April 2025
About
April 2025
Publications:
Rodger D. Citron, Judge Wilkinson’s Dualist Opinion in Abrego Garcia v. Noem: Judicial Review of Executive Branch Action in a Transformative Time, Verdict (Apr. 23, 2025).
Rodger D. Citron, Daniel Feldman, Rose Mary Bailly & Mehmet Konar-Steenberg, Learning Administrative Law, West Academic (2025).
Mark Goldfeder, Opinion: Time to H.E.L.P. the Fight Against Antisemitism, Newsweek (Apr. 5, 2025).
Melina A. Healey, Sharing the Tuna Platter: A Uniform System of Assessment for Clinical Education, 31 Clinical L. Rev. 275 (2025).
Deseriee A. Kennedy et al., Brief for Scholars of Civil Procedure and First Amendment Organizations as Amci Curiae in Support of Petitioners, Open Justice Baltimore v. Baltimore City Law Dept., 2025 WL 1270444 (4th Cir., Apr. 28, 2025).
Michael Lewyn, The Natalist Case for Sprawl (And Why It Fails), Planetizen (Apr. 7, 2025).
Michael Lewyn, Digging Deeper on Natalism and Urbanism, Market Urbanism (Apr. 7, 2025).
Presentations:
Ann Nowak, A Surprising Struggle: Law Students with Reading Disfluency, Massachusetts Reading Association’s 54th Annual Conference, Newton, MA (Mar. 26, 2025).
Samuel J. Levine, The Impact of Cultural and Religious Contexts on Neurodiversity and Promoting Inclusion, World Autism Awareness and Acceptance Seminar, University of South Africa (Apr. 9, 2025).
Samuel J. Levine, panelist, 2025 Criminal Justice Ethics Schmooze, Fordham University School of Law (Apr. 4, 2025).
Samuel J. Levine, participant, Yom HaShoah-Holocaust Remembrance Day Observance, Touro Law Center (Apr. 24, 2025).
Gabriel Weil, Climate Nationalism, Symposium on Tax Law, the Environment, and Climate Change, American Tax Policy Institute and Pace Environmental Law Review, Pace University (New York, Mar. 21, 2025).
Gabriel Weil, Instrument Choice in AI Governance: Liability as the Indispensable Core, Inaugural Roundtable on AI Safety Law, Center for Law & AI Risk (CLAIR), University of Alabama (Apr. 25, 2025).
Citations:
Harold I. Abramson, Outward Bound to Other Cultures: Seven Guidelines for U.S. Dispute Resolution Trainers, 9 Pepp. Disp. Resol. L.J. 437 (2009), was cited in, Thomas G. Ciarlone, Jr. & Demetri J. Economou, The Need for Speed, TXCLE Oil and Gas Disputes Course (2024).
Harold I. Abramson, Problem Solving Advocacy in Mediations: A Model of Client Representation, 10 Harv. Negot. L. Rev. 103 (2005), was cited in, Andrew Shoemaker, Beyond the Standard Settlement Conference: Consider Customizing Your Commercial Dispute Mediation, 54 Colo. Law. 24 (2025).
Rodger D. Citron, Herman Melville’s Billy Budd: Why This Classic Law and Literature Novel Endures and Is Still Relevant Today, 36 Touro L. Rev. 17 (2020), was cited in, Wes Henricksen, Citing Jorge Luis Borges, 14 British J. Am. Legal Stud. 53 (2025).
Suzanne Darrow-Kleinhaus, Mastering the Law School Exam (2d ed., 2023), was cited in, Elissa Jacob, Mistaken About Mistakes: Error Analysis as an Untapped Tool for Law School Success, 45 Pace L. Rev. 445 (2024).
Howard A. Glickstein, Law Schools: Where the Elite Meet to Teach, 10 Nova L. J. 541 (1986), was cited in, Rory Bahadur, Reconceptualizing Ford as the Jurisprudential Vehicle Driving Interstate Federalism Off the Specific Personal Jurisdictional Map, 92 Tenn. L. Rev. 563 (2025).
Tiffany C. Graham, Conversion Therapy: A Brief Reflection on the History of the Practice and Contemporary Regulatory Efforts, 52 Creighton L. Rev. 419 (2019), was cited in, Dov Fox & Mary Ziegler, The Lost History of “History and Tradition”, 98 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1 (2024).
