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Welcome to See infra, our e-newsletter delivering a sampling of news from St. John's Law. With the relative quiet of summer here at the Law School, it's the perfect time to look back at a busy year of teaching and scholarly pursuits and bring you this special newsletter edition with a Faculty Focus.
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| INSIGHTS & EXPERTISE ON TAP
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In addition to producing papers published in leading academic journals, St. John's Law faculty members are sought-after experts in the field who offer opinion pieces and commentary regularly across media channels and outlets. It's easy to sample their insights and expertise:
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NEW HIRES, ROLES, & KUDOS
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Here are just some of the ways we're building on, and recognizing, the excellence of our St. John's Law faculty:
Welcome Aboard! Professor Martin J. LaFalce, a longtime New York City public defender, joined the Law School's full-time faculty last semester and will direct our in-house Defense and Advocacy Clinic when it launches this fall.
In Spring 2023, Professor Miriam Cherry will start on the full-time faculty at St. John's Law, where she'll serve as Faculty Director of the Center for Labor and Employment Law. Professor Cherry comes to us from Saint Louis University School of Law, where she was Associate Dean for Research and Engagement and co-directed the William C. Wefel Center for Employment Law.
Tenure & Promotions We're very pleased to share the following faculty tenure and promotion news:
Congratulations, all, on this well-deserved recognition!
New Deanships Professor Rosa Castello has been named the Law School's Assistant Dean for Assessment, and Professor Christine Lazaro will be our Assistant Dean for Co-Curricular Programs. The appointments became official last week, and we can't wait to see all the great work that Deans Castello and Lazaro will do on behalf of St. John's Law and our students.
Named Professorships At an April ceremony, John Q. Barrett was appointed the Benjamin N. Cardozo Professor of Law, a chair first and last held by former Professor and Interim Dean Brian Z. Tamanaha. Rachel H. Smith was appointed the Mary C. Daly Professor of Legal Writing. That chair was held previously by former Law Professor and Associate Dean for Faculty Scholarship Anita S. Krishnakumar, who served as the inaugural Mary C. Daly Professor of Law. Read all about it.
Later this month, members of the Law School community will gather to celebrate the permanently endowed Harold F. McNiece Professorship, a chair held by Professor Cheryl L. Wade. Through an ongoing campaign, this named professorship is funded generously by St. John's Law alumni and friends to honor the late Harold F. McNiece, an esteemed professor and colleague who served as the Law School's Dean from 1960 to 1970.
We're Hiring! We're seeking entry-level and lateral candidates to join the dynamic St. John's Law faculty. We're committed to equity, inclusion, and antiracism, and are particularly interested in candidates who will enrich the diversity of our faculty. We hope to make multiple hires and are open to a variety of teaching and scholarly interests. We'll consider candidates listed in the AALS Faculty Appointments Register (FAR), as well as those who apply directly. Read more about the openings and apply online.
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Allen Professor Renee Nicole Allen was invited to present her work-in-progress, Get Out: Structural Racism and Academic Terror, to the law faculties at Arizona State, Arizona, and Kansas.
Barrett Professor John Q. Barrett was appointed a trustee of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum and a trustee emeritus of the Historical Society of the New York Courts. His article, "Law Clerk John Costelloe's Photographs of the Stone Court Justices, October 1943," was published in the Journal of Supreme Court History. Professor Barrett also lectured online at the FDR Library (C-SPAN), Federal Bar Association EDNY chapter, American Foreign Law Association, Queens Public Library, FBA's national Art Litigation & Fashion Law Conference, and Nassau County Inn of Court, and was on a Dissed podcast episode about the Steel Seizure Case.
Boyle Professor Robin Boyle gave five presentations recently on Human Trafficking and Coercion. She was a keynote speaker at an academic conference hosted by China's Shanxi University and spoke to community members at Hicksville High School, the National Charity League, the Garden City Community Church, and St. John's Law. "Swimming with Broad Strokes: Publishing and Presenting Beyond the LW Discipline," an article Professor Boyle wrote with Buffalo School of Law Professor Stephen Paskey, will appear in Perspectives: Teaching Legal Research and Writing. In addition, working pro bono under the mentorship of the Safe Passage Project, she successfully got deportation proceedings dismissed against her client, an undocumented immigrant who came to the United States as a minor.
Chiu Professor Elaine Chiu is working with the Asian American Bar Association of New York's (AABANY) Anti-Asian Violence Task Force to study the troubling rise in anti-Asian hate crimes in New York City. She leads a team that is researching what happens after victims report these crimes to the police. Professor Chiu has commented on this research, and on AABANY's May 2022 report sharing it, in articles for Politico, CNN, NY1, and other media outlets.
