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Faculty Scholarship Professor John Ammann’s commentary, “The Double Standard in Housing Subsidies: Why Should Criminals Be Allowed to Take the Mortgage Interest Deduction,” was published in volume 16 of the ABA’s Journal of Affordable Housing and Development Law. Professor Oluyemisi Bamgbose’s article, “Towards a Global Abolition of the Death Penalty: The Criminal Law in the United States and Nigeria,” was published in volume 13, issue 1 of the East African Journal of Peace and Human Rights. Professor Mark Bernstein’s essay, “The Social Audit: What is Your Library’s Impact on Society?,” from the AALL Spectrum (November 2007) was published in the Perspective column of the American Association of Law Libraries magazine. He will receive the Article of the Year Award for his article, “One Size Fits All No More: The Impact of Law Specialization on Library Services,” which was published in the March 2007 issue of Spectrum. The award will be presented at the annual meeting of the American Association of Law Libraries in July. Professor Frederic Bloom’s article, “State Courts Unbound,” was published earlier this year in the Cornell Law Review. Professor Matthew Bodie is co-editor (with Samuel Estreicher) of a book, Workplace Discrimination, Privacy and Security in an Age of Terrorism, published in 2007 by Kluwer Law International. His article, “Workers, Information, and Corporate Combinations: The Case for Non-Binding Employee Referenda in Transformative Transactions,” was accepted by the Washington University Law Review for publication in March 2008. His paper, “Mother Jones Meets Gordon Gekko: The Complicated Relationship Between Labor and Private Equity,” was selected for publication by the University of Colorado Law Review. His article, “Information and the Market for Union Representation,” was published in Virginia Law Review 94 (2008), and was featured on the review’s Web site “In Brief” with responses from three professors. Go to http://www.concurringopinions.com/archives/2008/04/virginia_law_re_3.html. Professor Brad Fogel’s article, “The Completely Insane Law of Partial Insanity: The Impact of Monomania on Testamentary Capacity,” will be included in the “Best of the ABA Sections” issue of the General Practice, Solo and Small Firm Division magazine. Professor Joel K. Goldstein co-authored, with Norman Redlich and John Attanasio, six chapters in the 5th edition of Constitutional Law, which will be published in 2008. His article, “Assuming Responsibility: Thomas F. Eagleton, the Senate and the Bombing of Cambodia,” was published in the Fall 2007 symposium issue of the Saint Louis University Law Journal in memory of Senator Eagleton. He also wrote the Foreword for the issue. His essays on “Presidential Immunity” and “Admiralty Jurisdiction” will be published in The Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court of the United States, as will his articles, “Presidential Responses to Supreme Court Decisions” and “The Unitary Executive.” His book review of “He Almost Changed the World: The Life and Times of Thomas Riley Marshall” by David Bennett will be published in the Indiana Magazine of History. Professor Thomas L. Greaney’s article, “Thirty Years of Solicitude: Antitrust Law and Physician Cartels,” was published in volume 7, issue 2 of the Houston Journal of Health Law and Policy in 2007. The 6th edition of the casebook Health Law, which is the leading health law casebook in the country, is in press and will be published in May. Professor Sandra Johnson is a co-author. Professor Sandra H. Johnson co-edited Legal Perspectives in Bioethics (with Dr. Ana Iltis and Barbara Hinze), a book published simultaneously in September in the U.S. and the U.K. by Routledge as part of the Annals of Bioethics series. The volume also contains chapters by Jesse Goldner, Nicolas Terry and Deirdre Madden. She and Dr. Iltis also co-authored a chapter on “Risk, Responsibility and Litigation,” which will be included in Innovation and the Pharmaceutical Industry, edited by Tristram Engelhardt and Jeremy Garrett (M&M Scrivener, 2008). Her article, “Polluting Medical Judgment? False Assumptions in the Pursuit of False Claims Regarding Off-Label Prescribing,” was published in the Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology in Spring 