy 101 (2002). ■“Identity Matters: Introduction to LatCrit VIConference,” 54 Rutgers L. Rev. 101 (2002).■ “International and Interracial Adoptions:Heroes, Villains or Loving Parents,” MoralImperialism: A Critical Anthology (N.Y.UPress, 2002) (Berta Hernandez-Truyol, ed.).■ “The Heart of Equal Protection: Educationand Race,” A Reader on Race, Civil Rightsand American Law: A Multiracial Approach(NYU Press, 2001) (Davis, K. Johnson, G.Martinez, eds.). ■ Loving Across the ColorLine: A White Adoptive Mother Learns AboutRace (Rowman & Littlefield) (2000). ■Foreword: “Culture, Nationhood, and theHuman Rights Ideal,” 33 Mich. J. L. Ref. 233(2000) (with Berta Hernanedez-Truyol). ■

“Doing Anti-Racism: Making an EgalitarianFuture,” 29 Contemp. Sociology 95 (2000)(with Joe R. Feagin & Jacqueline Johnson).

KATHERYN RUSSELL-BROWNDirector, Center for theStudy of Race and RaceRelations; Professor■ Underground Codes:Race, Crime and RelatedFires (New York UniversityPress, 2004).

SHERRIE LYNNRUSSELL-BROWNAssociate Professor;Associate Director,Center on Children andFamilies■ “The Last Line of

Defense: The Doctrine of CommandResponsibility and Gender Crimes in ArmedConflict,” Wisconsin Int’l L. J. (forthcoming2004). ■ “Bridging the ‘Divide’ BetweenFeminism and Child Protection Using theDiscourse of International Human Rights, 13S. Cal. Rev. L. and Women’s Stud. (2003). ■“Out of the Crooked Timber of Humanity:The Conflict Between South Africa’s Truthand Reconciliation Commission andInternational Human Rights NormsRegarding ‘Effective Remedies,’” 26Hastings Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 227 (2003). ■ “Labor Rights as Human Rights: TheSituation of Women Workers in Jamaica’sExport Free Zones,” 24 Berkeley J. Emp. &Lab. L. 179 (2003). ■ “Poisoned Chalice?The Rights of Criminal Defendants UnderInternational Law, During the Pre-TrialPhase,” 8 UCLA J. Int’l & Foreign Aff. 127(2003). ■ “A U.N. Solution to a Problemfrom Hell,” Review, Samantha Power, “AProblem from Hell: America and the Age ofGenocide,” 2 Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev.427 (2003). ■ “Rape as an Act of Genocide,”21 Berkeley J. Int’l L. 350 (2003).

VALERIE A. SANCHEZAssistant Professor■ “Back to the Future ofADR: Negotiating Justiceand Human Needs,” 18Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol.669 (2003). ■ EqualTreatment for People with

Mental Retardation: Having and RaisingChildren (Harv. Univ. Press, 2000) (withMartha Field).

GAIL E. SASNETTAssociate Dean forStudents, Professionalism& Community Relations■ “A Drug by Any OtherName is Still a Drug: Whythe Florida JudiciaryShould Start Treating A

DUI as Any Other Drug Offense,” 13 J. L. &Public Policy 299 (2001).

MICHAEL L. SEIGELProfessor■ Improbable Events(novel, forthcoming 2005).■ “On Collegiality,” 54 J.Legal Educ. 406 (2004).

CHRISTOPHERSLOBOGINStephen C. O’ConnellProfessor; AffiliateProfessor of Psychiatry;Adjunct Professor,University of SouthFlorida Mental Health

