Faculty news /law/ en ICYMI: Faculty Publications & Notable Mentions /law/2023/08/21/icymi-faculty-publications-notable-mentions ICYMI: Faculty Publications & Notable Mentions Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 08/21/2023 - 10:01 Categories: Faculty Faculty in the News Tags: Faculty Faculty news News homepage news

Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at 欧美口爆视频 Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this round up.

Faculty Publications

Amanda Parsons, SSRN.com, Aug. 7, 2023. 

Notable Mentions & Blog Posts

Paul Campos; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Lawyers, Guns, & Money Blog, (Aug. 11-18, 2023). 

T. Markus Funk鈥檚 [欧美口爆视频 Law adjunct] recent article on  made SSRN鈥檚 Top Ten Download Lists for the following eJournals: Compliance & Risk Management; Institutional & Transition Economics.  

[Gregor MacGregor, Acequia Assistance Project], , Getches-Wilkinson Center, (Aug. 14, 2023). 

Andrew Schwartz, , ProfessorBainbridge.com, (Aug. 17, 2023). 

Andrew Schwartz, , 欧美口爆视频 Lawyers Chapter of the Federalist Society (Aug. 18, 2023).   

[Ahmed White], Prof. Ahmed White awarded Richard A. Lester Prize, 欧美口爆视频 Law, Aug. 18, 2023. (Under the Iron Heel:  The Wobblies and the Capitalist War on Radical Workers awarded the Richard A. Lester Prize for the Outstanding Book in Labor Economics and Industrial Relations published in 2022. This prize is awarded annually by the Industrial Relations Section at Princeton University.) 

[Acequia Assistance Project, 欧美口爆视频 Law students Oliver Skelly and Ellen Beckert], , The Chronicle-News, (Aug. 14, 2023). 

Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at 欧美口爆视频 Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this round up.

Off

Traditional 0 On White ]]>
Mon, 21 Aug 2023 16:01:51 +0000 Anonymous 11760 at /law
ICYMI: Faculty Publications and Notable Mentions /law/2023/08/14/icymi-faculty-publications-and-notable-mentions ICYMI: Faculty Publications and Notable Mentions Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 08/14/2023 - 10:07 Categories: Faculty Faculty in the News Tags: Faculty Faculty news News homepage news

Faculty Publications

Peter Huang [retired 欧美口爆视频 Law faculty],  (2023). 

Lolita Buckner Inniss, Abortion Law as Protection Narrative, 101 Oregon L. Rev. (2023)(online link forthcoming). 

Maryam Jamshidi, , 108 Cornell L. Rev.739 (2023). 

Amanda Parsons, SSRN.com (Aug. 7, 2023).

Blake Reid, Jerry Kang, & Alan Butler,  (2023). 

Daria Roithmayr, , 28 Mich. J. Race & L. 145 (2023).   

Notable Mentions, Blogs, & Interviews 

[Harold Bruff, Professor Emeritus], Louis Jacobson,  Politifact, (Aug. 1, 2023). 

Paul Campos; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Lawyers, Guns, & Money Blog, (July 29-Aug.11, 2023).  

[Shamika Dalton, Deep Gulasekaram, Daria Roithmayr, & Wadie Said], , 欧美口爆视频 Connections (Aug. 10, 2023).   

T. Markus Funk [欧美口爆视频 Law adjunct], recent articles on , , and ) made SSRN鈥檚 Top Ten Download Lists for the following eJournals:  Institutional & Transition Economics; Criminal Law; Types of Offending; Compliance & Risk Management; Law & Society: Private Law - Labor & Employment Law; and Political Economy 鈥 Development: Underdevelopment & Poverty Law.   

[Deep Gulasekaram], Emily Battaglia, Getting to know Prof. Deep Gulasekaram, 欧美口爆视频 Law, (Aug. 8, 2023). 

[Deep Gulasekaram, Maryam Jamshidi, Vivek Krishnamurthy, Sarah Matsumoto, Blake Reid, Daria Roithmayr, & Wadie SaidTwelfth season of mini law school to feature new topic areas, faculty members, 欧美口爆视频 Law (June 29, 2023).   

