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2001-2002 Faculty Colloquia Series

Chris Wonnell, University of San Diego School of Law:
“Efficiency and Conservatism,” September 2001.

Jay Kesan, University of Illinois College of Law:
“Getting It Right at the Outset: Granting Patent Rights Commensurate with Innovation,” September 2001.

Jim Chen, Julius E. Davis Professor of Law, University of Minnesota:
“Reconciling Intellectual Property with Biological Diversity: A Blueprint for Effacing Humanity’s Footprint,” October 2001.

David A. Hyman, Professor of Law, University of Maryland School of Law:
“You Get What You Pay For: Result-Based Compensation for Health Care,” October 2001.

Mitchell Berman, Professor of Law, University of Texas at Austin:
“Commercial Speech and the Unconstitutional Conditions Doctrine: Second Look at ‘the Greater Includes the Lesser’,” October 2001.

Gail Evans, Visiting Professor, University of San Diego School of Law:
“Defending the Dark Victory of TRIPS: In Search of a More Equitable Jurisprudence for Resolving Intellectual Property Disputes in the Supercourt of the World Trade Organization,” November 2001.

Elizabeth S. Anderson, Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Michigan:
“Integration, Affirmative Action, and Strict Scrutiny,” September 2001.

Barry Dean, Professor, University of Kent, England:
“Legal Globalization and Legal Education,” November 2001.

Susan R. Klein, Professor, University of Texas at Austin:
“Independent-Norm Federalism in Criminal Law,” December 2001.

Stuart Banner, Professor, Washington University, and Visiting Professor, University of California, Los Angeles:
“Native Proprietors: American Indian Property Rights Under English Colonial Law,” February 2002.

Connie Rosati,  Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Davis:
“The Normativity of Constitutions,” February 2002.

Scott Altman, Professor of Law and Associate Dean, University of Southern California Law School:
“A Theory of Child Support,” February 2002.

Jonathan H. Adler, Assistant Professor, Case Western Reserve University School of Law:
“Conservatism through Collusion: Antitrust Barriers to Cooperative Fishery Management,” March 2002.

Abraham Bell, SJD Fellow, Harvard Law School:
“Pliability Rules: Reconceptualizing the Cathedral,” March 2002.

William K. Kelley, Associate Professor, Notre Dame Law School:
March 2002.

Ronald J. Allen, Wigmore Professor of Law, Northwestern University:
“Legal Phenomena, Knowledge, and Theory: A Cautionary Tale of Hedgehogs and Foxes,” April 2002.

Donald C. Langevoort, Professor of Law, Georgetown University:
“Taming the Animal Spirits of the Stock Markets: A Behavioral Approach to Securities Regulation,” April 2002.

G. Marcus Cole, Professor, Stanford Law School:
“Delaware is Not a State: Are We Witnessing Jurisdictional Competition in Bankruptcy?” April 2002.

Hanach Dagan, Affiliated Oversees Professor, University of Michigan School of Law:
“On Marital Property,” April 2002.

Larry Alexander, University of San Diego School of Law;

Yale Kamisar, University of San Diego School of Law;

Michael Rappaport, University of San Diego School of Law;

Daniel Rodriguez, Dean and Professor of Law, University of San Diego School of Law:
Colloquium: “The Role of Interdisciplinary Scholarship Within the Legal Academy,” May 2002.

John Copeland Nagle, Professor, Notre Dame Law School:
“Causation, Culpability, and Pollution,” July 2002.

            Fourth Annual USD Faculty Research Colloquium, January 2002

Professor Michael D. Ramsey

“Textualism and War Powers”
Commentator: Professor Sai Prakash

Professor Laurence Claus

“When is cruel punishment unusual? A reconsideration of the Eighth Amendment”
Commentator: Professor Michael Rappaport

Professor Steve Hartwell

“Legal Processes and Hierarchical Tangles”
Commentator: Professor Mike Kelly

Professor Emily Sherwin

“A Comparative Puzzle: Standards of Proof” (with Kevin Clermont)
Commentator: Professor Chris Wonnell

Professor Maimon Schwarzschild

“Acton’s Liberal Multiculturalism and Today’s”
Commentator:  Professor Alan Wertheimer