| Faculty
Notes & Publications |
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This
Fall, STEPHEN
B. BURBANK
David Berger Professor for the Administration of
Justice was a member of a panel of academics asked
to comment on a draft report concerning the selection of class counsel
at the Third Circuit Judicial Conference. Also during the Fall, he
moderated a panel on proposed amendments to the Federal Rules at a
class action conference held by the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules.
In January, Burbank presented a short paper,
Procedure, Politics and Power, to the Section of Civil
Procedureof the Association of American Law Schools. In March, Burbank
was the Symposium Moderator and also moderator of a panel at a conference
on Litigation in a Free Society co-sponsored by Penn Law, Washington
University Law School and the Institute for Law and Economic Policy.
The following week he presented a paper, What
Do We Mean by Judicial Independence? at a conference in Columbus,
Ohio. In April he moderated and participated in the program at the
annual meeting of the American Academy of Political
and Social Science on judicial independence, an event coordinated
with the publication of Burbanks co-edited book on that subject.
In May 2001, Burbank taught a short course at the University of
Urbino (Italy) and presented a short paper on federal judicial selection
at a symposium sponsored by the American Judicature Society in Washington,
D.C. Also in May, Burbank became a Life Member of the American Law Institute. |
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HOWARD
F. CHANG
Professor of Law Professor of Law, presented
Immigration Restrictions as Employment Discrimination
at faculty workshops at New York University School of Law in October
2001, at a workshop on labor and employment law at NYU School of Law
in November 2001, and at the University of Michigan Law School in
January 2002. He presented Public Benefits and Federal Authorization
for Alienage Discrimination by the States at an immigration
law symposium at the New York University School of Law in October
2001 and at a faculty workshop at the University of Michigan Law School
in February 2001. Chang also presented Liberal Ideals and Political
Feasibility: Guest-Worker Programs as Second-Best Policies at
an immigration law symposium at the University of North Carolina School
of Law in January 2002. |
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