F

to elementary school children (who, she cate General's Corps before coming to the finds, have a surprising level of insight Law School. Since then he has traveled as into the law). a visiting professor to Chou University, Prof. Althouse is also an artist (she Tokyo, in 1984, and to Justus Liebig Uni- exhibited her paintings in the 1987 Wis- versity, Giessen, West Germany, in 1987 consin Triennial at the Madison Art Cen- and 1992. He was also a Fulbright Profes- ter). She lives with her sons John and sor in Egypt, Iran and Cyprus in the late Christopher. 1960s and early 1970s, and served as Stockton Professor of International Law at the U.S. Naval War College in 1963-64. At the UW Law School he currently teaches Constitutional Law I & II, a First Amend- ment seminar, and Foreign Relations Law. He is of counsel to the Madison law firm Murphy & Desmond. Prof. Baldwin, who was a member of Law Review at Cornell, majored in both Professor of Law History and Government at Haverford and Born Wilmington) Delaware, 1951 was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He let- BFA. University of Michigan, 197.3; tered in cricket and soccer. He is a past J.D. New York Uniiersity, 1981 president of the Madison Downtown Rotary and Madison Rotary Foundation; Ann Althouse joined the Law School facul- the Wisconsin Conference of the American ty in 1984, after clerking for Judge Association of University Professors and Leonard B. Sand in the United States Dis- the Madison MUP Chapter, and he has trict COUltfor the Southern District of New served on the National Council of MUP. York and working as a litigation associate From 1981 to 1982 he chaired the State in the Wall Street law firm of Sullivan & Public Defender Board and the Wisconsin Cromwell. She attended New York Uni- Elections Board in 1992 (on which he still versity Law School, where she won the Mortimer !VI.Jackson Professor of Law serves). In 1979-80 and 1985-86 he University Graduation Prize and served as Born Binghamton, New York) 1929 served as president of the University Club Senior Note & Comment Editor for the B.A. Haoerford College) 1950; LL.B. Cornell at the University of Wisconsin. He is a Law Review. University, 1953 member of the Wisconsin and New York Prof. Althouse maintains a scholarly bars. interest in issues of federalism and separa- A nationally known expert on constitu- Prof. Baldwin has written widely on a tion of pmvers. Recent articles include tional and international law, Gordon Bald- variety of topics. His articles have "Variations on a Theory of Normative Fed- win has been a member of the UW Law appeared in such diverse publications as eralism: A Supreme Court Dialogue," 42 School faculty since 1957. Since 1971 he International Lauryer, Military Law Review) Duke Law Journal 979 (1993), "Saying has served as Director of Officer Educa- Revue Al-Ulum Al Qanuyiya Wal-lqti- What Rights Are: In and Out of Context " tion (ROTC) for the Madison campus. He sadiya (Egypt), and numerous law reviews 1991 Wisconsin Law Review 930--968, ~nd has served as a counselor on international and journals. "Standing, in Fluffy Slippers," in 77 Vir- law to the U.S. State Department from Married to Helen Hochgraf Baldwin, ginia Law Review 1177 (1991). She has 1975 to 1976, was a U.S. delegate to the Associate Director of the University of also undertaken a feminist analysis of Evi- United Nations Conference on Charter Wisconsin Clinical Center, Prof. Baldwin dence teaching materials (see "The Lying Review in New York in early 1976, and enjoys gardening, jogging, biking, down- Woman, the Devious Prostitute, and Other participated in a number of U.S. State hill and cross-country skiing, foreign trav- Stories From the Evidence Casebook" Department missions to Bolivia on nar- el, reading, automobiles, baseball, and forthcoming in Northwestern Law Re~iew cotics matters in 1977. In 1983, he argued classical music. The Baldwins have two in 1994). Welsh v. Wisconsin before the U.S. children: Schuyler, a computer specialist She currently teaches Federal Jurisdic- Supreme COUIt. with a degree in aeronautical engineering, tion, Constitutional Law I, Civil Procedure Prof. Baldwin, who served as Assistant and Mary Page, a graduate of Smith Col- II, and a seminar on Constitutional Theo- Dean and then Associate Dean of the Law lege who works in Boston. ry, and is working on an innovative case- School between 1959 and 1966, spent four book for the Federal Jurisdiction course. years practicing international and constitu- She sometimes teaches Constitutional Law tional Iaw in the U.S. Army Judge Advo-

3 mittee of the Association of American Law in the American Society of International Schools. Law and other professional organizations. A William H. Hastie Fellow in 1974-75 Prof. Bilder and his wife Sally have at the University of Wisconsin, Dean Bern- four children. stine also served as Senior Editor of the Clearinghouse Review at Northwestern University in 1971-72.

Dean and Professor of Law Born Berkeley, California, 1947 B.A. Universi~y cf California-Berkeiey, 1969;].D. Nortbuestern University, 1972; U.M. University of Wisconsin, 1975

Daniel Bemstine's experience prior to Robert Wand Irma M. Arthur-Bascom joining the University of Wisconsin Law B, Professor of Law School faculty in 1978 includes teaching at Associate Dean for Research and Howard University Law School from Burrus-Bascom Professor of Law Faculty Development 1975-78 and working for two years as a B.A. Williams College, 1949; J.D. Harvard Born Ellensburg, Wasbington, 1942 staff attorney with the U.S. Department of University, 1956 B.A. University of Wisconsin, 1964; M.A., Labor. Dean Bernstine spent the 1987-88 UB. , 1968 academic year as a visiting law professor An expert in the areas of international at Howard University, and from 1987-90 law, foreign relations law, international Peter Carstensen was a trial attorney in the he served as Howard's General Counsel. transactions, and international organiza- U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Divi- In August of 1988 he was also appointed tions, Richard Bilder served as an attorney sion for five years before joining the UW' Interim Dean of Howard's Law School. He in the Office of the Legal Advisor in the Law School faculty in 1973. His expertise was appointed Dean of the UW Law U.S. State Department for nearly eight in the areas of business, banking and School in 1990. years before becoming a law professor. antitrust is reflected in the courses he Dean Bernstine's major teaching areas A Fulbright Fellow at Cambridge Uni- teaches: Antitrust Law, Business Organiza- are Civil Procedure, Federal Jurisdiction, versity's Pembroke College in 1949, Prof. tions: Publicly Held Corporations, Torts, Legal Method and Civil Liberties. He Bilder has served as a visiting professor at Securities Regulation and Selected Prob- published Wisconsin and Federal Civil the University of Toronto, the University lems in Trade Regulation. He spent the Procedure with John Conway in 1986, His of Virginia, the University of North Caroli- spring semester of 1977 as a visiting pro- scholarly interests are reflected in his na, the University of Michigan and the fessor at Cornell University Law School. numerous law review articles on civil pro- University of Georgia. He has taught In addition to his teaching duties and cedure and minority rights, in his work as courses including Admiralty Law, Con- part-time service as Associate Dean, Prof. a hearing examiner for the D.C. Public tracts, Criminal Law, International Law, Carstensen is working on a number of Employee Relations Board, and as a Neu- International Organizations, International projects, including an historically oriented tral for the American Arbitration Associa- Human Rights Law, Foreign Relations Law, study of public policy toward accidents tion. and Tort Law. and an effort to identify and define pre- A member of the District of Columbia Prof. Bilder has written widely on dictively and descriptively workable stan- and Wisconsin bars, Dean Bernstine is the intemationallaw and other issues in a dards in antitrust law. His recent publica- former Vice-Chairman of the Wisconsin number of law reviews and journals. He is tions include: "The Content of the Hollow Supreme Court's Board of Bar Examiners. the author of Managing tbe Risks of Inter- Core of Antitrust: The Chicago Board of He is also a member of the Torts Drafting national Agreement (981), is a member Trade Case and the Meaning of the Rule Committee for the Multi-State Bar Exami- of the Board of Editors of the American of Reason in Restraint of Trade Analysis," nation and chairs the Accreditation Com- Journal of International Law, and is active in Research in Law and Economics (992) and "The Evolving Duty of Mental Health by the Congressional Office of Technolo- and as Executive Assistant Attorney Gen- Professionals to Third Parties: A Doctrinal gy Assessment 0986-88); and was eral until 1969. Shortly thereafter, he and Institutional Examination," in the appointed a diplomacy fellow of American became Assistant to the UW Chancellor, International journal cf Laui and Psychia- Association for the Advancement of Sci- then Associate Dean of the UW Law try (993). ence, working in the policy division of the School 0972-74), and served as co-direc- Prof. Carstensen and his wife, Carol, Office of Population at the U.S. Agency tor of the Center for Public Representation have four children: Mary, Jean, Dan and for International Development (1988-89). in the mid-1970s. He has been a member Steve, and two grandchildren. Her work there focused on law reform in of the Wisconsin Public Intervenors Advi- francophone West Africa and develop- sory Committee since 1976, was Chairman ment of private sector family planning ser- from 1980 to 1982, and has been a mem- vices in Central America. ber of the National Academy of Aribtrators Since coming to Wisconsin in 1989, since 1983. Prof. Charo has published articles on Prof. Christenson was Note Editor of reproductive technologies, family plan- Wisconsin Law Review, and a member of ning, abortion, genetic screening, and Order of the Coif. He teaches courses in human experimentation. Her most recent environmental law, administrative law, work focuses on the use of biological contracts, arbitration, and local govern- models of natural behavior in the con- ment. He is currently working in the areas struction of legal norms. She has also of local government regulation and in dis- been a visiting professor at universities in pute resolution. Argentina, France, and Germany, and has Prof. Christenson's non-legal interests lectured in China and Cuba. In addition, include canoeing, fishing, hunting and she has frequently served as a consultant hiking, spectator sports, and reading histo- to the National Academy of Sciences' Insti- lY, biographies, and spy and mystery nov- tute of Medicine and to the Congressional els. He and his wife, Judy, have two chil- Office of Technology Assessment. dren: John, a law student, and Anne, who practices law in San Francisco. Assistant Professor of Law and Medical Ethics Born Brooklyn, New York, 1958 BA. Harvard-Radcliffe, 1979; J.D. Columbia Law School, 1982

Alta Charo teaches courses at both the Law School and Medical School on biomedical ethics, medical malpractice, reproductive rights, statutory drafting, and torts. She has also been a member of the executive boards of the International Association for Bioethics, the Alan Guttmacher Institute. and International Projects Assistance Services, as well as a volunteer for the ACLU and the Wisconsin Women's Network. Prof. Charo has honors degrees in biol- ogy and law. From 1982 to 1985 she Professor of Law served as associate director of the Legisla- Born Wanderoos, Wisconsin, 1934 tive Drafting Research Fund of Columbia B.S. University of Wisconsin-River Falls, University, where she oversaw drafting 1958; LL.B. University of Wisconsin, 1960 Sherwood R. Volkman-Bascom projects on voting rights, reproductive Professor of Law technologies, and energy conservation, Arlen Christenson has made numerous Born Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1938 and lectured at Columbia Law School on contributions to the University of Wiscon- BA. Amherst College, 1960; LL.B. legislative process and drafting. Subse- sin and state government for the past 25 University of Wisconsin, 1963 quently she taught American law at the years. A member of the Law School facul- Sorbonne 0985-86); served as legal ana- ty since 1963, he served as the State's An exceptional classroom instructor, Larry lyst for a variety of biotechnology studies Deputy Attorney General from 1966-68 Church received the University of Wiscon- sin Distinguished Teacher Award in 1985