Deseriee A. Kennedy, Children, Parents & the State: The Construction of a New Family Ideology, 26 Berkeley J. Gender L. & Just. 78 (2011) & Deseriee A. Kennedy, “The Good Mother”: Mothering, Feminism, and Incarceration, 18 Wm. & Mary J. Women & L. 161 (2012), were cited in, Abigail Hean, The Worst Collateral Consequence: Rethinking the Best Interests Standard in the Context of Racism, Classism, and Mass Incarceration, 45 Child. Legal Rts. J. 1 (2024).
Deseriee A. Kennedy, Consumer Discrimination: The Limitations of Federal Civil Rights Protection, 66 Mo. L. Rev. 275 (2001), was cited in, Jeff Sovern, Is Discrimination Unfair?, 41 Ga. St. U.L. Rev. 631 (2025).
Deseriee A. Kennedy, Access Law Schools & Diversifying the Profession, 92 Temp. L. Rev. 799 (2020), was cited in, Michael I. Meyerson, When One Door Closes: Legal Education and Racial Justice After Students for Fair Admissions, 103 Neb. L. Rev. 325 (2025).
Samuel J. Levine & Bruce A. Green, Disciplinary Regulation of Prosecutors as a Remedy for Abuses of Prosecutorial Discretion: A Descriptive and Normative Analysis, 14 Ohio St. J. Crim L. 143 (2016), was cited in, Laura McNeal, Above the Law? Reforming Prosecutorial Accountability Measures Through State Action, 85 La. L. Rev. 577 (2025).
Samuel J. Levine & Bruce A. Green, Disciplinary Regulation of Prosecutors as a Remedy for Abuses of Prosecutorial Discretion: A Descriptive and Normative Analysis, 14 Ohio St. J. Crim L. 143 (2016), was cited in, Shima Baradaran Baughman, Do Prosecutorial Declination Trends Provide Hope for Reducing Mass Incarceration?, 60 Gonz. L. Rev. 255 (2025).
Samuel J. Levine, Another Look at Lawyer Discretion to Assist Clients in Unlawful Conduct: A Response to Professor Tremblay, 70 Fla. Law Rev. Forum 13 (2018), Samuel J. Levine, Faith in Legal Professionalism, 61 Md. L. Rev. 217 (2002) & Samuel J. Levine & Russel G. Pearce, Rethinking the Legal Reform Agenda: Will Raising the Standards for Bar Admission Promote or Undermine Democracy, Human Rights, and the Rule of Law?, 77 Fordham L. Rev. 1635 (2009), were cited in, Jedidiah J. Kroncke, Legal Complicity in an Age of Resurgent Authoritarianism, 38 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 75 (2025).
Michael Lewyn, Recent Case Law, Disparate Impact, and Restrictive Zoning, 39 Touro L. Rev. 639 (2022), was cited in, Nat Jordan, Toward an Economic Fair Housing Act, 123 Mich. L. Rev. 757 (2025).
Michael Lewyn, The Case Against the Case for Zoning, 35 Geo. Env’t L. Rev. 249 (2023), was cited in, Gary DeYoung, The State Giveth, The State Taketh Away: State Law, Local Housing Production, and the Right to Appeal, 30 Suffolk J. Trial & App. Advoc. 77 (2025).
Meredith R. Miller, Party Sophistication and Value Pluralism in Contract, 29 Touro L. Rev. 659 (2013), was cited in, Nicholas L. Salas, Caught Looking! Using K Law ꓘ to Big League Advantage’s Unconscionable Contracts, 110 Iowa L. Rev. 1447 (2025).
Meredith R. Miller, An Illusory Right to Appeal: Substantial Constitutional Questions at the New York Court of Appeals, 31 Pace L. Rev. 583 (2011), was cited in, Katrina Fischer Kuh, Nicholas A. Robinson & Scott Fein, New York’s Constitutional Guarantee of Environmental Rights, 27 N.Y.U. J. Legis. & Pub. Pol’y 361 (2025).
Deborah Waire Post, Power and the Morality of Grading – A Case Study and a Few Critical Thoughts on Grade Normalization, 65 UMKC L. Rev. 777 (1997), was cited in, James Fallows Tierney, Grade Insurance, 73 J. Legal Educ. 421 (2025).
Deborah Waire Post & Pheobe A. Haddon, Misuse and Abuse of the LSAT: Making the Case for Alternative Evaluative Efforts and a Redefinition of Merit, 80 St. John’s L. Rev. 41 (2006), was cited in, Paola Cecchi Dimeglio, An Empirical Analysis of the Impact of Student-Faculty Demographics on Law School Graduate Attrition, Attrition Rates, J.D.S. Awarded, and Bar Passage, 73 J. Legal Educ. 491 (2025).