2008. Her article, “New CDC Guidelines for HIV Screening: Ethical Implications for Health Care Providers,” appeared in the Winter 2007 issue of Health Care Ethics USA. Her editorial, “Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Pain Management,” was published in the July 2007 issue of Anesthesia and Analgesia. The 6th edition of Health Law – Cases, Materials and Problems (with Barry R. Furrow et al.) is in press with Thomas West; this is the 20th anniversary edition of this casebook. Johnson also co-authored “Chronic Pain and Healthy Communities: Legal, Ethical and Policy Issues in Improving the Public’s Health” (with K. Todd and B. Moulton), which appeared in the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics in 2007 in proceedings of a conference with the CDC. Professor Michael Korybut’s article, “Using an Online Auction to Sell Article 9 Collateral,” was published in the Consumer Finance Law Quarterly Report in 2007. In December, Professor Eric Miller’s forthcoming article in the Houston Law Review, “Judicial Preferences,” was named “download of the week” on Lawrence Slolum’s Legal Theory blog. Professor Carol A. Needham’s article, “Practicing Non-U.S. Law in the United States: Multijurisdictional Practice, Foreign Legal Consultants and Other Aspects of Cross-Border Legal Practice,” appeared in volume 15 of the Michigan State Journal of International Law in 2007. She also wrote “Introduction to the Symposium Issue on Teaching Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics,” which was published in volume 51 of the Saint Louis University Law Journal. Professor Camille A. Nelson’s article, “Animal Husbandry: Legal Norms Impacting the Production of (Re)Productivity,” was published in the Yale Journal of Law and Feminism (2007). Her article, “Lyrical Assault: Dancehall versus the Cultural Imperialism of the North-West,” has been accepted for publication in the Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal. Her article, “Lovin’ the Man: Examining the Nexus of Irony, Hypocrisy and Curiosity,” was published by the Wisconsin Law Review. Professor Henry M. Ordower’s article, “Demystifying Hedge Funds: A Design Primer,” was published in the Working Paper Series No. 9, Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability, Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Germany (2007). Professor Elizabeth A. Pendo’s article, “The Health Care Choice Act: The Individual Insurance Market and the Politics of ‘Choice,’” appeared in volume 29 of the Western New England Law Review in 2007. Her book review of Susan Starr Sered and Rushike Fernandopulle’s Uninsured in America was published in the Journal of Legal Medicine (2008). Christine Rollins’ lecture presentation, “Effective and Efficient Electronic Commenting,” has been accepted for publication at the 13th Biennial Conference of the Legal Writing Institute in Summer 2008. Her article, “Using the VARK: A Writing Department’s Commitment to ‘Turning the Light Bulbs On,’” was published in the Second Draft Journal of the Legal Writing Institute, Spring 2008 issue. Professor Peter Salsich is a signatory to a November 2007 report, “Residential Segregation and Housing Discrimination in the United States,” examining U.S. performance of its obligations under the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. His article, “Toward a Policy of Heterogeneity: Overcoming a Long History of Socioeconomic Segregation in Housing,” was placed in volume 42 of the Wake Forest Law Review. He also is a co-author of a comment, “Affordable Workforce Housing — An Agenda for the Show Me State: A Report from an Interactive Forum on Housing Issues in Missouri,” which will be published in the next issue of Saint Louis University’s Public Law Review. Emeritus Professor Joseph Simeone’s article, “The Trial of the Pirate Captain William Kidd: ‘The Wizard of the Seas,’” was published in the Whittier Law Review. Professor David L. Sloss is co-editor, with Derek Jinks, of The Role of Domestic Courts in Treaty Enforcement: A Comparative Study, Cambridge University Press (publication expected in 2008). His article, “Schizophrenic Treaty Law,” was published in the Texas International Law Journal in 2007. Another article, “Judicial Deference to Executive Branch Treaty Interpretations: A Historical Perspective,” was published in