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Parma Program Faculty Summer 2008

  FACULTY
                                                                 
David Jake Barnes
is the Seton Hall University Distinguished Research Professor Law. Professor Barnes began teaching at Seton Hall in 1999 after being the Charles W. Delaney Professor of Law at the University of Denver and teaching with the economics and the law faculties at Syracuse University. Professor Barnes’ educational background includes undergraduate study at Dartmouth College and Wellesley College, an M.A. and Ph.D. in economics from Virginia Polytechnic Institute, and a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. His casebooks and treatises include: The Law of Intellectual Property; Basic Tort Law: Cases, Problems, Statutes, and Materials; Cases and Materials on Law and Economics; Statistical Evidence in Litigation: Methodology, Procedure, and Practice; and Statistics as Proof: Fundamentals of Quantitative Evidence. He has written dozens of articles in various areas of law including torts, intellectual property, contracts, antitrust, environmental law, evidence, remedies, and the use of statistical and scientific methods in court.

R. Erik Lillquist, Associate Dean
teaches in the areas of criminal law and procedure, evidence, contracts, and electronic commerce. His current research interests include the interaction between theories of human-decision making and the legal process, and understanding the implications of biology, medicine and psychology for law.  Dean Lillquist received his B.S. in Biology and B.A. in History from Stanford University in 1989, and his J.D. from the University of Virginia in 1995. At Virginia, he was elected to the Order of the Coif and was the Editor-in-Chief of the Virginia Law Review.  After law school, Dean Lillquist clerked for the Honorable John M. Walker, Jr. of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He then joined the firm of Lankler, Siffert & Wohl, where he specialized in criminal defense. Dean Lillquist joined the faculty of Seton Hall Law School in 1999, where he is the Director of the Institute of Law, Science and Technology. In the Fall of 2004, Dean Lillquist visited at the University of Minnesota School of Law. He was named a Dean's Fellow at Seton Hall in 2005, and Associate Dean for Finance and Administration in 2007.

Judge Michael Daly Hawkins, U S Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Judge Hawkins received his B.A. (Political Science 1967) and his J.D. (cum laude) in 1970 from Arizona State University. He received a Masters in Law (LL.M) from the University of Virginia in May 1998. Judge Hawkins served to Captain in the United States Marine Corps (1970-73). From 1973 to 1977 and again from 1980 to 1994, Judge Hawkins was engaged in the private practice of law in Phoenix. From 1977 to 1980, he served as the United States Attorney for the District of Arizona where he carried an active trial and appellate caseload. Seventeen of his former Assistant United States Attorneys (in an office of forty) have taken the bench, nine as federal judges. A third generation native Arizonan, Judge Hawkins formerly served as President of the Maricopa County Bar Association, the Arizona Chapter of the Federal Bar Association, and the National Association of Former United States Attorneys. A former Uniform Law Commissioner for Arizona, Judge Hawkins previously served as a member of the Appellate Courts Nominating Commission for Arizona, a member of the Governor’s Commission on Major League Baseball, and chair of the Governor’s Task Force on Juvenile Corrections. Prior to his appointment as a circuit judge, he served as a public member of the Administrative Conference of the United States. Judge Hawkins has written and lectured extensively on trial practice, criminal procedure, and evidence issues, and was twice chosen to serve as Independent Counsel-Special Prosecutor for the Navajo Nation. A recent writing, “John Marshall Through the Eyes of an Admirer: John Quincy Adams,” appeared in the March 2002 issue of the William and Mary Law Review. In June 2003, the State Bar of Arizona presented Judge Hawkins with the James Walsh Outstanding Jurist Award. A 1995 recipient of the Arizona State University Alumni Achievement Award, Judge Hawkins was awarded the 2006 John S. Lancy Award, as an outstanding alumnus of the ASU Law Journal.

Professor Healy r
eceived his B.A. in Journalism from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his J.D. from Columbia Law School, where he was a James Kent Scholar, Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar and Book Review and Essay Editor of the Columbia Law Review. Prior to joining Seton Hall, he clerked for Judge Michael Daly Hawkins on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit and was an associate at Sidley Austin Brown and Wood in Washington D.C., where he practiced trial and appellate litigation and worked on several cases before the United States Supreme Court. He also worked for many years as a newspaper reporter, first in North Carolina and later as Supreme Court Correspondent for the Baltimore Sun. Professor Healy's scholarship focuses on freedom of speech and the role of courts in a democracy. He teaches the first-year course in Constitutional Law and upper-year electives in First Amendment, Federal Courts, and Criminal Procedure. He is also a regular contributor to Dorf on Law, a blog that focuses on issues of public law.



 Additional European law professors and attorneys will be on hand for special presentations during the program.

 

 
 
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