Lauren R. Roth, Redefining “Medical Care”, 27 Cornell J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 65 (2017), was cited in, Barbara J. Zabawa, Defining the Field of Wellness Law, 53 Hofstra L. Rev. 491 (2025).
Patricia E. Salkin, Am. L. Zoning (5th ed., 2024), was cited in, Hutto v. City of Rock Hill, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79432 (Mar. 4, 2025).
Martin A. Schwartz et al., Analysis of Videotape Evidence in Police Misconduct Cases, 25 Touro L. Rev. 857 (2009), was cited in, Castello v. Arbogast, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79167 (Md. D. PA, Apr. 25, 2025).
Martin A. Schwartz & Erwin Chemerinsky, Dialogue on State Actors, 16 Touro L. Rev. 775 (2000), was cited in, Martha M. McCarthy, Are Sectarian Public Schools on the Horizon?, 432 Ed. Law Rep. 959 (2025).
Theodore Silver, One Hundred Years of Harmful Error: The Historical Jurisprudence of Medical Malpractice, 1992 Wis. L. Rev. 1193 (1992), was cited in, Ani B. Satz & Liza Vertinsky, Customary Corruption, 66 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 693 (2025).
Theodore Silver, One Hundred Years of Harmful Error: The Historical Jurisprudence of Medical Malpractice, 1992 Wis. L. Rev. 1193 (1992), was cited in, Chinmayi Sharma, AI’s Hippocratic Oath, 102 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1101 (2025).
Sol Wachtler, Dred Scott: A Nightmare for the Originalists, 22 Touro L. Rev. 575 (2006), was cited in, Lumen N. Mulligan, Is Federal Question Jurisdiction Arising or Setting?, 104 B.U. L. Rev. 2207 (2024).
Media:
Laura Dooley & John R. Quinn, SCOTUS Subject Matter Jurisdiction – Royal Canin USA v. Wullshleger, Touro L. Rev. Podcast (Apr. 4, 2025).
Richard Daniel Klein, quoted, Kurt Semder, State Budget Delayed as Gov. Hochul Pushes for Changes to Discovery Law, News 12 Long Island (Apr. 2, 2025).
Tiffany C. Graham, mentioned, Howard Jay Meyer, Touro Law School Hosts Two-Day Special Education Summit, The Jewish Press (April 4, 2025).
Elena B. Langan, mentioned, Howard Jay Meyer, Touro Law School Hosts Two-Day Special Education Summit, The Jewish Press (April 4, 2025).
Samuel J. Levine, mentioned, Howard Jay Meyer, Touro Law School Hosts Two-Day Special Education Summit, The Jewish Press (April 4, 2025).
Michael Lewyn, quoted, Robert Steuteville, Why Walkable Places Are Good for Children, Public Square (Apr. 10, 2025).
John R. Quinn & Laura Dooley, SCOTUS Subject Matter Jurisdiction – Royal Canin USA v. Wullshleger, Touro L. Rev. Podcast (Apr. 4, 2025).
Patricia E. Salkin, The Risk to Local Government Posed by the Current Crisis in Higher Education, Touro L. Rev. Podcast (Apr. 21, 2025).
Rena C. Seplowitz, mentioned, Howard Jay Meyer, Touro Law School Hosts Two-Day Special Education Summit, The Jewish Press (April 4, 2025).
Thanks:
Rodger D. Citron, was thanked in, Landyn Wm. Rookard, The Common Threats of Artificial Intelligence and Privatization, 12 Tex. A&M L. Rev. 831 (2025).
Rodger D. Citron, was thanked in, Rory Bahadur, Reconceptualizing Ford as the Jurisprudential Vehicle Driving Interstate Federalism Off the Specific Personal Jurisdictional Map, 92 Tenn. L. Rev. 563 (2025).
Laura Dooley, was thanked in, Rory Bahadur, Reconceptualizing Ford as the Jurisprudential Vehicle Driving Interstate Federalism Off the Specific Personal Jurisdictional Map, 92 Tenn. L. Rev. 563 (2025).
Lauren Roth, was thanked in, Tomar Pierson-Brown, Transition Design as Health Justice Praxis, 32 Geo. J. Poverty Law & Pol’y 251 (2025).
Michelle Zakarin, was thanked in, D’Andra Millsap Shu, The Food Allergy Generation Goes to Work, 66 B.C. L. Rev. 857 (2025).