Institute; Associate Director, Center onChildren and Families■ “The Civilization of the Criminal Law,”Vanderbilt L. Rev. (forthcoming 2005). ■ Lawand the Mental Health System: Civil andCriminal Aspects (4th ed., 2004) (withReisner & Rai). ■ “Is Atkins the Antithesis orthe Apotheosis of Anti-DiscriminationPrinciples?: Sorting Out the GroupwideEffects of Exempting People With MentalRetardation From the Death Penalty,” 55 Ala.L. Rev. 1101 (2004) (symposium onDisability Rights). ■ “The IntegrationistAlternative to the Insanity Defense:Reflections on the Exculpatory Scope ofMental Illness in the Wake of the AndreaYates Case,” 30 Am. J. Crim. L. 315 (2004).■ “Teaching a Course on Regulation of thePolice (with a Special Focus on the SixthAmendment),” 42 Brandeis L. J. 389 (2003-04) (symposium). ■ “Rethinking LegallyRelevant Mental Illness,” 29 Ohio NorthernUniv. L. Rev. 497 (2004) (symposium). ■ “AJurisprudence of Dangerousness,” 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1 (2003). ■ “The Structure ofExpertise in Criminal Cases,” 34 Seton HallL. Rev. 105 (2003) (symposium). ■ “TowardTaping,” 1 Ohio State J. Crim. L. 309 (2003).■ “What Atkins Could Mean for People withMental Illness,” 33 New Mexico L. Rev. 293(2003) (symposium). ■ “The PovertyException to the Fourth Amendment,” 55Fla. L. Rev. 391 (2003) (symposium issue forLatCritVI Conference). ■ “PragmaticForensic Psychology: A Means of‘Scientizing’ Testimony from Mental HealthProfessionals?,” 9 Psychology, Pub. Pol. & L.

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275 (2003) (symposium). ■ “An EmpiricallyBased Comparison of American andEuropean Police Investigative Techniques,”Adversarial v. Inquisitorial Techniques:Psychological Perspectives on CriminalJustice Systems 27 (Kluwer, 2003, republica-tion) (Peter J. Koppel & Stephen D. Penrod,eds.). ■ “Technology’s Challenge: ABACreates Standards for Electronic and PhysicalSurveillance,” 18 ABA Criminal JusticeMagazine 5 (2003) (with Martin Marcus). ■Criminal Procedure — Regulation of PoliceInvestigation: Legal, Historical, Empiricaland Comparative Materials (ReedElsevier/Michie Co., 3rd ed., 2002). ■“Public Privacy: Camera Surveillance and theRight to Anonymity,” 72 Miss. L. J. 213(2002) (symposium). ■ “Peeping Techno-Toms and the Fourth Amendment: SeeingThrough Kyllo’s Rules GoverningTechnological Surveillance,” 86 Minn. L.Rev. 1393 (2002) (symposium). ■ “TheHartman Hotz Lecture — Race-BasedDefenses: The Insights of TraditionalAnalysis,” 54 Ark. L. Rev. 739 (2002). ■“Police Procedures,” The Oxford Companionto American Law 614 (Oxford Press, 2002,Kermit Hall, ed.) ■ “EyewitnessIdentification,” The Encyclopedia of Crimeand Justice 661 (Westgroup, 2002) (JoshuaDressler, ed.). ■ “Insanity and DiminishedCapacity,” Scientific Evidence Manual 237(Westgroup, 2d ed., 2001) (D. Faigman et al.,eds.) (with Norman Poythress & KirkHeilbrun). ■ “An Empirically-BasedComparison of American and EuropeanRegulatory Approaches to PoliceInvestigation,” 22 Mich. J. Int’l L. 423(2001). ■ “Psychiatric Evidence in CriminalTrials: A Twenty-Five Year Retrospective,”Mental Health Law in Evolution 245 (APAPress, 2001) (Linda Frost & Richard Bonnie,eds.). ■ “Directions for Future Research onthe Juvenile Justice System,” 25 L. & Hum.Beh. 13 (2001) (with Jennifer Woolard &Mark Fondacaro). ■ “New Wisdom AboutOld Crimes,” Review of D. Shuman & A.Smith, “Justice and the Prosecution of OldCrimes: Balancing Legal, Psychological, andMoral Concerns,” Jurist (http://jurist.law.pitt.edu) (March, 2001). ■ CriminalProcedure: An Analysis of Cases andConcepts (Foundation Press, 4th ed., 2000)(with Charles Whitebread). ■ “An End toInsanity: Recasting the Role of MentalIllness in Criminal Cases,” 86 Va. L. Rev.1199 (2000). ■ “The Criminal DefenseLawyer’s Fiduciary Duty to Clients withMental Disability,” 68 Fordham L. Rev. 1581(2000) (with Amy Mashburn). ■ “DoubtsAbout Daubert: Psychiatric Anecdata as aCase Study,” 57 W. & L. L. Rev. 919 (2000)(symposium). ■ Foreword: “Is Justice JustUs? A Symposium on the Use of SocialScience to Inform the Substantive Criminal