5 and was named Sherwood R. Volkman- Bascom Distinguished Teaching Professor of Law in 1986. His teaching has also won "popular acclaim" with student-voted teaching awards in 1971, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1988, and 1993- Prof. Church is a summa cum laude graduate of Wisconsin Law School and former Note Editor of the Wisconsin Law Review. Other scholastic honors include the Dalberg Award, Order of the Coif, and a Ford Foundation Fellowship in Urban and Regional Planning. After graduation, he joined the U.S. Peace Corps to teach law at Haile Sellassie University in Ethiopia. On return he became an associate with Foley & Lardner Associate Professor of Law William Voss-Bascom Professor of Laui in Milwaukee. Since joining the UW Law B.A. Vassar College, 1960; LL.B. Columbia Born Plainfield, New Jersey, 1942 School faculty in 1968, he has served as Law School, 1963 B.S. Loyola Universi~y (Chicago), 1964; an advisor to the Supreme Court of J.D., Ph.D. Candidate, M.A. Nortbuestern Afghanistan, lectured at the University of Carin Clauss specialized in Labor Law for University, 1967, 1972, 1975 Zambia Law School, and has been a visit- 17 years before joining the UW Law ing law professor at Brigham Young Uni- School faculty in 1981. During the three William Clune's expertise in education law versity, the University of Oregon, and years immediately prior to coming to Wis- and policy frequently involves him in con- American University Law School. He has consin, Prof. Clauss was the Solicitor of sultations with state legislatures, the U.S. also given lectures on law in Taiwan, Labor, primarily responsible for the Labor Congress, and courts. He has a joint Japan, Korea, China and Germany and Law Reform Bill and for handling legal appointment with the LaFollette Institute also to foreign students who come annual- aspects of coal, railroad and trucking for Public Affairs. His Law School courses ly to Madison for a course in American strikes. While in government service she include Law and Education, the First law. also served as Associate Solicitor for the Amendment, and Constitutional Law. In Prof. Church administers the Judicial Fair Labor Standards Division of the U.S. the LaFollette Institute he has taught Law Intern Clinical Program, and is advisor to Department of Labor. She served as the and Public Policy, Educational Policy, and the Wisconsin Law Review. He teaches Labor Department's representative to the Educational Finance and Policy. Property, Constitutional Law, Criminal United States Administrative Conference, Since 1980, Prof. Clune has managed a Law, Environmental Law and Introduction and played a major role in the Depart- series of research grants on educational pol- to American Law. He writes and compiles ment's regulatory and legislative process. icy located in the Wisconsin Center for Edu- his own teaching materials for most cours- Prof. Clauss' experience is invaluable cation Research. For the past 10 years he es. in the courses she teaches: Labor Law, has managed the Wisconsin branch of the Prof. Church is a co-author of the case- Administrative Law, Protective Labor Leg- Consortium for Policy Research in Educa- book Legislative and Adminsiratioe Pro- islation and Legal Process. A frequent tion, a national center for research on state cesses. speaker on Equal Employment, Civil and local educational policy funded by the Prof. Church is married to attornev and Rights and Labor Law at conferences and U.S. Department of Education. Funding also fellow Constitutional Law teacher Fre'der- symposiums throughout the United States, has been obtained from several private icka Paff. He enjoys reading, music, and prof. Clauss served as Vice-Chair of the foundations. Research projects have includ- outdoor sports and activities. He has three Wisconsin Governor's Task Force on ed the effects of higher academic standards, children: Laurel, Emily, and Gwynne. Comparable WOlth in 1984-85. school site management, decentralization, Her non-law activities often center and litigation seeking to define financially around her interests in anthropology, gar- adequate educational programs. dening, photography and her golden Prof. Clune, member of Coif and man- retriever, Emma. She also has a private aging editor of Northwestern Law Review, pilot's license and her extensive world worked as an associate for Hopkins, Sut- travels include a recent white-water canoe ter, Owen, Mulroy & Davis in Chicago trip in the jungle headwaters of the Ama- prior to joining the UW Law School facul- zon and trekking in Kashmir. ty in 1971. He has served as Chair of the Admissions and Research Committees.

6 CIa. From 1982~85 he was counsel for dent's dare, he recently performed as the the Labor-Management Relations Commit- opening act for comedienne Paula Pound- tee of the Minnesota House of Representa- stone at the Wisconsin Union Theater. tives. He drafted a recodification of that Prof. Davis served as co-reporter for state's Public Employee Labor Relations the recent revision of the Wisconsin Busi- Act, drafted bills on workers' compensa- ness Corporation Law, and is a principal tion and unemployment compensation author of the leading commentary on that and analyzed other state laws and policies law. He is a frequent speaker at continu- related to employment. ing legal education programs in the areas of corporate and securities law. Presently, he is involved in the efforts to revise Arti- cle 8 of the Uniform Commercial Code, serving on two separate American Law Institute committees. Prof. Davis has written several articles on various aspects of corporate and secu- rities law which have been published in Professor of Law leading law journals. Much of his work Born Des Moines, Iowa, 1956 has focused upon judicial review of con- BA. University ofWisconsill~Madisan, duct by corporate directors and other 1978; MA., PhD. University o./Michigan, fiduciaries. Among his present projects is 1981, 1984;J.D. University Michigan 0./ a broad examination of the nature of fidu- Law School, 1981 ciary obligation from a variety of perspec- tives, including economic and historical. Ken Dan-Schmidt will join the Law School Prof. Davis and his wife, Lindy, have faculty in the fall of 1994 with experience three small children, Peter, Mimi, and teaching Law and Economics, Labor Law, Tripp. Among Davis's outside activities is Antitrust, Employment Law, Collective his ongoing struggle as head coach of the Bargaining and Labor Economics. Prof. Professor 0./Law Savidusky FurBalls, his six-year-old Dau-Schmidt comes to Wisconsin from the Born Louisville, Kentucky, 1947 daughter's soccer team. Indiana University at Bloomington School A.B. Universi(y of Michigan, 1969,JD. of Law where he "•.as awarded the Louis Case Westem Reserve, 1974 F. Niezer Faculty Fellowship for scholarly achievement in 1993. His teaching at the Following graduation from law school, University of Cincinnati College of Law where he was editor-in-chief of the Case earned him a Commendation for Teaching Westem Reserve Law Review, Prof. Davis Excellence in 1990. That year he also won served as law clerk for Chief Judge the AALSScholarly Paper Competition. Richard H. Chambers, U.S. Court of Prof. Dau-Schmidt is currently working Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and then on two books: A Law and Economics practiced law with the Washington, D.C., Anthology with 1. Ulen for Anderson Pub- firm of Covington & Burling. He joined lishing Co. and The First Century of Feder- the University of Wisconsin Law School al Antitrust Enforcement with J. Gallo and faculty in 1978, and has been a visiting J. Craycraft for Praeger Publishing Co. His professor of law at the UCLAand Univer- most recent work also includes articles on sity of Pennsylvania law schools. the "bargaining theory" of American labor Prof. Davis teaches courses in the law published in the Michigan Law areas of business organizations and securi- Review and the Indiana Law journal and ties regulation, and has received both the an article on labor economics published Law School's and the University's Distin- in the journal of Economics. guished Teacher Awards. In addition, he Professor cf Laui Prior to his teaching career Prof. Dau- is one of the faculty members who regu- Bam Bronx, New York, 1946 Schmidt worked in labor law in private larly participates in the annual "Summer BA.,j,D. University o./V(lisconsin, 1968, practice and in the public sector. At the Program in United States Law and Legal 1971 Milwaukee firm of Previant, Goldberg & Institutions" for foreign lawyers. He has Uelmen he worked on the litigation, arbi- not confined his public speaking to the Illustrating the UW commitment to the tration and negotiations of clients such as law school classroom, however. On a stu- Wisconsin Idea of law in action, Walter the IET, IAtv!and the Wisconsin State AFL- Dickey, a member of the UW Law School Outside of work, Prof. Edelman enjoys faculty since 1976, served as Director of traditional ethnic music and dance. She the Wisconsin Division of Corrections does French Canadian folk-fiddling with from 1983 to 1987. He returned to the fac- the Last Gaspe Band as well as Eastern ulty full-time in 1987. Prof. Dickey has European fiddling and dance. also had a substantial involvement with the UW Law School's Legal Assistance to Institutionalized Persons Program as a teacher, scholar, and administrator of the program. He directed the program from 1975 to 1983 and since 1989 has directed it and the Prosecution and Defender pro- grams. Prof. Dickey teaches Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Law and Corrections, and Professional Responsibility. With Remington, Newman, Kimball and Gold- Associate Professor of Law and Sociology stein, he co-authored the text Criminal Born Urbana, Illinois justice Administration, and he drafted the BA. University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin Administrative Code for the 1977; MA., PbD. Stanford University, Division of Corrections. He is a recog- 1980, 1986; jD. University of California, nized national authority on prison issues Berkeley, 1986 and has written extensively on criminal justice issues. Since 1992, he has worked Lauren Edelman joined the Law School with Sentencing Project, based in Wash- Professor of Law and Sociology faculty in 1986 with a joint appointment in ington, D.C., in an effort to bring knowl- Born San Francisco, California, 1945 Sociology. She specializes in the sociology edge and information to bear on sentenc- BA., PbD. University of California at of law and organization theory, and teach- ing and correctional policy at the federal Berkeley, 1967, 1971; J.D. University of es Sociology of Law and seminars in Law level and in the states. Wisconsin, 1981 and Society and Law and the Employment He has been a member and chair of Relation. During the spring of 1994, she the Wisconsin Judicial Council, and served Howie Erlanger, a professor of sociology will be a visiting professor at the Universi- as chair of the Council's Homicide Com- at the University of Wisconsin since 1971, ty of California jurisprudence and Social mittee. The work of that committee result- joined the lJ\'q Law School faculty as a Policy Program. ed in a major revision of the homicide law professor of law in 1981 after earning his Prof. Edelman's research focuses on in Wisconsin which went into effect on J.D. In 1993 he became Voss-Bascom Pro- the intersection of law and organizations. january 1, 1989. He also served and fessor of Law. He was a Phi Beta Kappa She conducted a nationwide survey of staffed the Wisconsin Correctional System economics major at University of Califor- organizations' responses to civil rights Review Panel which recommended to the nia at Berkeley, from which he graduated laws and has written articles on due pro- legislature the Intensive Sanctions Pro- summa cum laude; a Ford Fellow as a cess in work organizations, organizational gram, which was adopted in 1991. This Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Berkeley; mediation of civil rights law, dispute han- alternative sentence is used in lieu of and winner of several awards at the UW dling within work organizations, and pro- prison to help ease prison crowding. Law School, where he graduated magna fessional construction of law. Her current He and his wife, MaIY, have two sons cum laude and was awarded Order of the research focuses on the internal legal cul- and live in the town of Roxbury, in rural Coif. tures of organizations. Dane County, where Prof. Dickey served Prof. Erlanger teaches Trusts and Prof. Edelman is a Consulting Editor as a member of the School Board. Estates, Marital Property, Estate Planning, for the American journal of Sociology and and a seminar on probate reform. He is an Associate Editor for Contemporary currently engaged in a law reform project Sociology. She is active in the Law & Soci- which he hopes will bring the Wisconsin ety Association as well as the Institute for Probate Code "kicking and screaming into Legal Studies, Institute for Research on the 21st century." His prior work in this Poverty, and Industrial Relations Research area includes publications on marital Institute at the University of Wisconsin. property, taxation, and estate planning. She has published articles in Law & Society Since 1982, Prof. Erlanger has been Review, American journal of Sociology, Review Section Editor for Law & Social and Law and Policy. Inquiry, an interdisciplinary journal pub-