Jennifer Hendricks, Emily Battaglia, Essentially a Mother: A Q&A with Jennifer Hendricks exploring her groundbreaking new book, 欧美口爆视频 Law (July 13, 2023).   

Peter Huang, Lunch and Learn Presentations: 欧美口爆视频 Fireside Chat on Disrupting Racism (forthcoming, Aug. 22, 2023). 

Maryam Jamshidi, Just Security, (July 24, 2023). 

[Maryam Jamshidi], Garrett Shanley, , The Independent Florida Alligator, (July 31, 2023). 

Maryam Jamshidi, , Law and Political Economy Blog (June 22, 2023).   

[Maryam Jamshidi], Caleb Symons, , Law360 (June 29, 2023). 

[Margot Kaminski], , TechPolicy.com (July 28, 2023).  

[Susan Nevelow Mart, Professor Emeritus], Bob Ambrogi, LawNext, (Aug. 9, 2023). 

[Christopher Mueller],  (New Jersey Supreme Court, Aug. 2, 2023)(citing Mueller鈥檚 Federal Evidence, 4th ed.).   

Helen Norton [panelist] & Doug Spencer [moderator], 2023 U.S. Supreme Court Review (Aug. 2, 2023). 

[Amanda Parsons], Paul Caron, , TaxProf Blog, (Aug. 9, 2023).   

Blake Reid, recipient of  for work in the Samuelson-Glushko Technology Law & Policy Clinic  

[Blake Reid], Emily Battaglia, Getting to know Prof. Blake Reid, 欧美口爆视频 Law, (Aug. 2, 2023). 

[Daria Roithmayr], Brian Leiter, , Brian Leiter鈥檚 Law School Reports, (Aug. 8, 2023). 

[Mark Squillace], Akielly Hu, , Grist (Aug. 1, 2023).   

[Harry Surden], Ronald M. Sandgrund, , 欧美口爆视频 Lawyer 24 (July/August 2023). 

Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at 欧美口爆视频 Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this round up.

Off

Traditional 0 On White ]]>
Mon, 14 Aug 2023 16:07:28 +0000 Anonymous 11750 at /law
ICYMI: Faculty Publications and Notable Mentions /law/2023/07/31/icymi-faculty-publications-and-notable-mentions ICYMI: Faculty Publications and Notable Mentions Anonymous (not verified) Mon, 07/31/2023 - 10:39 Categories: Faculty News homepage news Tags: Faculty Faculty news News homepage news

Faculty Publications

T. Markus Funk [欧美口爆视频 Law adjunct], , NACDL: The Champion 36 (August 2023); featured in Eugene Volokh, , The Volokh Conspiracy (July 19, 2023). 

Jennifer Hendricks, Disputed Conceptions of Motherhood, in  461 (Deborah L. Blake, Martha Chamallas, & Verna L. Williams, eds., 2023)(available online ). 

Christopher B. Mueller, , 10th ed. (Aspen, 2023)(with Laird C. Kirkpatrick & Liesa L. Richter). 

Notable Mentions  

Paul Campos, ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Lawyers, Guns, & Money, (July 21-28, 2023). 

Violeta Chapin, , Denver Post, (July 23, 2023). 

T. Markus Funk, , CrimProfBlog, (July 23, 2023). (On the Media鈥檚 Failure to Understand Self-Defense Law Basics #9

Jennifer Hendricks, Tracy Thomas, , Gender & the Law Blog, (July 25, 2023). 

Suzette Malveaux (panelist), , SEALs Conference (July 26, 2023), see notable mention by UIC Law Dean Nicky Boothe . 

Suzette Malveaux (discussant), , SEALs Conference (July 24, 2023).   

Blake Reid & the Samuelson-Glushko Technology Law & Policy Clinic, , Markey.Senate.gov, (July 25, 2023).   

Daria Roithmayr, Emily Battaglia, Getting to know Prof. Daria Roithmayr, 欧美口爆视频 Law, (July 27, 2023). 

Ahmed White, E. Tammy Kim, , The New Yorker, July 27, 2023. 

Charles Wilkinson, Naoiki Nitta, , Civil Eats, July 26, 2023. 

