Scholarship

Lawyering faculty members bring not only diverse, exceptional practice experiences to the Lawyering Program but also outstanding scholarly works, interests, and potential. During a Lawyering faculty member’s two to three years at , the Lawyering Program and School of Law provide support for the ongoing development of scholarship.

Institutional support includes budgets for research, conferences, and research assistants; collaboration with the Academic Careers Program; and access to the many colloquia, practice groups, and workshops at School of Law. Lawyering faculty members are also invited and encouraged to attend regularly scheduled faculty workshops and lunches.

The Lawyering Program coordinates the Lawyering Scholarship Colloquium, a weekly forum for Lawyering faculty to review and critique new scholarship. The colloquium is an invaluable tool for helping participants develop research ideas, prepare articles for submission, and perfect job talks. Participation is open to all Lawyering faculty members as well as other junior scholars in the Law community. This year’s LSC co-chairs are Haiyun Damon-Feng, Michael Goodyear, and Elise Maizel.

Publications by recent and current Lawyering faculty include:

  • Anna Arons, The Empty Promise of the Fourth Amendment in the Family Regulation System, 11 Wash. U.L. Rev. (2023)
  • Anna Arons, Thompson v. Clark and the 'Reasonable' Policing of Marginalized Families, N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change (2022)
  • Anna Arons, Book Review: Wendy A. Bach, Prosecuting Poverty, Criminalizing Care, 3 J.L. & Pol. Econ. 419 (2022)
  • Ashley Binetti Armstrong, Small Teaching, Big Impact, 19 LEGAL COMM. & RHETORIC: JALWD __ (2022)
  • Edith Beerdsen, Discovery Culture, 57 Georgia L. Rev. (2022)
  • Tyler Rose Clemons, Coercive Ideology, Maryland Law Review (2024)
  • Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, Investing in Abolition, 112 Georgetown L.J. (2023)
  • Mindy Nunez Duffourc & Dominick S. Giovanniello, The Autonomous AI Physician: Medical Ethics and Legal Liability in AI, LAW & BEYOND (Henrique Sousa Antunes & Arlindo Oliveira eds., Springer, 2023)
  • Haiyun Damon-Feng, Administrative Reliance, 73 Duke L.J. (2024)
  • Haiyun Damon-Feng, NIMBYism at the Border, Harv. L. Rev. Blog ( Mar. 6, 2023)
  • Katherine Wood, Medicaid Act Protections for Gender Affirming Care, 111 Va. L. Rev. Online 82 (2025), 
  • Michael P. Goodyear, Infringing Information Architectures, 58 UC Davis L. Rev__ ( 2024)
  • Michael P. Goodyear, Queer Trademarks, 2024 U. Ill. L. Rev. 163 (2024)
  • Madeleine Gyory, The Reasonable Pregnant Worker, 113 CALIF. L. REV. __ (forthcoming 2025)
  • Madeleine Gyory, Legislating Flexibility in the Post-Pandemic Workplace, 69 Vill. L. Rev. 209 ( 2024)
  • Christopher Jaeger, The Empirical Reasonable Person, 72 Alabama Law Review ___ (2021)
  • Brandon Johnson, The Accountability-Accessibility Disconnect, 58 WAKE FOREST L. REV.___ (2022)
  • Rachael Liebert, Trauma and Blameworthines in the Criminal Legal System, 18 STAN. J. C.R. & C.L. __ (2022)
  • Shirley Lin, Bargaining for Integration, 96 N.Y.U. L. Rev. __ (2021)
  • Elise Bernlohr Maizel, Corporate Lawyers, Disloyalty, and the Opioid Crisis, DePaul L. Rev. (2025)
  • Elise Bernlohr Maizel, Discovery as a Compliance Problem (with J. Travis Laster), 50 J. Corp L. (forthcoming 2024)
  • Elise Bernlohr Maizel, The Case for Downsizing the Corporate Attorney-Client Privilege, 75 UC Law J. 373 (2024)
  • Elise Bernlohr Maizel, In Re Grand Jury, Quantifying Purpose, and the “Lawyer in the Room” Problem in Corporate Attorney-Client Privilege, Yale Journal on Regulation (Mar. 19, 2023), https://www.yalejreg.com/nc/in-re-grand-jury-quantifying-purpose-and-the-lawyer-in-the-room-problem-in-corporate-attorney-client-privilege-by-elise-bernlohr-maizel/
  • Faraz Sanei, Reclaiming Establishment: Identity and the ‘Religious Equality Problem’, 71 U. Kans. L. Rev. __ (2022)
  • Nathan E. Rouse, Witness-Washing Facial Recognition Technology, 102 DENV. L. REV. 715 (2025)
  • David Simson, Most Favored Racial Hierarchy: The Ever-Evolving Ways of the Supreme Court’s Superordination of Whiteness, 120 MICH. L. REV. (2022)
  • David Simson, Hope Dies Last: The Progressive Potential and Regressive Reality of the Antibalkanization Approach to Racial Equality, 30 WM. & Mary Bill Rts. J. (2022)