8 lished by the University of Chicago Press. Following graduation from Stanford Recently he completed a series of articles, Law School, where he was President of co-authored with Lauren Edelman, on the Law Review and earned Order of the organizational behavior in response to Coif honors, he worked as an attorney for law. His previous publications on socio- a California law firm for five years. He legal topics include works on the negotia- then began his teaching career at the Uni- tion of agreements in divorce, the social- versity of New Mexico Law School and ization of law students, stratification in the was a visiting professor at Stanford and legal profession, and the careers of public Rutgers universities before joining the U\\7 interest lawyers. faculty. In May 1993 he took emeritus sta- A cartoon aficionado who enjoys tus, but plans to continue teaching on a "sedentary exercise," Prof. Erlanger is mar- half-time basis. ried to Pam, an occupational therapist and Prof. Finman served two terms as chair avid horseback rider. They have two chil- of the UW-Madison University Committee, dren: Lisa, a medical student at Washing- the faculty executive committee. He also ton University in St. Louis (who would served as a member of the UW Athletic rather be riding), and Jeff, an Edgewood Board and as the UW Faculty Representa- Eojue-Bascom Professor of Law College student (who would rather be at tive to the Big Ten and the NCAA, chaired Born Philadelphia, Pennsyluania, 1931 the ballpark) and two horses: Tangus the Ad Hoc Task Force on UW-Madison BA., MA., J.D. University of Chicago, Marangus and Regal. Prof. Erlanger has Enrollment and the Ad Hoc Committee on 1950, 1954, 1956 been voted Teacher of the Year by gradu- Sexual Harassment, and has been a mem- ating students several times; he has also ber of numerous other UW-Madison com- Marc Galanter, Evjue-Bascom Professor of received awards for distinguished teaching mittees, including the Chancellor's Aca- Law and Professor of South Asian Studies, from the Law Alumni and from the Uni- demic Planning Council and the Executive joined the University of Wisconsin Law versity. Committee of the Social Studies Division. School faculty in 1977 after teaching here In 1984-1985, as a member of the Wis- for a year as a visiting professor. He is consin Supreme COUlt'SCode of Profes- director of the Institute for Legal Studies sional Responsibility Review Committee, and the Disputes Processing Research Pro- he helped shape Wisconsin's rules of pro- gram, an interdisciplinary group that con- fessional conduct for attorneys, and he ducts research on litigation and other has lectured on this subject at State Bar forms of dispute resolution. continuing legal education programs and Prof. Galanter's experience in India, elsewhere. starting as a Fulbright scholar at the Uni- Co-author with Vern Countryman and versity of Delhi in 1957-58, has led Theodore Schneyer of Tbe Lawyer in Mod- to two books: Competing Equalities: Law em Society, 2nd Ed., Prof. Finman also and the Backward Classes in India (Uni- authored Civil Litigation and Professional versity of California Press, 1984), and Law Responsibility. He has to his credit numer- and Society in Modem India (Oxford Uni- ous law review articles and research versity Press, 1989). In addition to his papers in the areas of civil procedure and work on India, he has written on church- professional responsibilities. state law and, most recently and exten- Prof. Finman and his wife, Susan, have sively, on litigation and the legal profes- two children and two grandchildren. The sion in the United States. He is co-author Finmans enjoy skiing, tennis, photogra- with Thomas Palay of Tournament of Bascom Professor of Law Emeritus phy, and travel. From 1983 until her retire- Lawyers (University of Chicago Press, Born San Francisco, California, 1931 ment in 1993, Susan Finman served as 1991), a study of the growth and transfor- BA. University of Chicago, 1950j J.D. Secretary of the Faculty, Office of the mation of large law firms. Stanford University, 1954 Chancellor. Prior to joining the Wisconsin faculty, Ted Finman has been a professor at the Prof. Galanter taught at Stanford, the Uni- UW Law School since 1963 and was versity of Chicago and SUNY at Buffalo. In named Bascom Professor of Law in 1986. 1986, he was a visiting professor at He has taught Civil Procedure, Profession- Columbia Law School and in 1993 at Stan- al Responsibilities, a course on legal ford Law School. He teaches Contracts, method, and a seminar on freedom of Negotiations, Law and Social Science, Civil speech problems. Procedure, South Asian Law, and Religion and the Law. criminal justice administration and on Prof. Galanter was President of the policing. He co-authored Criminal justice Law and Society Association from 1983 to Administration in 1969 and its revision in 1985. He was editor of the Law & Society 1982; co-authored the American Bar Asso- Review 0972-76) and presently serves on ciation's Standards on the Urban Police many editorial boards and other advisory Function; authored Policing a Free Society bodies. He is a member of the American in 1977; and, in 1990, wrote Problem-Ori- Law Institute and a fellow of the American ented Policing. In addition, he has written Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has numerous monographs and articles on been a consultant to the Ford Foundation, such topics as the changing nature of the the National Institute for Dispute Resolu- police function, police discretion, policy- tion, and the International Legal Center, making in policing, and the control of among many others. He has been a Fel- police conduct. Most of his work has been low of the American Institute of Indian devoted to designing a form of policing Studies, the National Endowment for the that enables the police to be more effec- Humanities, and the Guggenheim Founda- tive in dealing with the broad range of tion. problems they are expected to handle, but Professor of Law in ways that strengthen the commitment Born Oakland, California, 1948 of the police to maintain and extend A.B. Universi~V of California at Long democratic values. Beach, 1970; j.D. University of California Prof. Goldstein has served as a consul- at Berkeley, 1974 tant to a number of major studies relating to the police, including the President's In 1989, Linda S. Greene became a full Commission on Law Enforcement and Professor of Law at the University of Wis- Administration of Justice and the Kerner consin Law School where she teaches Commission on Civil Disorder. He has col- Constitutional Law, Legislation, and Race laborated with numerous police agencies Conscious Remedies. She is a member of in conducting research and in implement- the University of Wisconsin Athletic ing innovative programs, including the Board, and serves on the Personnel and police departments in New York City, Finance Committees of the Board. She is Chicago, and San Diego, and London's the Chair of the United States Olympic Metropolitan Police. Committee Legislation Committee and co- Currently, Prof. Goldstein is working founder of the Black Women in Sport with the Police Executive Research Forum, Foundation. the National Institute of Justice, and sever- Herman Goldstein Prof. Greene, a California native, grad- al police agencies in implementing and uated from the University of California at Evjue-Bascom Professor cf Laio developing the concept that was the sub- Berkeley Law School in 1974 and worked Born New London, Connecticut, 1931 ject of his most recent book. BA. University ol Connecticut, 1953; immediately thereafter as a civil rights iVI.GA. University of Pennsylvania, 1955 attorney at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund in New York. She began Herman Goldstein, named Evjue-Bascom her teaching career as an assistant profes- Professor of Law in 1982, is nationally sor at Temple University, was a tenured known for his work relating to the police associate professor at Oregon as well as a and criminal justice administration. A visiting professor at Harvard and George- member of the Wisconsin faculty since town, then left full-time teaching to serve 1964, he previously served as a field as Counsel to the United States Judiciary researcher and analyst with the landmark Committee. At the Committee she special- American Bar Foundation Survey of the ized in judicial confirmation, constitutional Administration of Justice and from 1960 to law, federal courts, and civil rights issues. 1964 was executive assistant to O.W. Wil- After three years with the Committee, she son, the leader of the professional move- returned to full-time teaching at Wiscon- ment in policing, when Wilson was sin. During the 1992-93 academic year, employed as superintendent to reform the Prof. Greene held the William J. Maier Jr. Chicago Police Department. Chair of Law at West Virginia College of Prof. Goldstein teaches courses on Law. She has written on a wide range of issues including constitutional equality, Prof. Grossman has served as Chair of ters in Public Administration from Prince- civil rights laws, presidential and congres- the Political Science department, editor of ton, where as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow sional powers, and sports law and has Law & Society Review, Chair of the Wis- he concentrated in international develop- taught law in Germany, Ghana, and Japan. consin Judicial Commission, and in ment, and his J.D. from Harvard, from Her activities are numerous. She cur- 1993-94 as Chair of the University Com- which he graduated cum laude. rently serves on the Board of Trustees of mittee, the executive committee of the Prof. Haney Lopez's scholarly interests the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, Faculty Senate. He was co-director (with lie in the area of race theory and immigra- and the Board of Directors of the Society David Trubek) of the Civil Litigation tion. His publications include "The Social of American Law Teachers where she is Research Project. He has been a visiting Construction of Race: Some Observations also the President-Elect. She was the Chair professor at the University of Strathclyde on Illusion, Fabrication, and Choice," 29 of the American Association of Law in Glasgow, Scotland, and at the Universi- Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Schools Section on Minority Groups in ty of Stockholm Law School. Review (1994), and "Community Ties and 1992, the founder of the Midwestern Peo- Prof. Grossman is the author of numer- Law School Faculty Hiring: The Case for ple of Color Legal Scholarship Conference, ous books and articles in professional Professors Who Don't Think White," in and served as Chair of the 1990 Wisconsin journals and law reviews. Most recently he Beyond a Dream Deferred: Multicultural Conference on Critical Race Theory. She served as co-editor of T7JeOxford Com- Education and the Politics of Excellence was a member of the Board of the Nation- panion to the Supreme COUi1of the United (993). He recently spoke on immigration al Abortion and Reproductive Rights States. Currently he is working on a book law at the Seminario: El sistema juridico Action League from 1990-93 where she about judicial activism and Supreme Court norteamericano (United States Law Con- was Chair of the (national) Political Action policy making tentatively titled Thejudi- ference), Facultad de Leyes, Universidad Committee and also (national) Treasurer. cial Imperatiue Legitimacy, Activism, and de Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico. She enjoys all of these activities and Public Policy. He is currently working on projects in reads biographies of writers and artists, three broadly related areas: a study of the collects art, and watches basketball and epistemological significance of race which football games, too. draws on empirical evidence from the legal history of the Chicano Movement; an investigation of the role of law in the social construction of race; and an elabo- ration on the implications of race's social nature for legal responses to racism, in particular the Fourteenth Amendment and Title Vll, In addition, his work in progress includes an article on the "white person" prerequisite to naturalization which marred this country's citizenship laws between 1790 and 1952. Prof. Haney Lopez teaches seminars or courses in critical race theory, immigra- tion, and property. He is an advisor to the Latino Law Student Moot Court Program, the Latino Law Student Association, and Assistant Professor of Law the Immigration Law Project. He is also a Born Honolulu, Hawaii, 1964 member of the Chicano Studies Program B.A., MA. Washington University, 1985. Committee at the UW College of Letters Professor of Political Science and Law 1986; M.F.A. Princeton Unioersity, 1990; and Sciences. Born New York, New York, 1936 J.D. Harvard Law School, 1991 His personal interests include literature BA. Queens College, 1957; Ph.D. and the outdoors, in particular mountain University of Iowa, 1963 Ian Haney Lopez joined the U\'VLaw biking, snow boarding, and body surfing. School faculty in 1992. Prior to joining the He has lived abroad in Spain as a student, Joel Grossman has taught constitutional faculty, he clerked for the Honorable in Peru while working for the Ford Foun- law and related courses on courts and the Harry Pregerson, U.S. Court of Appeals for dation Developing Country Program, and law since joining the Wisconsin faculty in the Ninth Circuit. He was a Phi Beta in South Africa under the auspices of the 1963. He has received a Distinguished Kappa double major in history and litera- Harvard Law School Human Rights Pro- Teaching Award from the IJ\\7-Madison as ture at Washington University, where he gram. In addition, he has traveled exten- well as many other student and depart- also completed a Masters degree in mod- sively in other parts of Europe, South mental teaching citations. ern American history. He received a Mas- America, and Africa, as well as in East