Duryea Professor Catherine Baylin Duryea has published “Mobilizing Universalism: The Origins of Human Rights” in the Berkeley Journal of International Law. The article argues that the practice of human rights in several Arab countries in the 1970s and 1980s supports the claim that human rights can be universal—not because rights exist outside of politics or have diverse origins, but because they were constantly reinvented to support a range of different, sometimes contradictory, political goals. Professor Duryea also accepted an invitation to join the Middle East Studies Association's Committee on Academic Freedom.
Greenberg Professor Elayne E. Greenberg presented "What they really want . . . Bringing Objective Evaluation Into Mediation" to bankruptcy mediators in the Honorable Thomas T. Glover Mediation Program in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Washington. In her recurring "Ethical Compass" column for the New York Dispute Resolution Lawyer, Professor Greenberg wrote a three-part series addressing lawyers' ethical obligations in a settlement-centric justice system. She presented a draft of "Harnessing the Paradox of Racial Stressors: Reimagining Racism Education While Reducing Cancel Culture Casualties" at the annual AALS ADR Works-in-Progress Conference hosted by the Straus Institute for Dispute Resolution. She also presented "Blinding Justice and Virtual Dispute Resolution?" at a recent Stetson Law Review symposium. The presentation is part of a developing paper that will appear in the Stetson Law Review.
Lazaro At PIABA's annual meeting, Professor Christine Lazaro co-moderated a panel program on Exploring Obligations—and Regulatory Challenges—of Online Broker-Dealers and Trading Platforms. She also co-authored an article for the program titled "The Obligations and Regulatory Challenges of Online Broker-Dealers and Trading Platforms" and participated in a panel addressing the Fundamentals of Arbitration: Significant Documents and an Introduction to the Discovery Guide. Professor Lazaro was invited to join the CFP Board's Standards Resource Commission and served on an SEC Investor Advisory Committee panel that considered the commission's potential role in addressing elder financial abuse issues.
Movsesian Professor Mark L. Movsesian's article on the response of courts around the world to the Covid pandemic, "Law, Religion, and the COVID-19 Crisis," appears in the current volume of the Journal of Law and Religion. He moderated a panel at a recent online conference on cultural property in law and diplomacy co-sponsored by the Law School's Center for Law and Religion, the Fletcher School at Tufts University, and California State University-Fresno. He also participated in an online panel, Secularism and Its Discontents, sponsored by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation's Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University.
Salomone Professor Rosemary Salomone's latest book, The Rise of English: Global Politics and the Power of Language (Oxford University Press), was reviewed in the New York Times Book Review, the Kirkus Review, the Times of India, and Sentence First and listed among the New York Times Book Review Editors' weekly "12 Books to Read." The book was also excerpted in the Wall Street Journal Book Review Section, featured in the Economist, recommended by Goodreads, and covered in podcast interviews in the United States, Europe, and Canada and in NPR broadcasts nationwide. The German magazine Spotlight published an interview with Professor Salomone in its latest edition, and she presented the book in a workshop hosted by the Berkeley Center for Comparative Equality and Anti-Discrimination Law at the University of California. Professor Salomone's commentary, "The Inequities of English Use in Global Higher Education Must Be Addressed," appeared in Times Higher Education, and University World News published her commentary on "China and the Geopoliitcs of Language."
Selby and Smith Professors Courtney Selby and Rachel H. Smith contributed a chapter to Law Teaching Strategies for a New Era (Carolina Academic Press 2021).
Sovern Professor Jeff Sovern's article, "Six Scandals: Why We Need Consumer Protection Laws Instead of Just Markets," has been published in the Michigan Business & Entrepreneurial Law Review. He also spoke at, and drafted a short memorandum for, the University of California at Berkeley's CFPB Academic Advisory Roundtable. Berkeley submitted the memorandum to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, along with memos drafted by other consumer law professors. Professor Sovern was also quoted in American Banker and Roll Call.
Subotnik Professor Eva Subotnik's co-authored, interdisciplinary paper on legal issues growing out of the Britney Spears conservatorship was accepted for presentation at both the Critical Trusts & Estates Conference 2022 and the Mid-Career Intellectual Property Scholars Workshop.
Wade Professor Cheryl L. Wade was the keynote speaker at the University of Cincinnati College of Law's Corporate Law Symposium on diversity, race, and business. She was also one of the racial justice speakers for a UC Davis Law School series where she discussed her co-authored book, Predatory Lending and the Destruction of the African American Dream. Earlier this year, Professor Wade was a panelist at the Center for American Progress' Women's History Month event and at a University of Houston Law Center conference on Race, Racism, and American Media.
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| Comments, Suggestions, or Content Ideas?
Please email Lori Herz, See infra's Managing Editor and Lead Writer, at herzl@stjohns.edu.
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