Janet Moore / Summer 2018

Professor Moore received the University of Cincinnati 2018 Cohen Award for Excellence in Teaching.

Professor Moore received the 2018 University of Cincinnati College of Law Faculty Excellence Award.

Professor Moore’s article, “Tipping the Outhouse or Storming the Mansionhouse? New Developments in Securing Early Access to Criminal Defense Counsel,” has been accepted for publication as an invited contribution to a symposium volume of Loyola University-Chicago Law Review (2019).

Professor Moore and her co-authors’ (Ellen Yaroshefsky and Andrew Davies) paper, “Privileging Public Defense Research,” was accepted for publication by Mercer Law Review as an invited symposium piece.

Professor Moore’s article, “The Antidemocratic Sixth Amendment,” 91 Wash. L. Rev. 1705 (2016), was cited and discussed by Judge James O. Browning in U.S. v. DeLeon, 291 F.Supp.3d 1283 (D. N.M. 2017), and U.S. v. Baca, 2018 WL 2422053 (D. N.M. May 29, 2018).

Professor Moore’s paper, “Empirical Research on Attorney-Client Communication in Public Defense,” was accepted for presentation at the Annual Conference of the American Society of Criminology in Atlanta, Georgia (November 2018).

Professor Moore’s work-in-progress, “Community-Partnered Research, Isonomy, and the Carceral State,” was accepted for presentation at the ClassCrits Conference in Morgantown, West Virginia (November 2018), and was presented at the Law & Society Conference in Toronto, Canada (June 2018).

Professor Moore presented her paper, “Tipping the Outhouse or Storming the Mansionhouse? New Developments in Securing Early Access to Criminal Defense Counsel,” as an invited speaker at the annual Criminal Justice Ethics Schmooze in New York City, New York (June 2018) and as an invited participant in the discussion group Judging 50 Years After the Chicago 7 Trial at the Southeastern Association of Law Schools Annual Conference, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida (August 2018).

Professor Moore filed an amicus brief as counsel for the National Association for Public Defense in the capital post-conviction appeal involving North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act, State v. Robinson, North Carolina Supreme Court Docket No. 411A94-6 (13 July 2018). Rising 3Ls Kristi Murphy and Caitlyn Idoine assisted in researching and drafting the brief.

Professor Moore accepted an invitation to serve as an expert for the National Center for State Courts on a quasi-experimental research project funded by the United States Department of Justice National Institute of Justice, Examining the Effectiveness of Indigent Defense Team Services: A Multisite Evaluation of Holistic Defense in Practice.

Professor Moore agreed to serve as a mentor for the University of Cincinnati’s 2018-2019 Transdisciplinary Research Leadership Group at the request of the University’s Office of Research.


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