11 Asia and Southeast Asia, and also by bicy- the Rule of Law in the Soviet Union? (1992) winning films, such as "In the Jury Room," cle across parts of Canada, the United and New Voices in Soviet Studies (1993) which he wrote and produced for PBS' States, and Mexico. She has also lectured across the country Frontline series. The film recorded the and in the Netherlands, Italy and Canada deliberations of a jury in a criminal trial on Soviet and post-Soviet law. Prof. Hend- and won a Blue Ribbon at the American ley is a member of the American Political Film and Video Festival in 1987. He was a Science Association, the American Socio- field producer for "Moyers: The Secret logical Association, the American Associa- Government: The Constitution in Crisis," tion for the Advancement of Slavic Studies which won an Emmy in 1988 for its treat- and the Texas Bar Association. ment of secrecy in government. Herzberg also produced, directed and wrote "The Trial of Filimon Amaro, Jr.," the first gavel- to-gavel broadcast of a trial in Wisconsin; he also created a follow-up film in which all of the participants, including the jurors, were interviewed. Prof. Herzberg has also won awards from the Association of Trial Lawyers of America for teaching trial advocacy with a social science approach in "The Ultimate Trial Advocacy Course," in which experi- enced trial lawyers were taught and cri- Assistant Professor of Law tiqued by a team of trial attorneys and Born Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1958 social scientists. He also won t11eRichard A.B. Indiana University, 1979;].D. UCLA S. Jacobson Award for Excellence in the School of Law, 1982; MA. Georgetown Teaching of Trial Advocacy from the University, 1987; PhD. University of Roscoe Pound Foundation in 1989 and California, Berkeley, 1993 Teacher of the Year Award from the U\X7 Law School in 1973-74. Kathryn Hendley joined the Law School Professor of Law Prof. Herzberg's legal practice involves faculty in 1993 as an assistant professor Born New London, Connecticut, 1944 mostly pro bono work in the areas of teaching International Business Transac- A.B. University of California at Los Ange- human rights, free speech and civil rights tions. She has a joint appointment with les, 1966;J.D. University of Southern claims. He has written extensively on the Political Science department, for California, 1969 Native American treaty rights and social which she teaches Russian Politics and science critiques of trial advocacy. Comparative Legal Institutions. Stephen Herzberg has been with the UW Prof. Herzberg has been a pit crew Prof. Hendley specializes in Russian Law faculty since 1972 and is one of the member in car races and enjoys muskie and Soviet studies, most especially the few teachers who uses theory from the fishing in his spare time. role of the contract in the Russian legal social sciences for teaching trial advocacy, and economic spheres. She traveled to especially in the areas of presentation and Russia in 1989-90 and in 1992-93 on fel- persuasion. Prof. Herzberg has taught nine lowships from the International Research classes at the UW, including Trial Advoca- and Exchanges Board. She was a post- cy, Substantive Criminal Law and Criminal doctoral fellow at the Center for Interna- Procedure. He founded and was the direc- tional Security and Arms Control at Stan- tor of the Legal Defense Project, a clinical ford University. She also worked as a program at the Law School in which law consultant for the U.S. Agency for Interna- students help low income people through tional Development in 1992 and 1993. the legal system. Herzberg also founded Prior to her work in Russian studies, another clinical program, the Wisconsin Prof. Hendley was an associate in the Dal- Native American Law Center, and was its las firm Johnson & Gibbs, where she spe- first director. Prof. Herzberg is currently cialized in federal securities law. on leave from the Law School to work Prof. Hendley has written on Russian with trial attorneys as a consultant. legal matters for the journals Soviet Econo- Herzberg is also known for using my, Soviet Studies, Review of Central and video to document the legal process. Prof. East European Law, and the texts Toward Herzberg has worked on several award-

12 for courses on Law and Tax Policy, U.S. Collective Bargaining, Employment Dis- Laws Affecting International Business crimination, Arbitration and Administrative Transactions, and Legal Issues Involving Law, was appointed by President Carter in North America and East Asia. 1978 to the Federal Service Impasse Panel; His wife, Anne, owns a local children's his term as panelist ended in 1982. He is a bookstore; the couple has two children, member of the National Academy of Arbi- Robert and Margaret. In his spare time, trators, the Labor Law Group, and the Prof. Irish enjoys scuba diving, skiing, Public Review Board of the International golfing, fishing and carpentry, and he is a Union UAW, and has served appointments much-feared tennis opponent by those with the Madison Police and Fire Commis- law students who have had the opportuni- sion, the Wisconsin Manpower Planning ty to spend time on the court with him. Council, the Wisconsin Governor's Task Force on Comparable Worth, and the U\V Athletic Board. He was also on the nation- al executive board of the IRRA from 1977 to 1980, and was Director of the IJW Industrial Relations Research Institute from Sherman R. Volkman-Bascom Professor 1971 to 1973. He was a John Bascom Pro- of Law fessor from 1983 to 1991, when he Born New Bern, North Carolina, 1944 became the first Nathan P. Feinsinger Pro- BA. , 1966; .J.D. fessor of Labor Law. Vanderbilt University, 1969 Prof. Jones has published extensively in law reviews, and co-authored Discrimi- Charles "Chuck" Irish is an international nation in Employment, 5th Ed (987) with tax expert who, in addition to teaching at Murphy and Belton, The Changing Law of the UW Law School since 1974, has held a Fair Representation, with McKelvey and number of consulting and teaching posi- others in 1985, and Race in America, with tions for international and regional organi- Herbert Hill, in 1993. zations and foreign governments in Asia, He and his wife, Joan Turner Jones, Africa, Europe and the insular countries of have two children: a son, Peter R.c. Jones, the Pacific and the Caribbean. Prof. Irish and a daughter, Evan Whitley Jones. Prof. has been a tax advisor to the governments Professor of Law and Professor of Industri- Jones is known as a "facilitator of profes- of Zambia, Ghana, Barbados and Domini- al Relations Emeritus sional opportunities" for UW law students ca, and served as a consultant to the Unit- Born Little Rock, Arkansas, 1924 and graduates seeking employment in ed Nations Centre on Transnational Cor- EA. Lincoln University (}v10.), 1950; MA. Washington, D.C., where he maintains porations and the U.N. Economics Uniiersity of Illinois, 1951; .J.D. University both professional and personal contacts. Commission for Africa. of Wisconsin, 1956 He was the faculty supervisor of the Legal Prof. Irish teaches Tax I & II, Interna- Defense Fund-NAACP Clinical Program in tional Taxation, Tax Policy and Interna- James E. Jones, jr., a nationally respected New York City, and periodically super- tional Business Transactions. Since 1990, authority on labor law and labor relations, vised the Labor Law Clinicals. Prof. Irish has been director of the Law joined the UW Law School and the Indus- School's East Asian Legal Studies Center. trial Relations Research Institute faculties Prof. Irish is also of counsel to the law firm in 1969, bringing with him extensive Stafford, Rosenbaum, Rieser & Hansen in experience. Prof. Jones pursued his law Madison. Before coming to Wisconsin, degree after having worked as an industri- Prof. Irish was an associate with Musick, al relations analyst for the U.S. Wage Sta- Peeler & Garrett in Los Angeles, after bilization Board. He then started his law which he became legal advisor to the career as a civil service lawyer with the Zambian Ministry of Finance and lecturer U.S. Department of Labor, where he at the University of Zambia. served as Counsel for Labor Relations and Prof. Irish has been honored as Teach- as Director of the Office of Labor-Manage- er of the Year by the UW Law School in ment Policy Development before becom- 1981-82 and 1988, and was awarded the ing the department's Associate Solicitor of First Annual Distinguished Teaching Labor for Labor Relations and Civil Rights Award by the Wisconsin Law Alumni in from 1967 to 1969. 1986. He currently is preparing materials Prof. Jones, who has taught Labor Law,

13 Kaplan had been a staff attorney for the office) and from time to time delivers the Community Legal Counsel in Chicago for Ambrose Bierce Lecture on Law and four years, and had been on the law facul- Humor. He worked as a consultant to the ty at the University of Nebraska Law University in the establishment of a pro- School. He has been a visiting law profes- gram for the national distribution of edu- sor at the University of Houston, and at cational software. He also served as chair Osgoode Hall Law School, York Universi- of a UW committee which re-wrote the ty, England. rules and procedures governing student Prof. Kaplan is a member of the edito- academic misconduct. rial board of the International Journal of He and professors Macaulay, Whitford Law and Psychiatry, and is serving as the and Galanter have recently completed First Vice President and as an executive work on a two-volume Contracts text, board member for the International Contracts: Law in Action; earlier versions Academy of Law and Mental Health. He is of the work have been used for some a frequent speaker at conferences dealing years at the UW Law School. He is also with psychiatry and the law. assisting the State Bar of Wisconsin pre- He and his wife, Martha, have two pare a one-volume reference work on Professor of Law children, Jonathan and Sarah. contract law for Wisconsin practitioners. Born Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1941 He has published numerous articles in the AB., JD. Temple University, 1962, 1965; Colorado, Minnesota, Texas and Wiscon- LL.M. Yale, 1966; M.A., PhD. University sin law reviews, as well as in the Journal of Chicago, 1971, 1977 of Law and Contemporary Problems, the ABA Journal, the American Bar Founda- Leonard Kaplan, a clinical psychologist as tion Journal and the Journal of the Patent well as a professor of law, brought diverse Office Society. He served for six years on credentials to the University of Wisconsin the District Nine Professional Responsibili- Law School. Trained in psychoanalysis at ty Committee, and is currently the vice- the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis, chair of the Wisconsin Board of Bar much of Prof. Kaplan's research reflects Examiners. He has recently become active his dual interests in law and mental in the National Conference of Bar Examin- health. ers' effort to explore new kinds of bar Prof. Kaplan teaches Criminal Law; examinations. In the past he served as the Criminal Procedure; Law and Psychiatry; Reporter for the Wisconsin Supreme Law and Literature; Law, Society and State; Court's Committee to Review the State Legal Process; Jurisprudence; and Law and Bar, and as the Acting Director of the UW Theology. His publications in various law Law Library during a search for a perma- reviews and journals reflect his expertise nent director. He has been involved in and interest in the law of the mental Haight Professor of Law numerous University and Law School health field and in the legal aspects of Born Denver, Colorado, 1945 committees, and has recently assumed the mental health commitments. He currently B.A. University of Iowa, 1967; JD. job of chair of the Law School's Admis- has a contract with the American Psycho- , 1970 sions Committee. logical Association to co-author with Dr. He and his wife Jean have a son, Ben. Robert Miller a comprehensive book on John Kidwell joined the UW Law faculty He enjoys listening to music, reading, mental health law in Wisconsin, as part of in 1972 after working as an associate with woodworking, golf and darts. a series that will cover mental health law Dawson, Nagel, Sherman & Howard in in the United States. Denver, Colorado. He was a Fellow in Prof. Kaplan, along with Prof. Andrew Law and Humanities at Harvard University Weiner, is co-editor-in-chief of a new during the 1976-77 academic year, but has annual journal sponsored in part by the otherwise been at the Law School continu- Law School. The journal, Graven Images: ously. A Journal of Culture, Law and the Sacred, Prof. Kidwell teaches Contracts I & II, will focus on the clash between post-mod- Copyright Law, Remedies and Trade- em theorizing and the urge to transcen- marks. In the past he has taught Property, dence as it illuminates the status of culture Patent Law, Entertainment Law, and vari- and law. ous seminars. He is interested in humor in Before coming to Wisconsin, Prof. the law (and has a large collection in his

14 journal of Politics) American journal of Political Science, Law & Society Review, justice System journal, and judicature.

james and Ruth Doyle-Bascom Professor Professor of Law and Glenn B. and Cleone of Law Orr Hawkins Professor of Political Science Born 1941 B.A. Haoerford College, 1969; PhD. A.B., A.M., J.D., PhD. University of Chica- University of North Carolina, 1974 go, 1963, 1964, 1967, 1973 Prof. Kritzer brings an empirical social sci- Professor of Law and E. Gordon Fox Neil Komesar, who earned both law and ence approach to his work in law and Professor of American Institutions economic graduate degrees at the Univer- politics, which includes studying Rule 11 Born Cleveland, Ohio, 1934 sity of Chicago, joined the UW Law School of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, B.A. Bowling Green State University, 1956; faculty in 1971. He practiced law with the the performance of non-lawyer advocates, PhD. , 1960 Chicago firms of Sidley & Austin and legal careers and pro bono work (with Devoe, Shadur, Mikva & Plotkin. UW Law Professor Howard Erlanger), and Historian Stanley 1. Kutler has been a part Prof. Komesar teaches Law and Eco- the salience of Supreme Court decisions. of the Law School faculty since 1987 and nomics, Constitutional Law, Property and Prof. Kritzer has a joint appointment with specializes in American legal and political TOIts. His dual interests in law and eco- the Political Science department and institutions. He teaches American Consti- nomics have led to extensive publication teaches classes on the judicial process, tutional Legal Development and other in law reviews and journals. He has writ- political analysis, law and politics, and courses at the University. ten about medical malpractice, research methodology. Prof. Kutler has published extensively landlord-tenant law, tort reform and con- Prof. Kritzer has been at the UW since and two of his works are being turned stitutional theOlY. He has evolved an 1977; in addition to his teaching duties he into television programs. His book The approach to law and public policy called was the Director of the Data and Compu- American Inquisition: justice and Injustice "comparative institutional analysis." This tation Center from 1982-86. Before com- in the Cold Warwon him the Silver Gavel work has culminated in a book titled ing to the UW he taught in the Political Award from the American Bar Association Imperfea Alternatives: Choosing Institu- Science departments at Rice University in 1983. Prof. Kutler is writing and con- tions in Law, Economics and Public Poli- and Indiana University in the mid-1970s; sulting for "Tokyo Rose," a one-hour doc- cy. Prof. Komesar also co-authored a book in 1986-87 he was a visiting fellow at Uni- umentary based on a chapter in that book. titled Public Interest Law: An Economic versity College in London. His most recent book, The Wars of Water- and Institutional Analysis. Prof. Kritzer has published two books, gate: The Last Crisis of Richard Nixon Prof. Komesar was voted Professor of The justice Broker: Lawyers and Ordinary (1990/1992), is being turned into five one- the Year by the Legal Education Opportu- Civil Litigation (1990) and Let's Make a hour documentaries to be broadcast in nities Program students in 1988, and is a Deal: Negotiation and Settlement in Ordi- August 1994 on the BBC and Discovery member of the Law School Faculty nary Litigation (1991), which was co-win- Channel; Prof. Kutler is serving as the his- Appointments Committee. ner of the 1993 C. Herman Pritchett torical consultant for the series. He is also Award. He has also published many jour- editing two reference works for Simon & nal articles, the most recent of which are Schuster: Encyclopedia of the United States in Law & Social Inquiry, Marquette Law in the Twentieth Century, and T7JeEncy- Review, Law & Society Review, and ABA clopedia of the Vietnam War. He is cur- journal. He is also a regular reviewer for rently writing "This Honorable Court": T7Je the American Political Science Review, Supreme Court, Politics, and Democracy.