Law,” 26 Hofstra L. Rev. 601 (2000). ■“Three Models of Liberty Deprivation: TheContributions of Ecological Jurisprudenceand Therapeutic Jurisprudence,” 18 Beh. Sci.& L. 499 (2000) (with Mark Fondacaro)(symposium). ■ “Mental Illness and theDeath Penalty,” 1 Cal. Crim. L. Rev. Art. 3(2000); 24 Men. & Phys. Dis. L. Rep. 667(2000).

BETTY W. TAYLORHistorian; Clarence J.TeSelle ProfessorEmeritus■ “A History of Race andGender at the University ofFlorida Levin College ofLaw, 1909-2001,” 54 Fla.L. Rev. 495 (2002).

MARY POETWITCHELLProfessor■ “Why We Keep DoingBusiness with Doing-Business Jurisdiction,” U.Chi. L. Forum 171 (2001).

JEFFREY WADEDirector, EnvironmentalDivision, Center forGovernmentalResponsibility■ “The Evolution of NorthAmerican EnvironmentalLaw,” 3 Revista do Centro

de Apoio Operacional às Promotorias deJustiça de Proteção ao Meio Ambiente doEstado do Paraná 5 (3 J. of the OperationalSupport Center for EnvironmentalProsecutors of the State of Paraná 5) (2002).■ “Environmental Crime in the UnitedStates,” 15 Fla. J. Int’l L. 39 (2002). ■ “Lawand Policy for Water Resources Managementin Florida,” 42 Revista do Curso de Pós-Graduação em Direito da UFSC 135 (42 J.of the Post-Graduate Course of Law, FederalUniversity of Santa Catarina 135) (2001). ■ “U.S. Water Pollution Control: Issues andResponses,” The Future of Pollution Controland Environmental Implementation:Proceedings of the Fifth InternationalConference on Environmental Law(Benjamin, Sícoli, eds.), São Paulo, Brazil(2001).

WALTER O.WEYRAUCHDistinguished Professor;Stephen C. O’ConnellChair; Associate Director,Center on Children andFamilies■ “Private Legal Systems,”

Encyclopedia of Law and Society (2004,Sage Publications, CA). ■ “Gypsies andTravelers,” Encyclopedia of Law and Society(2004, Sage Publications, CA). ■ “Il DirittoDegli Zingari,” Giuristi Stranieri di Oggi(2004, Giuffrè, Milan, Italy) (A. Simoni, ed.).■ Book Review, “The Romani People: ALong Surviving and Distinguished Culture atRisk,” 51 Am. J. Com. L. 679 (2003). ■ DasRecht der Roma und Sinti: Ein BeispielAutonomer Rectsschopfun (VittorioKlostermann Pub., 2002). ■ Gypsy Law:Romani Legal Traditions and Culture (Univ.Calif. Press, 2001). ■ “A Theory of LegalStrategy,” 49 Duke L. J. 1405 (2000) (withLynn Lopucki). ■ “Nonrational Sources ofScholarship: Remembering David Daube(1909-1999),” 19 Rechtshistorisches J. 677(2000).