Korey Wise Innocence Project, Debra Cassens Weiss, , 专A Journal, (July 24, 2023).   

欧美口爆视频 Law, Bennito L. Kelty, , Westword, (July 27, 2023). 

 

Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at 欧美口爆视频 Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up.

Off

Traditional 0 On White ]]>
Mon, 31 Jul 2023 16:39:25 +0000 Anonymous 11729 at /law
Essentially a Mother: A Q&A with Jennifer Hendricks exploring her groundbreaking new book鈥 /law/2023/07/13/essentially-mother-qa-jennifer-hendricks-exploring-her-groundbreaking-new-book-0 Essentially a Mother: A Q&A with Jennifer Hendricks exploring her groundbreaking new book鈥 Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 07/13/2023 - 12:47 Categories: Faculty Faculty in the News Homepage News Tags: Faculty news homepage news Emily Battaglia

professor of law and co-director of the Juvenile and Family Law Program, recently published a new book. argues that the law of pregnancy and motherhood has been overrun by sexist ideology. Over the past few decades, courts have held that a woman鈥檚 pregnancy hardly counts in her claim to parent her child and have stripped women of the right to abortion, treated surrogate mothers as mere vessels, and handed biological fathers automatic rights over women and their children.鈥疎ssentially a Mother argues that feminists must overthrow this skewed value system and incorporate new kinds of feminist analysis that have been ignored in the law before now.鈥 

In this interview, Professor Hendricks sits down with 欧美口爆视频 Law鈥檚 Emily Battaglia to chat about her new book, the inspiration behind it, and the contribution she hopes it provides to the legal field. 鈥 

Thank you so much, Professor Hendricks, for taking time to answer my questions. I would love to know: what was the inspiration behind this book?鈥 

JH: Thanks so much for taking the time to talk. The cases I point to as the crux of the book are a series of court cases about IVF mix-ups. These are cases in which women who had been struggling with infertility finally became pregnant through IVF at a clinic, only to learn that they鈥檇 been given the wrong embryos; they were then be forced to turn over the babies to the genetic parents (or even to would-be parents who bought someone else鈥檚 egg or sperm). These are hard and tragic situations, and I鈥檓 not saying there鈥檚 an easy or obvious way these cases should be decided. But what鈥檚 appalling to me is how easy鈥痶he鈥痗ourts鈥痶hink those cases are鈥攈ow quick they are to dismiss the birth mother鈥檚 claim in favor of the genetic parents. They basically turn her into an involuntary surrogate. In some cases, the judges have been quite horrible about scolding the birth mother, telling her it was all her fault for letting herself get attached to the baby that she literally made with her body.鈥疘t鈥檚 an extreme example of how courts have come to define parenthood in terms of genes, to the exclusion of the actual work that parents do to create and care for their children鈥攊ncluding not just pregnancy and birth, but all the caretaking that parents do after birth as well.鈥 

On the flip side, this minimizing of pregnancy鈥攖reating it as irrelevant to parenthood鈥攈elped pave the way for the supreme court鈥檚 decision in鈥疍obbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health, the case that overruled鈥疪oe v. Wade鈥痑nd eliminated the right to abortion. In that case, the Republicans on the supreme court told women that if they didn鈥檛 want a baby, they should just stay pregnant, give birth, and then place the baby for adoption. But we know that women who are denied abortions overwhelmingly reject adoption as an option. Why? Because an embryo is not the same as a baby, and having an abortion is not the same as giving up a child you鈥檝e borne. Pregnancy is a lot of physical work, but it鈥檚 also very emotional for most people, so it leads to a bond even if it was forced on you in the first place. But the supreme court basically said pregnancy doesn鈥檛 matter, either physically or emotionally鈥攊t鈥檚 just an inconvenience. That鈥檚 the attitude that鈥疎ssentially a Mother鈥痠s trying to fight.鈥 

