A. Christopher Bryant / April 2013

On Saturday, April 6, Chris gave a talk about “The Constitutional Jurisprudence of William Howard Taft” at the local Taft birthplace National Historic Site.

From Friday, April 26 to Sunday, April 28, Chris judged the Center for Civic Education’s We The People High School National Finals, held in Fairfax, Virginia.

Chris’s article, Reading the Law in the Office of Calvin Fletcher: The Apprenticeship System and the Practice of Law in Frontier Indiana, 1 Nev. L.J. 19 (2001), was cited in Robert Hornstein, The Role and Value of a Shadow Program in the Law School Curriculum, 31 Miss. C. L. Rev. 405 (2013).

Paul L. Caron / April 2013

In April, Paul published:

Paul was quoted in The Case Against Law School, Business Week, Apr. 1, 2013

Paul published several issues of his SSRN Tax Law Abstracts e-journals:

Two of Paul’s articles were cited:

Felix B. Chang / April 2013

On April 11, Felix spoke with UC Law colleagues Lynn Bai and Emily Houh and UC DAAP colleague Edson Cabalfin, on a panel organized by UC Law’s Asian Pacific American Law Students Association on the topic, “Are Asian Americans Perpetual Foreigners?”.  The panel was very ably moderated by UC Law student Jyoshu Tsaushima (’14).

Jacob Katz Cogan / April 2013

Jacob presented “Competing Trends in the Jus ad Bellum” (with Monica Hakimi), at a symposium on “Solving Global Problems,” at New York Law School on April 12.

At the 107th Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law, held at in Washington, DC, from April 3-6, Jacob presented on two panels:

  • “Book Discussion: ‘Partly Laws Common to All Mankind’: Foreign Laws in American Courts, by Jeremy Waldron,” Annual Meeting of the American Society of International Law; and
  • “21st Century International Institutions: Lessons from Global Health Governance?”.

Mark A. Godsey / April 2013

In April Mark traveled to India, where he spoke in New Delhi at the Nehru Memorial Library and Museum to the High Court and more than 200 other judges about the expansion of the innocence movement around the world.  He also spoke at the National Law University in Delhi, as they attempt to start the first Innocence Project in India.
Mark additionally spoke with OIP exoneree Dean Gillispie in a DNA Forensics class at UC Law, and at Bowling Green University in Ohio.   He attended the Innocence Network National Conference in Charlotte, NC, where he chaired several panels.
At UC Law, Mark hosted scholars from China who are attempting to learn more about the Innocence Movement in the U.S.  He also provided a lecture on the Innocence Movement and how to use DNA in post-conviction cases to a class in Dublin, Ireland via Skype.

Mark’s article, Educational Inequalities, the Myth of Meritocracy, and the Silencing of Minority Voices: The Need for Diversity on America’s Law Reviews, 12 Harv. BlackLetter J. 59 (1995), was cited in Megan S. Knize, The Pen Is Mightier: Rethinking the “Gladiator” Ethos of Student-Edited Law Reviews, 44 McGeorge L. Rev. 309 (2013). 

Lewis Goldfarb / April 2013

On April 23rd, Lew hosted a local cable TV program (on Time Warner Channel 24) called “The Business Connection.”  The program, which could become a series, is aimed at connecting local businesses with the resources they need.  Lew’s guests included Dr. Charles Matthews, Director of UC’s Center for Entrepreneurship Education and Research; Corey Drushal, Executive Director of Bad Girl Ventures; Caitlin Behle, Coordinator of the Springboard Program at Artworks; and Willie Hill, Executive Director of The Greater Cincinnati Microenterprise Initiative.
An October 2012 Forbes’ article, Want a Better Economy? History Says Vote Democrat, featuring Lew’s book, Bulls Bears and the Ballot Box, has become one of Forbes’ most read articles with over 100,000 views.  Consequently, Forbes plans to run a follow up article in May.

Emily M.S. Houh / April 2013

On April 4, Emily participated on a Faculty, Student and Community Roundtable discussing the book The Rich and the Rest of Us, by Tavis Smiley and Cornel West.  The Roundtable was part of the University of Cincinnati’s  Taft Research Center’s Annual Research Symposium, featuring Mr. Smiley as its keynote speaker.

On April 11, Emily spoke with UC Law colleagues Lynn Bai and Felix Chang and UC DAAP colleague Edson Cabalfin, on a panel organized by UC Law’s Asian Pacific American Law Students Association on the topic, “Are Asian Americans Perpetual Foreigners?”.  The panel was very ably moderated by UC Law student Jyoshu Tsaushima (’14).

Bradford C. Mank / April 2013

Brad’s article, Is Prudential Standing Jurisdictional?, was accepted for publication and will appear in volume 64 of the Case Western Reserve Law Review (forthcoming 2013-2014).

Several of Brad’s articles were cited:

 

 

Michael E. Solimine / April 2013

Several of Michael’s articles were cited:

  • Judicial Influence: A Citation Analysis of Federal Courts of Appeals Judges, 27 J. Legal Stud. 271 (1998)(with William M. Landes & Lawrence Lessig), in Ryan C. Black & James F. Spriggs II, The Citation and Depreciation of U.S. Supreme Court Precedent, 10 J. Empirical Legal Stud. 325 (2013);;
  • Judicial Stratification and the Reputations of the United States Courts of Appeals, 32 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 1331 (2005), in Ryan C. Black & James F. Spriggs II, The Citation and Depreciation of U.S. Supreme Court Precedent, 10 J. Empirical Legal Stud. 325 (2013);
  • Enforcement and Interpretation of Settlements of Federal Civil Rights Actions, 19 Rutgers L.J. 295 (1988), in Robert D. Friedman, Comment, Confusing the Means for the Ends: How a Pro-Settlement Policy Risks Undermining the Aims of Title VII, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1361 (2013);
  • Institutional Process, Agenda Setting, and the Development of Election Law on the Supreme Court, 68 Ohio St. L.J. 769 (2007), in Lisa Marshall Mainheim, Redistricting Litigation and the Delegation of Democratic Design, 93 B.U. L. Rev. 563 (2013);
  • Voting Rights and Election Law (LexisNexis 2010) (with Michael Dimino & Bradley Smith), in Jon A. Gryskiewicz, Note, Williams v. Rhodes: How One Case, One Week, and One Justice Shaped Ballot Access Law, 28 J. L. & Pol. 185 (2013);
  • The Next Word: Congressional Response to Supreme Court Statutory Decisions, 65 Temp. L. Rev. 425 (1992) (with James L. Walker), in Richard L. Hasen, End of the Dialogue? Political Polarization, the Supreme Court, and Congress, 86 S. Cal. L. Rev. 205 (2013);
  • Shoring Up Article III: Legislative Court Doctrine  in the Post CFTC v. Schor Era, 68 B.U. L. Rev. 85 (1988)(with Richard B. Saphire), in Grant Hermes, Note, A Uniform Federal Judiciary Enables Bankruptcy Courts to Bring Relief to Debtors, 34 Whittier L. Rev. 261 (2013);
  • Respecting State Courts: The Inevitability of Judicial Federalism (1999), in State v. Baldon, 2013 WL 1694553 (Iowa 2013); and

  • The Future of Parity, 46 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1457 (2005), in State v. Baldon, 2013 WL 1694553 (Iowa 2013).