volume 62 of the New York University Annual Survey of American Law (2007). His article, “Judicial Foreign Policy: Lessons from the 1790s,” has been accepted for publication in the Saint Louis University Law Journal. He co-authored a research study, “Life and Death Decisions: Prosecutorial Discretion and Capital Punishment in Missouri,” with Katherine Barnes and Professor Stephen Thaman, which was published in April 2008. Professor Stephen C. Thaman has three entries in the Encyclopedia of Law & Society: American and Global Perspectives (edited by David S. Clark , 2007): “Consensual Penal Resolution,” volume I; “Legality and Discretion,” volume II; and “Penal Court Procedures: Doctrinal Issues,” volume III. His article, “The Nullification of the Russian Jury: Lessons for Jury-Inspired Reform in Eurasia and Beyond,” was published last year in the Cornell International Law Journal. Another of his articles, “The Good, the Bad, or the Indifferent: ‘12 Angry Men’ in Russia,” was part of Symposium: The 50th Anniversary of “12 Angry Men” in volume 82 of the Chicago-Kent Law Review (2007). His book, Comparative Criminal Procedure: A Casebook Approach, 2nd ed. (Carolina Academic Press), will be published this year. His chapter, “Jury Trial and Adversary Procedure in Russia: Reform of Soviet Inquisitorial Procedure or Democratic Window-Dressing?” was published in Russia and Its Constitution, edited by Gordon B. Smith and Robert Sharlet (Martinus Nijhoff, Leiden, Boston, 2008). Professor Constance Wagner’s chapter, “Gender Dimensions of Biotechnology Policy and Trade,” was published in Genetic Engineering and the World Trade System, edited by Daniel Wüger and Thomas Cottier (Cambridge University Press, 2007). She also wrote, “Corporate Social Responsibility of Multinational Enterprises and the International Business Law Curriculum,” which will be published in 2008 by Hart Publishing as a chapter in the book, International Economic Law — The State and Future of the Discipline, under the auspices of the American Society of International Law, International Economic Law Group. Professor Sidney D. Watson recently returned from Japan where she presented a paper on U.S. health care for the elderly, titled “When Wealth, Welfare and Markets Collide,” at the Annual Symposium of the Japanese Society for American Legal Studies held at Kobe University, and it was published in the Journal of the Japanese Society for American Legal Studies. Her opinion piece, “Does America Have Two Health Care Systems,” appeared in the November 7 issue of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. She also co-authored an article with SLU faculty members Timothy McBride, Heather Bednarek and Muhammed Islam, “The Road from Massachusetts to Missouri: What it Will Take for Other States to Replicate Massachusetts Health Reform,” which was recently published in the Kansas Law Review. Her review essay of Jonathon Engel’s “Poor People’s Medicine: Medicaid and American Charity Care since 1965” and of “Poor Families in America’s Health Care Crisis” by Ronald J. Angel, Laura Lein and Jane Henrici was published in volume 32 of the Journal of Politics, Policy and Law. A law review article, “The View from the Bottom: Consumer-Directed Medicaid and Cost-Shifting to Patients,” was published in volume 51 of the Saint Louis University Law Journal. Watson co-authored Living in the Red, Medical Debt and Housing Security in Missouri, Survey Findings and Profiles of Working Families, which was published by the The Access Project. Margarida Jorge, Andrew Cohen and Robert Seifert were co-authors. Professor Alan Weinberger’s essay, “Some Further Observations on Using the Pervasive Method of Teaching Legal Ethics in Property Courses,” was published in the Summer 2007 issue of the Saint Louis University Law Journal. His column, “Cases in Brief,” appears in the Appraisal Journal, the quarterly publication of the Appraisal Institute. A portion of Professor Molly Wilson’s article, “An Evolutionary Perspective on Male Domestic Violence: Practical and Policy Implications,” which was originally published in the American Journal of Criminal Law, will be included in a casebook by Elizabeth M. Schneider, et al., Domestic Violence and the Law: Theory and Practice (2nd ed.), to be published in 2008.
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