What are the main points you hope readers take away from reading this book?鈥 

JH: I hope to convince people that the law should define parenthood primarily in terms of caretaking for the child; and critically, the process of gestation and childbirth should be considered 鈥渃aretaking鈥 that establishes parental rights as soon as the child is born. Genes alone, without any caretaking, should not be enough. Fathers and others who don鈥檛 gestate their children can take care of them in other ways, and that caretaking should count more than just genes. We often romanticize pregnancy as some blissful, magical state, but we don鈥檛 give it real importance in terms of rights; while with fathers, we focus only on genes and child support. My argument is that, on the one hand, the law shouldn鈥檛 be acting like babies just appear out of nowhere when they鈥檙e born, with no connection to the person they just popped out of. On the other hand, the law also shouldn鈥檛 act like giving birth creates a mystical connection that is superior to other ways of becoming a parent.鈥 

鈥疢ore generally, I want people to see the connections between losing the right to abortion and denigrating pregnancy in other areas of the law, and in our culture. Women are suffering horribly, every day, from the loss of鈥疪oe v. Wade. As we fight to win back the right to abortion, we have the chance to do it in a much broader way that will protect everyone鈥檚 reproductive rights and freedoms. We must overthrow the entire skewed value system, currently enshrined in the law,鈥痶hat subordinates women, devalues pregnancy and other forms of caregiving, and denies too many people the right to choose whether to become parents and to raise their families with dignity and security.鈥 

Can you talk about how this book builds upon your previous鈥痺ork?鈥 

JH: Essentially a Mother鈥痠s the culmination of work I鈥檝e been doing on these issues for about fifteen years.鈥疶he IVF mix-up cases are the tip of the iceberg in terms of how the genetic definition of parenthood has taken over family law. Defining parenthood in terms of genes is, at its root, a sexist approach to the law. It says that鈥痑 pregnant woman鈥檚 nine months of gestation count for basically nothing when it comes to her claim to be the parent of the child she bears. Armed with this notion of parenthood, courts have handed biological fathers鈥攅ven those who become fathers through rape鈥攁utomatic rights over women and their children.鈥 

Part of the problem is a logical error that courts make in terms of what it means for the law to be sex-neutral.鈥疶o me, the core of parenthood is caretaking for a child, so parental rights should be based on a caretaking relationship. That caretaking can come in a variety of forms, including pregnancy. Many courts and scholars, however, have implicitly concluded that pregnancy and childbirth鈥痗annot鈥痓e part of the definition of parenthood, because that would be unfair to men. That means that genes are all that鈥檚 left for identifying the parents at the time the child is born. But that isn鈥檛 sex-neutral; that鈥檚 discrimination against the people who get pregnant, because you鈥檙e refusing to count this huge thing that they did.鈥 

The focus on genes also ends up hurting men who put a lot into taking care of their kids. When courts are judging fathers, the one thing they are likely to consider in addition to genes is whether a man paid child support. In one case, the supreme court denied parental rights to an unmarried father who had raised his son all by himself, because he鈥檇 never filed the paperwork to formally take financial responsibility. It鈥檚 all part of a pattern where the actual, physical labor of creating, birthing, and raising a child just doesn鈥檛 count for much in the law.鈥 

With this work, what perspective鈥痙o you鈥痟ope to add to the current field of research in this area?鈥  

JH: One of the things I talk about in the book is that a lot of feminist legal scholars have been surprisingly supportive of legal rules that minimize the importance of pregnancy. I think that鈥檚 because, abortion aside, a huge amount of feminist legal work is focused on employment law and constitutional law. In those fields, most of the fights in the past have been about women trying to win the same privileges as men by showing they are just as good as men at being a lawyer or a soldier or whatever. But family law is one of the most dynamic and exciting fields in legal scholarship right now, and it also has the most experience grappling with issues about gender and relationships.鈥疎ssentially a Mother鈥痗hallenges constitutional lawyers to confront and incorporate new kinds of feminist analysis that have been ignored in the law before now.鈥 

The book is available for order at your local bookstore, from online booksellers, and from the . 

In this interview, Professor Hendricks sits down with 欧美口爆视频 Law鈥檚 Emily Battaglia to chat about her new book, the inspiration behind it, and the contribution she hopes it provides to the legal field. 鈥

Off

Traditional 0 On White ]]>
Thu, 13 Jul 2023 18:47:42 +0000 Anonymous 11717 at /law