STEVEN J. WILLISProfessor; AssociateDirector, Center onChildren and Families■ “Family Law Economics,Child Support, and Alimony:Ruminations on Income,Part II,” 78 Fla. Bar J. 34

(June 2004). ■ “Family Law Economics,Child Support, and Alimony: Ruminations onIncome, Part I,” 78 Fla. Bar J. 34 (2004). ■Electronic Teaching Materials for TaxExempt Organizations (Thomson West,2004). ■ The Tax Law of Charities and OtherExempt Organizations: Cases, Materials,Questions, and Activities and accompanyingInstructor’s Manual (Thomson West, 2003)(with Darryll K. Jones, David A. Brennen,and Beverly I. Moran). ■ 2003 StatutorySupplement to The Tax Law of Charities andOther Exempt Organizations (Thomson West,2003). ■ “It’s Time for Schlude to Go,” 93Tax Notes 127 (2001). ■ “Show Me theNumbers, Please,” 93 Tax Notes 1391 (2001).

MICHAEL ALLAN WOLFRichard E. Nelson Chairin Local GovernmentLaw; Professor■ “Yes, Thankfully, EuclidLives,” Fordham L. Rev.(forthcoming) (withCharles Haar). ■ Powell on

Real Property (general ed., 17 vols.)(Matthew Bender, 2004). ■ “CharlesWarren,” Yale Biographical Dictionary ofAmerican Law (Yale Univ. Press, forthcom-ing). ■ “Leo Frank,” “Emma Goldman,”“Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.,” One HundredAmericans Making Constitutional History(Melvin Urofsky ed.) (CQ Press, 2004). ■“Euclid Lives: The Survival of ProgressiveJurisprudence,” 115 Harv. L. Rev. 2158(2002) (with Charles Haar). Also publishedas Chapter 15 in 2003 Zoning and Planning

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Law Handbook (West 2003) (Patricia E.Salkin ed.), and in Land Use andEnvironment L. Rev. 2003 (Westgroup)(Stuart L. Deutsch et al. eds.). ■ “EarningDeference: Reflections on the Merger ofEnvironmental and Land-Use Law,” 32 Env’lL. Reporter 11190 (October 2002). Also pub-lished in 20 Pace Environmental L. Rev. 253(2002), and in New Ground: The Advent ofLocal Environmental Law (John R. Noloned.) (Environmental Law Institute, 2003). ■Book Review, “The Lochner Court, Myth andReality: Substantive Due Process from the1890s to the 1930s,” 45 Am. J. Legal Hist.109 (2001). ■ “A New Chain of Title: TheEvolution of American Common Law in theNineteenth Century,” I Law in History:Evolution of Judicial Law in XIXth Century(Catholic University of Lublin, 2000)(Grzegorz Górski ed.). ■ “Taking RegulatoryTakings Personally: The Perils of(Mis)Reasoning by Analogy,” 51 Ala. L. Rev.1355 (2000). ■ “Fifteenth Amendment” and“Nineteenth Amendment,” Civil Rights in theUnited States (MacMillan, 2000) (withDaniel A. Wolf). ■ “Practice, Policy, andPedagogy in a Mandatory Environmental LawCourse,” 123 Water, Air, & Soil Pollution: AnInt’l J. of Environmental Pollution 409 (2000(with Joel Eisen); (also published inEnvironmental Challenges (Kluwer, 2000)(Shimshon Belkin ed.). ■ “EnvironmentalSlogans for the New Millennium,” 30 Env’tlL. Reporter 10283 (April 2000), revised andrepublished in 35 Univ. of Rich. L. Rev. 91(2001).

BARBARA BENNETTWOODHOUSEDirector, Center onChildren and Families;Director, Family LawCertificate Program; DavidH. Levin Chair In Family

Law; Co-Director, UF Institute for Childand Adolescent Research and Evaluation ■ “Re-Visioning Rights for Children,”Rethinking Childhood (Rutgers UniversityPress, 2004) (Peter B. Pufall and Richard P.Unsworth, eds.). ■ Children’s Rights in Gayand Lesbian Families: A Child-CenteredPerspective in Child, Family and State(Nomos XLIV) (NYU Press, 2003) (StephenMacedo & Iris Young, eds.). ■ “EnhancingChildren’s Participation in Policy Formation,”

