Faculty in the News

Faculty News

Professor Kevin Reitz was quoted in a New York Times Magazine article entitled “Can You Talk Your Way Out of a Life Sentence?” He explained that, as an inmate “[y]ou have about 3 percent of the…

Professor Kristin Hickman was quoted extensively in a January 9 Tax Notes article (subscription required), “Silver Strikes Gold for Tax Administrative Challenges,” regarding issues raised by a federal…

Professor Kitrosser was quoted in a Washington Post column entitled “John Bolton’s…

Centennial Professor of Law Emeritus Barry C. Feld’s most recent book, The Evolution of the Juvenile Court: Race, Politics, and the Criminalizing of Juvenile Justice (2017), has received the Academy of…

Professor Kristin Hickman’s essay entitled Gundy, Nondelegation, and Never-Ending Hope was recognized by The Regulatory Review as among its top contributor essays of 2019. In the…

Professor Kristin Hickman was quoted by Bloomberg’s Daily Tax Report in an article regarding tax law issues to watch in 2020. The article highlighted ongoing litigation and a pending…

Within the past few months, two state supreme courts have cited Centennial Professor of Law Emeritus Barry Feld’s scholarship on juvenile justice:

A December 13, 2019 Law360 article titled “Fed. Circ.’s FRAND Decision Will Put Spotlight On Juries” quotes Professor Thomas Cotter on the Federal Circuit’s recent decision in TCL v. Ericsson,…

Professor Jill Hasday appeared on “The Mary Hanson Show,” a public television program, to discuss her new book, Intimate Lies and the Law (2019).

A November 20, 2019 Law360 article titled “DOJ Gets Time In Court In Qualcomm’s 9th Circ. Class Appeal” discusses an order issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which permits the Antitrust…

Deepinder Mayell, executive director of the James H. Binger Center for New Americans at the University of Minnesota Law School, said immigrant advocates are still feeling out the sanctuary concept in an…

Professor Kitrosser was quoted in a Washington Post story entitled, “Facebook and YouTube Block Spread of Supposed Whistleblower’s Name and Photo. Twitter Allows Both.” Kitrosser explains that the…