15 Prof. Kutler's articles have appeared in 10 paraphrased Gerturde Stein and asked, various publications including Wisconsin "Law and the Behavioral Sciences: Is Law Review, New York University Law There Any There There?" He cautioned Review and Historical Law Review. He has against both dismissing the enterprise and written opinion pieces for Christian Sci- claiming too much. ence Monitor, Wall Street joumal, Wasb- Prof. Macaulay has written extensively ington Post and Los Angeles Times. on a variety of subjects ranging from Prof. Kutler is also active in the Ameri- lawyers and consumer law to private gov- can Historical Association, State Historical ernment and legal pluralism. He has been Society of Wisconsin, Law and Society published in such places as the Wisconsin Association and other historical organiza- Law Review, Law & Society Review, and tions. He is the founder and editor of Law & Policy. He authored Law and the Reviews in American History. Balance of Power: T7JeAutomobile Manu- Prof. Kutler and his wife have four facturers and Their Dealers, and co- children, one grandchild, and another on authored Law and the Bebauioral Sciences the way. They enjoy travelling in the U.S. with Lawrence Friedman. and abroad. He fashions himself as a seri- Prof. Macaulay, who teaches Contracts Professor of Law and History (JUstennis, poker, and pinochle player. I & II and Sociology of Law, was President Born Schenectady, New York, 1952 of the Law and Society Association from A.B. Stanford University, 1973; PbD. Uni- 1985 to 1987. He is a former Director of versity of California at San Diego, 1979; the Chile Law Program of the International J.D. Stanford Law School, 1989 Legal Center in Santiago. Several of his articles were translated into Spanish and Arthur Mcfvoy will join the Law School published in Chilean law journals. He was faculty with a joint appointment with the a member of the Board of Advisors to the History department in the fall of 1994 and Reporter for the Restatement (Second) will teach courses on History of American Contracts of the American Law Institute. Law and Environmental Law. He has been He was a member of the Commission of with Northwestern University as an Asso- Behavioral and Social Science and Educa- ciate Professor of History, Adjunct Profes- tion of the National Academy of Science. sor of Law, and Fellow at the Center for In 1994 he was elected to the American Urban Affairs and Policy Research. He is Academy of Arts and Sciences. also a part-time Research Fellow at the He is married to attorney Jacqueline American Bar Foundation in Chicago Macaulay, who holds a ph.D. and a J.D. where he is working on the project "Cau- from the University of Wisconsin-Madi- sation and Uncertainty in 20th Century son, The Macaulays have four children: U.S. Industrial Safety Law: An Historical Monica, John, Philip and Laura. In his Study of Causal Attribution." Theodore W Brazeau Professor of Law spare time, Macaulay listens to his very Prof. Mcfvoy has won awards for both Born Atlanta, Georgia, 1931 large collection of Duke Ellington records. his teaching and research on legal history, A.B., LL.B. Stanford University, 1952, 1954 He enjoys reading mysteries and is sus- the environment and employment. His pected of pushing this habit onto his col- book 17JeFisherman's Problem: Ecology Stewart Macaulay is internationally recog- leagues at every opportunity. His Presi- and Law in the California Fisheries, nized as a leader of the law-in-action dential Address to the Law and Society 1850-1980 (Cambridge University Press, approach to contracts and as a pioneer of Association was called "Images of Law in 1986/1989) won awards from the Ameri- the study of business practices and the Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, can Society for Environmental History, Law work of lawyers related to the questions Entertainment, and Spectator Sports." He and Society Association, American Histori- of contract law. Yale's Grant Gilmore argued that we must study the symbols cal Association, and North American Soci- called him "the Lord High Executioner of related to law found in American culture. ety for Oceanic History. He was named the Contract is Dead Movement." He concluded, "Perhaps, best of all, I no the Charles Deering McCormick Professor Macaulay declined the honor and claimed longer feel guilty as I watch the Badgers, of Teaching Excellence at Northwestern to have said only that academic contract Bucks, and Packers struggle with so little and was also honored by the Northwest- was dead while the real institution was success. It's not wasting time. It's ern Student Government. The ABA recog- alive and well, Also, he is one of the research. " founders of the modern Law and Society nized him as one of "Twenty Young Attor- movement. His 1983 Mitchell Lecture at neys Whose Work Makes a Difference," in the State University of New York at Buffa- an article published in Barrister ui 1989.

16 His most recent writings include two specialties are family law, juvenile justice tion, She is an avid traveler and a consci- American Bar Foundation Working administration and criminal law. Prior to entious exerciser. Papers: "Working Environments: Prospec- joining the faculty, she was the director of tus for an Ecological Study of Workplace the Wisconsin Legislative Council's project Safety," to be reprinted in Accidents, to revise the Wisconsin's Children's Code, Fatalities, and Social Relations: Historical and was executive director of the Wiscon- Orientations (edited by Cooter and sin Judicial Council. Luckin); and "The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Prof. Melli's research interests relate of 1911: Social Change, Industrial Acci- primarily to families and children. She has dents, and the Evolution of Common- been involved in a large-scale research Sense Causality." project to reform the child support system His article "Toward an Interactive The- in Wisconsin and in an American Law ory of Nature and Culture: Ecology, Pro- Institute project on Principles of the Law duction, and Cognition in the California of Family Dissolution. Fishing Industry" is being translated into Prof. Melli is a member of the Ameri- Russian; it has already been published in can Law Institute, the Executive Council of Environmental Review (987) and in The the Intemational Society on Family Law, Ends of the Earth (Cambridge University the Law and Society Association, and is a Press, 1988). Another article has appeared Fellow of the American Academy of Matri- in the Spanish publication Ayeras "Histo- monial Lawyers and was founding Execu- ria y ecologia de las pesquerias del tive Editor of its journal. She serves as nordeste del oceano Pacifico." Prof. Reporter for the Family Law Section of the Professor of Law McEvoy is also an Associate Editor for Law State Bar of Wisconsin. She has been Born 1938 and Social Inquiry and on the policy com- active on University committees and has B.5. Purdue University, 1961;j.D. mittee of the American Bar Foundation. chaired the University Committee, which Georgetown University, 1965 Prof. McEvoy is married to Lynne is the Executive Committee of the Madi- Thomson, a market researcher and strate- son faculty. Since 1985, Prof. Gary Milhollin has direct- gic planner for McDonald's. He enjoys Prof. Melli has been involved at several ed the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms cooking and tending to his houseplants levels in the bar examination process for Control, which carries out research and and orange cat, Fred. the profession. She has been a member of public education designed to inhibit the the Wisconsin Board of Attorneys Profes- spread of nuclear weapons. It operates in sional Competence, now the Board of Bar Washington, D.C., under the auspices of Examiners, Chair of the National Confer- the University of Wisconsin, where Prof. ence of Bar Examiners and chaired the Milhollin has been a member of the facul- drafting committee for the Multistate Essay ty since 1976. Exam for several years. Prof. Milhollin holds degrees in engi- Prof. Melli has written and contributed neering and law, and was an Administra- to several books and monographs, includ- tive Law Judge, part time, at the Nuclear ing Criminal justice Administration (with Regulatory Commission for fifteen years. Remington, et al.), The Legal Status of He has also taught courses on nuclear Women in Wisconsin; Wisconsin juvenile arms proliferation at Princeton University Court Practice, TJJeCase for Transracial and the University of Wisconsin, and has Adoption (with Simon and Alstein) and been a consultant on nuclear non-prolifer- Child SUPP011:A SUl7Jeyof the Statutes. She ation to the Department of Defense. has had articles published in scholarly The Wisconsin Project's strategy has reviews including, among others, Wiscon- been to discover and publicize clandestine sin Law Retneui, American Bar Founda- nuclear transactions and the weaknesses tion Research journal, Australian journal in international agreements or national of Family Law, Rutgers Law Review, Family laws that allow them to happen. Through Voss-Bascom Professor of Law Emerita Law Quarterly, Family Advocate, journal its research reports, articles, and work Born Rhinelander, Wisconsin, 1926 of Family Relations, and Sex Roles: Ajour- with the press, the Project has influenced B.A., LL.B. University of Wisconsin, 1947, nal of Research. the export policies of major supplier 1950 Prof. Melli and her husband, Madison countries. attorney Joseph Melli, have four children. The Project has caused Norway to end Margo Melli joined the UW Law School She is interested in art, particularly prints, a dangerous nuclear export program, Israel faculty in 1959 and retired in 1993. Her and has an extensive-if eclectic-eollec- to return to Norway a nuclear import that Israel was misusing, and Germany to dents work on various cases such as taxa- Goldman Award for Teaching Excellence investigate a nuclear blackmarketeer and tion, deeds and land titles for tribal courts. in 1990. She was also a visiting professor tighten its nuclear export laws. While working on his J.D. at the Uni- at the University of Colorado at Boulder In addition, the Project has helped lead versity of Oregon, Prof. Monette was Arti- School ofLaw in summer 1991. Before the American national debate on US. cles Editor for the Oregon Law Review, teaching, she worked in the public and export controls. The Project's publications which published his article, "Indian Coun- private sectors in New York as executive and congressional testimony on this sub- try Jurisdiction and the Assimilative Crimes director of the New York City Business ject have been quoted widely in the inter- Act." Relocation Assistance Corporation, as the national press and have led to improve- Prof. Monette grew up on the reserva- general counsel of the Industrial and ments in both US. and international tion of the Turtle Mountain band of Commercial Incentive Board, and as an control lists. The Project has also pub- Chippewa-Cree-Michif and is an enrolled associate in the firm Cullen & Dykeman. lished widely noted reports on China's member of that band. Prof. Moran has written scholarly arti- nuclear and missile exports and on US. cles on tax issues for the Harvard Journal exports to Iran, Iraq and Syria. on Legislation, the Oregon Law Review and Prof. Milhollin has published articles in the Berkeley Women's Lauijournal, among Foreign Policy Magazine, the New Yorker, others. She has contributed to the books the New York Times Magazine, and a Federal Income Taxation of Individuals number of law reviews. His name appears (1988) and The Law of Fixtures (991). Prof. frequently in national and international Moran has also written about race and gen- newspapers as a result of his current der issues for Berkeley Women's Laui jour- research tracking the illegal shipment of nal, Black Issues in Higher Education and nuclear materials. St. Louis Unuersity Public Law Review.