45 Ariz. L. Rev. 751 (2003). ■ “SpeakingTruth to Power: Challenging the Power ofParents to Control the Education of TheirOwn,” 11 Cornell J. L. Pub. Pol. 481 (2002).■ “Talking About Children’s Rights inJudicial Custody and Visitation Decision-Making,” 36 Family L. Quart. 105 (2002). ■“Making Poor Mothers Fungible: ChildWelfare Reform and the Privatization ofFoster Care,” Unequal Power, Unequal Care:Carework for Children and Youth in DiverseSettings (Routlege Press, 2002). ■ “YouthfulIndiscretions: Culture, Class, Status, and thePassage to Adulthood,” 51 DePaul L. Rev.743 (2002). ■ “Horton Looks at the ALIPrinciples,” 4 J. L & Family Studies 151(2002). ■ “Child Abuse, the Constitution andthe Legacy of Pierce V. Society of Sisters,” 78Detroit Mercy L. Rev. 479 (2001). ■ “TroxelV. Granville: Implications for At RiskChildren and the Amicus Curiae Role ofUniversity-Based Centers for Children,” 32Rutgers-Camden L. J. 857 (2001). ■ “Child-Centered, Vertically-Integrated, andInterdisciplinary: An Integrative Approach toChildren’s Policy, Practice and Research,” 40Fam. Ct. Rev. 116 (2001). ■ “Children’sRights,” Youth and the Law (Plenum Press,2001, Susan White, ed.). ■ “Dred Scott’sDaughters: Nineteenth Century Urban Girls atthe Intersection of Race and Patriarchy,” 48Buff. L. Rev. 669 (2000). ■ “The Status ofChildren: A Story of Emerging Rights,”Cross-Currents: Family Law in England andthe United States (Oxford Univ. Press, 2000).■ “The Adoption and Safe Families Act: AMajor Shift in Child Welfare Law andPolicy,” International Survey of Family Law(Family Law Pubs., 2000). ■ KeynoteAddress, Symposium on Legal Reform andChildren’s Human Rights, 14 St. John’s J.Leg. Commentary 331 (2000).

CLAUDIA WRIGHTDirector, GatorTeamChild /Juvenile LawClinic; Legal SkillsProfessor; AssociateDirector, Center onChildren and Families■ “Representation of

Children in a Unified Family Court System inFlorida,” U. Fla. J. L. and Pub. Pol’y (Spring2003). ■ “The Value of High Quality,Comprehensive Information to Decision-

makers in Juvenile Cases,” Fla. B. J. (2003)(with Thomas Oakland).

DANAYA C. WRIGHTProfessor■ “The Logic andExperience of Law:Lawrence v. Texas and thePolitics of Privacy,” 15 Fl.J. of Law & Pub. Pol’y 423(2004). ■ “Untying the

Knot: An Analysis of English Divorce andMatrimonial Causes Court Records,” 1858,38 Univ. of Richmond L. Rev. 903 (2004). ■“Well-Behaved Women Don’t Make History:Rethinking Family, Law, And HistoryThrough an Analysis of the First Nine Yearsof the English Divorce and MatrimonialCauses Court (1858-1866),” Wis. Women’s L.J. (2004). ■ “A New Time For Denominators:Toward A Dynamic Theory Of Property InRegulatory Takings’ Relevant ParcelAnalysis,” 34 Environmental L. (2004). ■“Shaken, Not Stirred: Has Tahoe-SierraSettled or Muddied the Regulatory TakingsWaters?” 32 Envt’l L. Reports 11177 (2002)(with Nissa Laughner). ■ “The Crisis of ChildCustody: A History of the Birth of FamilyLaw in England,” 11 Colum. J. Gender & L.175 (2002). ■ “Eminent Domain, Exactions,and Railbanking: Can Recreational TrailsSurvive the Court’s Fifth AmendmentJurisprudence?” 26 Colum. J. Envt’l L. 399(2001). ■ “Foreword: Toward a MulticulturalTheory of Property,” 12 Fla. J. L. & Pub.Pol’y 1 (2001). ■ “The “Anti-Boomer Effect:Property Rights, Regulatory Takings, and aWelfare Model of Land Ownership,” 6 Aust.J. Leg. Hist. 1 (2000). ■ “Pipes, Wires, andBicycles: Rails-To-Trails, Utility Licenses,and the Shifting Scope of Railroad Easementsfrom the Nineteenth to the Twenty-FirstCenturies,” 27 Eco. L. Q. (2000) (with JeffreyM. Hester).

