Our faculty are leaders in scholarship, teaching and service, as detailed in our faculty profiles. Here are highlights of their recent achievements:
Hosch Professor Julian A. Cook III published "Federal Guilty Pleas: Inequities, Indigence, and the Rule 11 Process" in 60 Boston College Law Review 1073 (2019).
Callaway Chair of Law Emeritus Ronald L. Carlson's book Carlson on Evidence, 5th ed. (with M. Carlson) was cited by the Georgia Court of Appeals to explain the Georgia standards for the doctrine of evidentiary relevancy in criminal cases in Hines v. State.
Distinguished Research Professor & Shackelford Distinguished Professor in Taxation Law Emeritus Walter Hellerstein published "Taxes Falling Disproportionately on Nonresidents: Reflections on Saban" in 93 Tax Notes State 15 (2019).
Woodruff Chair in International Law Diane Marie Amann presented her paper "Victors' Justice and the New Turn to Transnational Process" at the Justice for Transnational Human Rights Violations conference, which was sponsored by the Bonavero Institute of Human Rights and the University of Oxford law faculty during June.
Woodruff Chair in International Law Diane Marie Amann took part in a two-day consultation as a member of the advisory council for Courtroom 600, a digital humanities project pertaining to the post-World War II Nuremberg trials, which was funded by a National Endowment for the Humanities grant and held at the University of Connecticut during June.