From the Summer 2020 USC Law magazine
Select Recent Publications
Jonathan Barnett
“Patent Tigers and Global Innovation”
Regulation (2019)
Ariela Gross (with Alejandro de la Fuente)
Becoming Free, Becoming Black: Race, Freedom, and Law in Cuba, Virginia, and Louisiana
Cambridge University Press (2020)
Felipe Jiménez
“A Formalist Theory of Contract Law Adjudication”
Utah Law Review (Forthcoming)
Dorothy Lund (with Natasha Sarin)
“The Cost of Doing Business: Corporate Crime and Punishment Post-Crisis”
University of Pennsylvania, Institute for Law & Economics Research Paper No. 20-13 (2020)
Thomas D. Lyon (with Shanna Williams and Kelly McWilliams)
“Children’s concealment of a minor transgression: The role of age, maltreatment, and executive functioning”
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology (2020)
Emily Ryo (with Ian Peacock)
“Jailing Immigrant Detainees: A National Study of County Participation in Immigration Detention, 1983-2013”
Law & Society Review (2020)
Robert Rasmussen and Michael Simkovic
“Bounties for Errors: Market Testing Contracts”
Harvard Business Law Review (2020)
Nomi Stolzenberg
“From Eternity to Here: Divine Accommodation and the Lost Language of Law”
The Oxford Handbook of Law and the Humanities (edited by S. Stern, M. Del Mar, and B. Meyler) (2019)
Abby K. Wood (with Christian Grose)
“Randomized experiments by government institutions and American political development”
Public Choice (2019)
Awards & Notes
Prof. Edward D. Kleinbard delivered a keynote presentation at the New York State Bar Association’s Tax Section Annual Meeting in January. (Prof. Kleinbard passed away in June. Please see the Dean's memo honoring Prof. Kleinbard.)
Prof. Lisa Klerman was inducted as a Distinguished Fellow to the International Academy of Mediators.
Prof. Emily Ryo’s paper — “Predicting Danger in Immigration Courts” — was named to the list of top 10 most downloaded articles of 2019 in the American Bar Foundation journal, Law & Social Inquiry. In addition, Prof. Ryo’s 2019 American Immigration Council report — “Changing Patterns of Interior Immigration Enforcement in the United States, 2016–2018” — was cited in an issue brief addendum submitted to the U.S. House Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship in 2019.
Prof. Ariela Gross was elected as a fellow of the Society of American Historians.