JENNIFER ZEDALISDirector, Trial Practice;Legal Skills Professor;Coordinator, Gerald T.Bennett Prosecutor/PublicDefender CLE Course■ “Re-thinking Your

Practice Habits — SevenWays to be a Better Lawyer in the CriminalCourts,” 33 Fla. Crim. L. J. (2003). ❒

Fredric G. Levin College of Law Administration• Robert HH. JJerry, III, Dean; Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor • Stuart RR. CCohn, Associate Dean for International Studies; Gerald A. Sohn Scholar; Professor• George LL. DDawson, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs; Professor• Michael KK. FFriel, Associate Dean & Director, Graduate Tax Program; Professor• William HH. PPage, Associate Dean for Faculty Development; Criser Eminent Scholar in

Electronic Communications & Administrative Law; Professor• M. KKathleen ““Kathie” PPrice, Associate Dean, Library & Technology; TeSelle Professor • Gail EE. SSasnett, Associate Dean for Students, Professionalism & Community Relations• J. PPatrick SShannon, Associate Dean for Administrative Affairs • Donald JJ. HHale, Senior Development Director• Linda CCalvert HHanson, Assistant Dean for Career Services• Richard LL. LLudwick, Assistant Dean for Students

• J. MMichael PPatrick, Assistant Dean for Admissions• Debra DD. AAmirin, Director of Information & Publications

PPlleeaassee NNoottee::• This Report From the Faculty is published annually by the Levin

College of Law Associate Dean for Faculty Development. Sendupdates or corrections to the Office of Communications, PO Box117633, Gainesville, Fl, 32611, or e-mail [email protected].

• The University of Florida is committed to non-discrimination withrespect to race, creed, color, religion, age, disability, gender, marital status, sexual orientation, national origin, political opinions or affiliations, and veteran status.

U F L A W 2 3

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■ UF LLAW OONLINEAccess the latest on UF Levin College of Law faculty, programs and events, a variety of legal links and more at www.law.ufl.edu.

■ CONFERENCES/SYMPOSIAEnhance your understanding of specialized areas, network and earn CLE credit. Scheduled thus far:■ Fourth RRichard EE. NNelson SSymposium, Feb. 11, 2005, Hilton University of Florida Conference Center, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by

Professor Michael Allan Wolf, Nelson Chair in Local Government Law.■ Fourth AAnnual LLaw && TTechnology CConference, Feb. 24-25, 2005, Sheraton World Resort, Orlando, Fla. Organized by Intellectual Property

Law Program.■ Race aand LLaw CCurriculum WWorkshop, Feb. 24-26, 2005, Hilton University of Florida Conference Center, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by

Center for the Study of Race and Race Relations.■ Public IInterest EEnvironmental CConference, Feb. 24-26, 2005, University of Florida J. Wayne Reitz Union, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by

Environmental and Land Use Law Society. ■ Center oon CChildren && FFamilies AAnnual CConference, “Multi-disciplinary Collaboration: What Does It Mean and How Does It Work?,”

2005 (Details TBA). ■ Sixth AAnnual CConference oon LLegal aand PPolicy IIssues iin tthe AAmericas, Spring 2005, Gainesville, Fla. Organized by Center for

Governmental Responsibility.

To register or for information: Director of Conference Planning Barbara DeVoe (352-392-8070 or [email protected]).

C O M P R E H E N S I V E , I N T E R N A T I O N A L , I N N O V A T I V E , I N T E R D I S C I P L I N A R Y , E X C E L L E N T

Fredric G. Levin College of LawP.O. Box 117633Gainesville, FL 32611-7633

Non-ProfitOrganizationU.S. Postage

PAIDGainesville, FLPermit No. 94