Associate Professor of Law A.B. Vassar College, 1977;J.D. University of Pennsylvania School of Law, 1981; LL.M. New York Unioersity School of Law, 1986

The 1993 Commencement speaker, Prof. Beverly Moran, has lectured on taxation around the world. She taught at three institutions in China in 1993: Peking Uni- Associate Professor of Law versity and People's University in Beijing, Assistant Professor of Law B.S. Mayville State College, 1982;J.D. Uni- and the East China Institute of Law and Born Dunedin, Florida, 1958 versity of Oregon Law School, 1988 Politics in Shanghai. She also spoke at the BA. Stanford University, 1980; J.D. Uni- University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law versity of California at Berkeley, 1984 Prof. Monette came to the UW Law School in May 1992. At the U\'Vshe teaches Tax I, from working as staff counsel for Sen. Federal Income Taxation of Partners and Prof. Nourse came to the Law School in Daniel Inouye, chairman of the U.S. Sen- Partnerships, and Taxation of Non-Profits, 1993 after a challenging legal career in ate Select Committee on Indian Affairs. Oil and Gas. She was chosen the Legal Washington, D.C. Prof. Nourse now teach- Prof. Monette taught Torts and is currently Education Opportunity Teacher of the es Substantive Criminal Law, Criminal Pro- on leave from the school to work for the Year by African American, Native Ameri- cedure and a seminar on congressional Bureau of Indian Affairs. He is an expert can and Latino students at the Law School power and the legislative process. in Federal Indian Law and Water Rights in 1993. Prior to joining the faculty Prof. Nourse Law. Prof. Moran came to the UW in 1991 was Special Counsel for Criminal Law to Prof. Monette organized the Great from the University of Cincinnati College the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, Lakes Indian Law Center, in which stu- of Law, where she was honored with the where she worked on the 1990 and 1991

18 versions of the Violence Against Women Prof. Palay's interests in these fields is J.D. in 1953 from the University of Wis- Act, the Habeas Corpus Reform Act and evidenced in his writing as well as in his consin with Order of Coif honors, was the Violent Crime Control Act. She was an course offerings: Torts, Properly. Business Articles Editor of Wisconsin Law Review appellate attorney for the U.S. Department Organizations and Legislation. In recent and graduated first in his class. He ofJustice, Civil Division from 1988-90. years Prof. Palay's research has focused on returned to the Law School in 1958 to Prof. Nourse was brought to Washing- the growth and change of large law firms. teach Real Estate Transactions and Proper- ton to work as Assistant Counsel to the He is the author, with Marc Galanter, of ty after serving as an Air Force Legal Offi- U.S. Senate Iran-Contra Committee from Tournament of Lawyers: The Transforma- cer in the mid-1950s and becoming a part- the New York firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, tion of the Big Law Firm (University of ner in the Madison firm of LaFollette, Wharton & Garrison. Prior to joining the Chicago Press, 1991) as well as a number Sinykin & Doyle. firm Prof. Nourse clerked for Judge of articles on the subject. Articles on other Although he has been a member of the Edward Weinfeld of the Southern District subjects include "Comparative Institutional UW Law faculty since 1958, Prof. of New York. Economies: TIle Governance of Rail Freight Raushenbush has taught in a number of Prof. Nourse received her J.D. from Contract," in the Journal of Legal Studies, universities as a visiting professor, most Boalt Hall, University of California at and "The Avoidance of Regulatory Con- recently at the University of San Diego Berkeley and earned Order of the Coif straints: The Use of Informal Contracts," in School of Law from 1992-94. Prof. honors. She was also Senior Articles Editor the Journal of Law. Economics, and Institu- Raushenbush has written (with Prof. of the California Law Review. She was tions. He recently published "Relational James MacDonald) the 1989 and 1994 edi- honored with the American jurisprudence Contracting, Transaction Cost Economics, tions of Wisconsin Real Estate Law; Brown Award for Criminal Law in 1981. Prof. and the Governance of HMOs' in Temple on Personal Property (third edition, 1975); Nourse graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Law Quarterly. His doctoral dissertation Wisconsin Construction Lien Law (974); Stanford University. was titled "The Governance of Rail-Freight and edited Cases and Materials on Real Prof. Nourse is presently working on Contracts: A Comparative Institutional Estate Transactions (994). an article on the legislative process and is Approach." A recent project of Prof. Raushenbush's planning a project studying trial transcripts Prof. Palay, who also chairs the Law is helping city officials of Dubna, Russia, in rape cases. School's building committee, is currently at establish a framework for laws assisting work with Prof. Galanter on studies of the privatization of property. He visited Russia English law firm, law firm networks, and in May-June, 1993, the result of an invita- the provision of pro bono legal services. tion from the LaCrosse-Dubna Sister City organization. He then traveled on a trans- Siberian train which began in Moscow and finished at the Great Wall of China. Prof. Raushenbush is currently on the Real Property Drafting Committee for the Multistate Bar Examination and serves the National Law School Admission Council as Corporate Secretary and Chair of the LSAC History Project. Prof. Raushenbush and his wife Marylu have four children. He plays tennis and golf, and also enjoys sailing at his summer home on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

Associate Professor of Law Born Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1953 BA. Tufts University, 1975; PhD., JD. University of Pennsylvania, 1981

Thomas Palay, a former research fellow Professor of Law for the Brookings Institution, joined the Born Madison, Wisconsin, 1928 UW Law School faculty in 1980. His com- A.B. Harvard University, 1950. it: Uni- bined study of public policy analysis and versity of Wisconsin, 1953 law earned him both his Ph.D. and J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. Walter Raushenbush has a distinguished scholarly and legal career. He received his

19 statutes and in the development of the research programs. Prof. Rogers also new Wisconsin Crimes Against Children serves as a consultant to the Senate Labor Chapter. Most recently he was co-editor of and Human Resources Committee, and is Discretion in Criminal justice: The Tension chair of the advisory board of the Center Between Individualization and Uniformity for a New Democracy. (1993). Prof. Rogers has written numerous Prof. Remington and his wife, Sue, scholarly articles, editorials, reviews and reside in Madison and Iron River, books, and is a contributing editor for The Wisconsin. Nation and a coordinating editor for Poli- tics and Society. His books include The Hidden Election: Politics and Economics in the 1980 Presidential Campaign and Right Turn: The Decline of the Democrats and the Future of American Politics (with Thomas Ferguson); On Democracy; and J, Rules of the Game: American Politics and the Central America Movement (with Professor of Law Emeritus Joshua Cohen); and forthcoming works on Born Schenectady, New York, 1922 American labor and democracy. B.S., LLB. University of Wisconsin, 1947, Prior to joining the faculty at Wiscon- 1949 sin, Prof. Rogers taught at the University of Miami 0986-87) and at Rutgers Univer- Frank Remington, credited with originat- sity 0980-86), where he received the Out- ing the "seat of the squad car" approach standing Teacher of the Year Award in to criminal law, is a nationally respected 1985. He was also a Lecturer at Princeton authority in the areas of criminal law and and Yale. procedure and criminal justice administra- I Prof. Rogers is married to attorney tion. He joined the U\V Law School faculty J Sarah Siskind and they have two young in 1949, and from 1956-58 he served as Professor of Law, Sociology and daughters, Helen and Sophia. director of the American Bar Foundation's Political Science Survey of the Administration of Justice in Born Long Branch, Neui jersey, 1952 the United States. He established the Legal BA., j.D. Yale, 1972, 1976; MA, PhD. Assistance to Institutionalized Persons Pro- Princeton, 1978, 1984 gram at the University of Wisconsin in 1967. Joel Rogers joined the Law School faculty Prof. Remington has been extremely in 1987 and is now Professor of Law, active in a variety of organizations. He is Political Science, and Sociology. Rogers former chair of the Wisconsin Public focuses on democratic theory, American Defender Board, the Big Ten Conference, politics, and public policy; his current and the NCAA Committee on Infractions. research includes studies of inter-corpo- He served on the United States Wiretap rate litigation, alternative models of indus- Commission, was draftsman of the Wis- trial relations in the U.S., and independent consin Criminal Code 0950-56) and the political parties. He has received the American Law Institute's Model Penal Romnes and Vilas fellowships at the UW. Code 0952-62), and was Reporter for the Prof. Rogers teaches Administrative Law Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure from and a variety of special topics such as Law 1966 to 1973. He has been a member of and the Welfare State and Recent Topics the Wisconsin Criminal Jury Instructions in Labor Law. Committee since 1960. In addition to his teaching duties, Prof. Assistant Professor of Law A co-author of Criminal justice Admin- Rogers is the Director of Center on Wis- Born New Rochelle, New York, 1958 istration (969), Prof. Remington was also consin Strategy, Associate Director of the AB. University of Michigan, 1980; jD. editor of the American Bar Foundation's A. Eugene Havens Center for the Study of Harvard Law School, 1984 five-volume series on Criminal Justice Social Structure and Social Change, a Adminstration, published by Little Brown member of the Advisory Committee of the Prof. Jane Schacter joined the Law School & Co. He was actively involved in the Center for International and Comparative faculty in 1991. She has two principal 1988 revision of Wisconsin's homicide Labor Studies, and is active in other areas of scholarly interest: administrative

20 and legislative law, and sexual orientation enjoys golf and other outdoor activities and the law. She teaches Administrative and reading. Law, Civil Procedure I, Sexual Orientation and the Law, and a seminar called "Statu- tory Interpretation and the Democratic Idea!." Prof. Schacter studied history at the University of Michigan, where she gradu- ated with highest distinction and highest honors in history. She graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she was Articles Editor of the Harvard Women's Law Journal and a research assistant to Professor Susan Estrich. Although this is Prof. Schacter's first teach- ing assignment, she has worked in the law for nearly a decade. After earning her law Professor Law and Associate Dean for degree, Prof. Schacter served as law clerk of Continuing Education and Outreach to the Hon. Raymond J. Pettine at the Born Watel10wn, Wisconsin, 1946 United States District Court in Providence, B.S; ID. University of Wisconsin, 1967, Rhode Island. She went on to be a litiga- 1972 tion associate at the Boston firm of Hill & Professor of Law and Associate Dean Barlow. where she was involved in a wide Born Galena, Illinois, 1935 David Schultz worked as a staff attorney variety of cases. While at Hill & Barlow, BA.,j.D. University of Iowa, 1957, 1960 in the Corrections Legal Services Program she developed a program under the aus- for two years before he became affiliated pices of the Massachusetts Women's Bar An expert in advertising law, Gerald Thain with the UW Extension Law Program. Association to facilitate the pro bono rep- brought with him 11 years of experience Through the Continuing Legal Education resentation of incarcerated women. She with the Federal Trade Commission when and Outreach Program, Prof. Schultz left the firm for two years to serve as an he joined the UW Law School faculty in teaches a variety of programs on criminal Assistant Attorney General in Mas- 1974. During his tenure at the FTC, Prof. law for lawyers, judges and police offi- sachusetts, where she represented state Thain served first as an attorney in the cers. In the Law School, Prof. Schultz asencies in affirmative and defensive Office of the General Counsel, Division of o teaches first-year courses in Criminal Law cases, and did extensive appellate work. Appeals (representing the agency in the and Criminal Procedure. Some of Prof. Schacter's research will federal courts), then as an advisor to FTC Prof. Schultz has been the Reporter for be published in 1994 in the Micbigan Law Commissioner Phil Elman before becom- the Wisconsin Jury Instructions-Criminal Review and the Harvard Civil Rights-Cioil ing Director of the FTC's National Adver- since 1976. He has published a book Liberties Law Review. tising Regulation Division. At the Universi- review on Escape of the Guilty in the Mar- Prof. Schacter is an avid fan of movies ty of Iowa, Prof. Thain was elected to Phi quette Law Review (1987) and, earlier, co- and music. She collects and listens to Beta Kappa as an undergraduate, and was authored with UW Law Professors Rem- music of all kinds, but has a special fond- first in his law school class, earning Order ington and Dickey an article titled "Law, ness for jazz. As an avocation, she also fol- of the Coif honors. He won the Nathan Trial Judges, and the Psychiatric Witness," lows government and politics closely and Burkan Copyright Law competition and which appeared in the International Jour- will watch "almost anything on C-SPAN" was editor of the Iowa Law Review. nal of Law and Psychiatry (1980) He also Prof. Thain teaches courses in Com- co-authored, with Prof. Walter Dickey and mercial Law, Commercial Paper, Secured Tames Fullin, "The Importance of Clarity in Transactions, Unfair Trade Practices and 'the Law of Homicide-The Wisconsin Consumer Protection. He was a visiting Revision" (1989). Prof. Schultz has been a professor at the University of Maryland member of the Wisconsin Judicial Council and Georgetown University in the early since 1989; he has chaired the organiza- 1970s, and served for three years in the tion since 1991. He is also a member of U.S. Air Force Judge Advocate General's the Association of Continuing Legal Edu- Corps. cation Administrators. Active in a variety of organizations, Prof. Schultz and his wife, Kristine, a Prof. Thain is on the editorial boards of school nurse, have three young children: the Journal of Consumer Affairs and The Kathryn, David and Andrew. Prof. Schultz Wisconsin Lawyer. He is a member of the

21 Wisconsin Bar Association and its Com- can law. was a research associate at the publications include "Notes on Legal Plu- mittee on Legal Education and Bar Admis- University of Wisconsin Land Tenure Cen- ralism," with Armando Guevara, Beyond sions. He was on the ABA-AALSTask ter for two years before joining the Law Law (992); "People Versus the Authoritar- Force on Lawyer Competence and Legal School faculty in 1965. ians: Grassroots Organization and Chile's Education. He is a former member of the Prof. Thome has served as a USAID Transition to Democracy," Beyond Law Board of Directors of the Food Safety consultant in various Latin American coun- (991); and "Law, Conflict, and Change: Council, and was Director of the Ford tries, on such development and democra- Frei's Law and Allende's Land Reform," Foundation Project on Marketing to Chil- tization issues as land tenure reform, legal Searchingfor Agrarian Reform 0989} dren from 1977 to 1979. He is a member services, and, more recently, on adminis- During 1993, he completed a report on of the American Law Institute and served tration of justice reforms. During the past "Administration of Justice in Latin Ameri- on its consultative groups on revision of few years, he also has worked on similar ca: A Survey of AID Funded Programs in Article 9 of the UCC and the Restatement issues in Equatorial Guinea, as a World Argentina and Uruguay," and delivered a of Unfair Trade Practices, He is a member Bank consultant, in Russia as a F.A.O. lec- paper in Johannesburg, South Africa, on of the Iowa Bar, Wisconsin Bar, U.S. turer, and in South Africa as a USAID and "Constitutionalism, Property Rights and Supreme COUItBar and several Federal Ford Foundation consultant and lecturer Agrarian Reform." Appellate Circuits. on land reform issues. He has been a visit- Prof. Thome is married to Dr. Pauline Prof. Thain has written numerous law ing professor at Catholic University in San- Ropert, a clinical psychologist in Madison. review articles on advertising and trade tiago, Chile, and at the University of They are the parents of Andrea and regulation. He was the recipient of the Miami Law School. From 1971 to 1973 he Daniela, both of whom are college stu- Consumer Law Professorship in 1992 and was a research fellow in Chile for the dents. His "non-law" interests include organizer of an annual conference on con- International Legal Center, and during Latin American literature, music and cul- sumer law beginning in 1993, 1978-79 he was a research fellow in Spain ture; classical music; travel; Latin American Prof. Thain's leisure pursuits include on a U.S/Spain Exchange Program. From politics and relations with the U.S.; read- biking, playing racquetball, watching January 1981 to June 1982, he directed a ing, and an occassional game of tennis, baseball, and reading historical and mys- collaborative research and training pro- He is bilingual in English-Spanish and flu- tery novels. He and his wife, Priscilla, who gram between the Land Tenure Center of ent in Portuguese. is Administrative Assistant to PROFS, a the University of Wisconsin and ClERA, UW-Madison faculty lobbying group, have the Center for Agrarian Reform Research three children: Gregory, a computer scien- of the Ministry of Agriculture, Nicaragua. tist in Tucson, Arizona, and Petita and In 1988 he was appointed Director of Douglas, both college students. the Latin American and Iberian Studies Program, an interdisciplinary university- wide research and academic center, which includes B,A. and M.A. programs on Latin American Studies. He served in this capac- ity until 1992. Finally, during 1993 Prof. Thome served as the first resident director of a University of Wisconsin study abroad program at the Catholic University of San- tiago, Chile. Students from the universities of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Michigan and Notre Dame also participate in this pro- gram. During his stay in Chile, Prof. Thome taught a graduate seminar at the Institute of Political Science of Catholic University, and a seminar at the Law Fac- Professor of Law and Dean Emeritus ulty of Diego Portales University. Acting as Born Kansas City, MiSSOUri, 1934 the University of Wisconsin representative, A.B. Harvard College, 1956; J.D. Harvard he also successfully negotiated an Law School, 1960; MA. Magdalen College, J exchange agreement between the UW Oxford University, 1962 Professor of Law Law School and the Diego Portales Law Born San Jose, Costa Rica, 1935 Faculty. Cliff F. Thompson was the 11th Dean of BA. University of California at Los Ange- Courses taught by Prof. Thome include the Law School, serving from 1983-90. In les, 1958; LL.B. Harvard University, 1961 Contracts, Latin American Legal lnsu.u 1993, he was granted leave (as Professor tions, Comparative Law, and seminar- on of Law) for three years to serve as Legal Joseph Thome, a specialist in Latin Ameri- Education Advisor to the Government of Land Reform in Latin America. His Il( ent

22 Indonesia and its 26 public law schools. the u.s. Fulbright Screening Committee legal services and public interest law, and Born in Missouri and raised in for Law. the role of law in economic development. Shawnee Mission, Kansas, where he He has been the Distinguished Visiting He has also written numerous articles on attended high school, Prof. Thompson Professor at the University of Missouri- legal theory and the relationship between received his A.B. degree magna cum Columbia (1982) and the Rice Distin- social theory and the law. His current laude from Harvard College and his J.D. guished Chair at the University of Kansas research focuses on the interrelationship from Harvard Law School. He attended (1992). In 1990-91, he was Honorary Visit- of legal practice and global economic and Magdalen College, Oxford University as a ing Scholar at the Institute for Advanced political restructuring. In addition, he is Rhodes Scholar, receiving an M.A. degree Legal Studies and at the School of Oriental well known as a founder of the "Critical in law (with honors). He was an All-Ivy and African Studies, both at the University Legal Studies" school of legal theorists. League fencer and an Oxford Fencing of London. Dean Trubek taught at Yale Law Blue. Prof. Thompson's wife, Judith, is a School for seven years before joining the Upon receiving his law degree he teacher at Eagle School in Madison. They UW Law faculty in 1973. Prior to becom- joined the Ford Foundation as a program have four grown children, all born abroad: ing an educator, Dean Trubek spent sev- officer for the Near East and Africa, there- james (England); Laura (the Sudan); John eral years in Brazil as an Attorney Advisor by beginning a 13-year period of research, (Zambia); and Hannah (Ethiopia). Prof. for the Agency for International Develop- teaching and institution-building in African Thompson retains his interest in sports. In ment, and as Chief Officer for Housing Law. Between 1961 and 1973 he taught on Indonesia, these are fencing, tennis, walk- and Urban Development. After graduation the law faculties of the University of Khar- ing, and open ocean diving. He enjoys from Yale he clerked for the Hon. Charles toum and the University of Zambia, where reading spy novels and non-fiction books Clark, U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Cir- he was co-founder of the law school, and on history, architecture, and science. cuit. from 1969 to 1973 he served as Dean of Dean Trubek's most recent books are the School of Law at Haile Sellassie I Uni- Lawyer's Ideals and Lawyer's Practices: versity in Ethiopia. From 1961 to 1965 he Transformations in the American Legal was Director of the Sudan Law Project. Profession (1992) with Nelson & Solomon; His three-volume The Land Law of the Critical Legal Thought: A German-Ameri- Sudan (1965, reprinted 1969 and 1983) can Debate (1989) with Joerges; and Con- remains a basic work. In 1983 he returned sumer Law, Common Markets, and Feder- to the Sudan and Ethiopia as a Distin- alism in Europe and the United States guished Fulbright Scholar. His scholarly (1987) with Courgognie. His articles have works include The Law of Contracts of appeared in such publications as Stanford Zambia (1969) and articles on third world Law Review, Michigan Law Review, and development, and he was the founder of Law and Society Review. the Law Reports in Zambia and the Dean Trubek is married to attorney African Law Digest at Columbia University. Louise Trubek, a clinical professor More recently, he was elected Director of involved with the Center for Public Repre- the UW's African Studies Program. sentation in Madison. In 1973 Prof. Thompson accepted a position as Professor of Law at Southern Methodist University, where he received the University Outstanding Teaching Voss-Bascom Professor of Law and Dean of Award in 1975 and served as President of International Studies the University Senate in 1976. Between Born 1935 1976 and 1983 he served first as Dean and B.A University of Wisconsin, 1957; LL.B. Professor at the University of Hawaii Law Yale University Law School, 1961 School and then as Dean and Professor at the University of Idaho College of Law. David M. Trubek is Dean of International Prof. Thompson's teaching and aca- Studies and Voss-Bascom Professor of Law demic interests include property, con- at the University of Wisconsin-Madison tracts, jurisprudence, legal process, nego- where he directs the University's Office of tiable instruments, comparative law, and International Studies and Programs. From the legal systems of Africa and Asia. He 1985-90 he served as the Director of the has served on the national ABA Law lJW-Madison's Institute for Legal Studies. School Accreditation Committee, the Advi- Dean Trubek has conducted empirical sory Board, International Third World research on civil litigation, the changing Legal Studies Association, and as Chair of role of the legal profession in society,

23 Prof. Tuerkheimer's law-related inter- for Education Policy. ests lie primarily in the areas of criminal Prior to coming to Wisconsin, Prof. litigation and the environment. He has Underwood taught and was an Assistant written a number of articles reflecting Dean for the Center for Teaching and these interests in the New York University Learning at the University of North Dako- Law Review, Columbia Law Review, Cali- ta. She taught legal writing and research at fornia Law Review, American Criminal the School of Law, University of Florida Law Review, Marquette Law Review and from 1981-82, and clerked in the F0U11h the Natural Resources Lawyer. District of the Indiana Court of Appeals Prof. Tuerkheimer's leisure-time inter- after earning her J.D. in 1979. ests include astronomy, geology, biking, Prof. Underwood has published exten- sailing, classical music and history. His sively. Her most recent books are Legal wife, Barbara, is an attorney in the Con- Aspects of Special Education and Pupil sumer Protection Unit of the Wisconsin Services and The Principal's Legal Hand- Department of Justice. The Tuerkheimer's book. She has written on school choice for daughter is a first-year law student at Yale; W'by We Still Need Public Schools. Church- their son is a fourth-year student at the State Relations and Visions of Democracy Professor of Law University of Wisconsin-Madison. (992), and the publications Journal of Born New York, New Yorlz, 1939 Law and Education, Education Law B.A. Columbia College, 1960; LL.B. New Reporterand Educational Considerations. York University Law School, 1963 Prof. Underwood is also legal editor of Journal of Education Finance and editor Frank Tuerkheimer, a former Associate of The Scbools and the Courts, and on the Special Prosecutor for the Watergate Spe- authors' committee of Education Law cial Prosecution Force and former U.S. Reporter. Attornev for the Western District of Wis- In addition to her work in the Law consin, 'has taught at the U\\7 Law School School and Department of Educational since 1970 and has been of counsel to the Administration, Prof. Underwood serves the Madison law firm of LaFollette & Sinykin lJ'W as the Chair of the University Affirm- since 1985. He teaches Evidence, Criminal ative Action Committee and as a member Litigation, Trial Advocacy and Appellate of the Student Conduct Committee. Advocacy. At NYU Law School he was She lives in Madison with her husband Note Editor of Law Review and graduated and four children. As a family they enjoy with cum laude and Order of the Coif the many state parks, lakes and other out- honors. door recreational opportunities in Prof. Tuerkheimer has since 1981 Wisconsin. served as counsel to the Wisconsin Board of Attorneys Professional Responsibility Associate Professor of Law and and the Wisconsin Judicial Commission, Educational Administration and in that capacity has handled a number Born Sycamore, Illinois, 1954 of cases against judges and attorneys. He B.A. DePauw University, 1976; J.D. Indi- formerly served as Legal Counsel to both ana University, 1979; PbD. University of the Sierra Club 0972-73) and the Natural Florida-Gainesville, 1984 Resources Defense Council 0976-77), and worked as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for Julie Underwood, Chair of the Department the Southern District of New York from of Educational Administration, combines 1965 to 1970. He also spent a year in the her expertise in education policy with her mid-1960s as a legal assistant to the Attor- legal training to address critical areas in ney General of Swaziland, and clerked for education such as First Amendment issues, the Hon. Edward Weinfeld, U.S. District parental choice and special education pro- Judge for the Southern District of New grams. Prof. Underwood has taught in the York, immediately following his gradua- department of Educational Administration tion from law school. More recently, he since 1986; she now has a joint appoint- served as a United States Senate ment with the Law School. Prof. Under- Appointee to the National Commission of wood is also co-director (with Law Profes- Judicial Discipline and Removal. sor William Clune) of Wisconsin Center

24 ship between medicine and law, the role a visiting associate professor at Cornell of philosophy and philosophers in the University 0972-74); Legal Counsel to the public policy process, the contributions Rochester, New York, Board of Education and pitfalls of public commissions, 0966-72), and Assistant City Attorney informed consent, the withdrawal of life- with the Corporation Counsel's Office in sustaining therapies, the definition of Rochester 0964-65). She is currently the death, Baby Doe issues, organ transplanta- Nathan P. Feinsinger Professor of Labor tion, and compensation for medical and Law. research injuries. Prof. Weisberger teaches Trusts and Prof. Weisbard is a magna cum laude, Estates and Public Sector Labor Law. She Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Harvard Col- has had articles published in the Uniuersi- lege, a former National Science Founda- ~vof Chicago Law Review, Wisconsin Law tion graduate fellow in economics, and Review, Wisconsin Women's Law Journal, was selected as a Francis Coker teaching Wisconsin Bar Bulletin, and the Journal of fellow in constitutional law while earning Comparative Law. She also co-authored a 1 J' his J.D. from Yale Law School. He clerked U.S. Department of Labor-financed study for the Hon. Irving L. Goldberg of the titled "Public Sector Strikes and Strike Associate Professor of Law and of Federal Court of Appeals for the Fifth Cir- Penalties." She is co-author with Donald Medical Ethics cuit and practiced law with the Washing- Wollett and Joseph Grodin of the case- Born Miami Beach, Florida, 1950 ton, D.C., firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts & book Collective Bargaining in Public AB. Haruard, 1972; ID. Yale, 1977 Trowbridge. Employment published in 1993 by West Prof. Weisbard is married to Phyllis Publishing Company. The career of Alan Weisbard bridges the Holman Weisbard, the Acting Women's Prof. Weisberger has been exceptional- worlds of scholarly research, public policy Studies Librarian for the University of Wis- ly active in a number of committees and development and public service, and the consin System. They have two children, organizations. She is currently a member disciplines of law, moral philosophy and Talya and Ariel. of the American Law Institute, several sec- religious studies. He joined the Law tion committees of the American Bar Asso- School faculty in 1990 and teaches Torts; ciation, and chairs the campus Commis- Bioethics and the Law; Law, Science and sion of Faculty Governance. She has Biotechnology; Children, Parents and the served on the Executive Committee of the State; and other courses and seminars in Association of American Law Schools, the the Law School, Medical School, and else- Board of Trustees of the Law School where in the University. He has a particu- Admissions Council, and the Wisconsin lar interest in the relevance of religious Equal Justice Task Force, and has chaired teachings and traditions to the creation of various committees including the campus public policy in our pluralistic society and Faculty Rights and Responsibilities Com- has lectured and written extensively on mittee and the Law School's Clinical Pro- Jewish medical ethics. grams Committee. During the 1993-94 Prior to his position at the UW, Prof. school year, she chairs the Law School's Weisbard was a Visiting Lecturer in Public Lectures Committee and the Students with and International Affairs at Princeton Uni- Disabilities Committee and is a member of versity's Woodrow Wilson School. He was the LEO Committee, the Admissions Com- Associate Professor at Yeshiva University's mittee, and the Tenure Committee. She Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and selves as advisor to the Wisconsin Albert Einstein College of Medicine, where Women's Law Journal. he taught from 1982 to 1987. In addition Nathan P. Feinsinger Professor of Prof. Weisberger enjoys making quilts to his academic work, Prof. Weisbard has Labor Law whenever she has spare time. She is mar- also served as Executive Director of the Born Chicago, Illinois, 1930 ried to C.H. Blanchard, a retired professor New Jersey Bioethics Commission from BA. Swarthmore College, 1951; MA. Johns of physics, and has three married children: 1987 to 1990, and as Assistant Director for Hopkins University, 1953;].D. University of Jonathan, a househusband-father, musi- Legal Studies with the President's Commis- Chicago Law School, 1963 cian, and political activist; Lise, a family sion for the Study of Ethical Problems in practice doctor and mother; and Beth, a Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral June Weisberger, an expert in marital medical transcriptionist and mother. She is Research from 1980 to 1982. property and public sector labor law, also a parent by marriage to: Beth, an Prof. Weisbard has published numer- joined the UW Law School faculty in 1974. advisor to non-profit organizations; Mar- ous articles on such issues as the relation- Her previous positions included serving as garet, a hydro-geologist; Jean, an academ-

25 ic advisor in the University's Athletics Creditors and Debtors Rights. He taught expert in comparative law and liability Department; and Brian, a lawyer in the the introductory Income Tax course for law, joined the U\y Law School faculty in United States Attorney's Office. Prof. Weis- many years and may do so again in the 1961. He was a Fulbright Professor at berger and her husband enjoy domestic future. Helsinki University, Finland, in 1977, and foreign travel. During the summer of His articles have appeared in the Yale returned there as a Visiting Research Pro- 1992 they traveled to Mongolia and the Law Journal and the Wisconsin Law fessor in 1982, and lectured at Justus- Russian Far East. During the summer of Review, among others. He has published Liebig University in Giessen, Federal 1993 they traveled to Iceland, Denmark, over 30 law review articles in his academ- Republic of Germany, in 1985. He was and Norway. ic life. He and former U\y Law Professor honored by being named Foley and Lard- Lynn LoPucki recently completed a study ner-Bascom Professor of Law in 1986 and of bankruptcy reorganizations by publicly in 1977 he was named Teacher of the held corporations. Year at the UW Law School. He was Prof. Whitford enjoys cooking, back- granted emeritus status in 1990. packing, biking, and occasionally partici- Prof. Zile's teaching assignments have pating in political campaigns. He and his included: Torts I and II; Product Safety wife, Lynn Seidl Whitford, an artist, have Law; Soviet Legal Process; Comparative four children: Louis, Joshua, James, and Law; and seminars in Law of the European Elizabeth. Communities, Problems of World Order, Selected Problems in Tort Law, and Transnational Civil Litigation. Prof. Zile has been widely published in forums including the American Journal of International Law, Columbia Law Review, Cornell Law Quarterly, Journal of Baltic Studies, Law in Eastern Europe, Review of Socialist Law, Washington Law Quarterly, Wisconsin Law Review, and others. He has contributed essays to a number of books George H. Young-Bascom Professor of Law on Soviet Law, is author of Ideas and Born Madison, Wisconsin, 1940 forces in Soviet Legal History, and co- B.A. University of Wisconsin, 1961; LL.B. author of The Soviet Legal System and Yale University, 1964 Arms Inspection. He is a book reviewer for scholarly publications including Cana- William Whitford was a law clerk for the dian-American Slavic Studies, Slavic u.s. Court of Appeals for the District of Review, Virginia Journal of International Columbia before joining the UW Law Law, Wisconsin Law Review, and others. School faculty in 1965. Since then he has Additionally, he is a member of the Advi- been a Visiting Professor to Stanford Uni- Professor of Law Emeritus sory Committee for Statutes and Decisions.' versity 0972-73) and Boston University Born Riga, Latvia, 1927 The Laws of the USSR and Its Successor 0986-87), and served as a Visiting Ful- B.A., LL.B., LL.M. University of Wisconsin, States. bright Professor to Tanzania and Kenya 1956, 1958, 1959; SID. Harvard Uniuer- A member of the Association for the 0967-69, 1975-76). sity, 1967 Advancement of Baltic Studies, Prof. Zile Known for his work in the area of con- enjoys outdoor activities including white- tracts, bankruptcy, and consumer protec- Zigurds Zile, the President and Executive water canoeing, cross-country skiing, bicy- tion law, Prof. Whitford presently teaches Director of the Wisconsin Institute for cling and hiking. He has three daughters, courses in Contracts, Corporate Law, and International Legal Programs and an Mara, Anda, and Inga.

26 s1: Assistant Dean Assistant Dean Assistant Dean BA. University of North Texas) 1988;j.D. Born Milwaukee, Wlisconsin, 1947 B.S. Florida A&M Unioersity, 1972;].D. University of Kansas School of Lato, 1991; B.A.) J.D. University of Wisconsin, 1969, Uniiersity of Iowa, 1986 U.M. Georgetown University School of 1972 Law) 1993 James Thomas joined the Law School in Ed Reisner is responsible for operation of July 1993. Prior to coming aboard, he was Asst. Dean Correales began his law studies the Law School's Career Services Office, is the Director of Admissions and Financial after a seven-year career as a chemist in Executive Director and Secretary/Treasurer Aid at the University of Iowa College of Texas. Prior to law school, Asst. Dean of the Wisconsin Law Alumni Association, Law. Asst. Dean Thomas' current duties at Correales worked in an immunology labo- and serves as the Law School's Building the Law School include responsibilities in ratory at Southwestern Medical School, in Manager. admissions, financial aid and recruitment. quality control at Texas Instruments, for- Prior to joining the Law School Admin- Shortly after graduating from the College mulating elastomers at Dresser Industries, istration in 1976, Asst. Dean Reisner was a of Law, Asst. Dean Thomas became the Uni- and as a process chemist at Texas Indus- Staff Attorney with the State Bar of Wis- versity of Iowa's first Compliance Officer. tries. According to Asst. Dean Correales, consin from 1972 to 1974. From 1974 to Asst. Dean Thomas has been a presen- his career in this field would be an excel- 1976 he was the Legislative Counsel of the ter at the American Association of Colle- lent indicator of the ebb and flow of the State Bar. giate Registrars and Admissions Officers Texas economy in the 1980s. Asst. Dean Reisner was the Vice Chair (AACRAO) Conferences; a member of the Having developed a strong interest in of the American Bar Association Committee Pre-legal Education Committee of AALS;a civil rights through community activities, on New Lawyers and was the Assistant member of the training faculty at the His- Asst. Dean Correales decided to attend law Reporter for the Wisconsin Supreme Court torically Black Colleges and Universities school. He received his J.D. from the Uni- on the State Bar of Wisconsin. He has had (HBCD) Pre-Law Advisors Institute; Direc- versity of Kansas School of Law, where he several articles on legal employment and tor of the "Bridging the Gap" Pre-Law was the student director of the Douglas computerization published in the Wiscon- Conferences held at the University of Iowa County Legal Aid Clinic at Haskell Indian sin Bar Bulletin and in Case and Comment. College of Law; served as Region IV Junior College. He then became a fellow at He is co-author of the Wisconsin Probate Council on Legal Education Opportunity the Institute for Public Representation at the System 0975, 1976, 1977 and 1979 edi- (CLEO) 1992 Summer Institute Regional Georgetown University Law Center, and tions). Director; and served on the Services and was awarded an LL.M.in 1993. At the Insti- He and his wife, Deborah, have two Programs Committee of the Law School tute he worked on environmental, commu- daughters, Megan and Jessica. Admission Council (LSAC). He has devel- nications, and disability law cases, acting as oped a mentoring project in East St. Louis a staff attorney and supervisor of student and organized and implemented a number interns. He enjoyed helping students devel- of pre-law clubs and societies. op their skills as they prepared to enter the Asst. Dean Thomas has been a consul- legal profession, which led him to his posi- tant regarding Title \11 and Title IX mat- tion as Assistant Dean for Student and Aca- ters. He has developed recruitment, reten- demic Affairs at the UW Law School. tion and compliance programs and Asst. Dean Correales and his wife Julia proposals with a number of law schools have four children, Patricia, Alison, Char- throughout the country. lie, and Gabriela.