University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 77 Issue 3, Summer 2006

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

STEPHANIE HINDSON, Race, Gender, Region and Death Sentencing in Colorado, 1980-1999. Stephanie (Effie) Hindson received her B.A. from the University of Oregon in 1999 and M.A. from the University of Colorado in 2003. She just completed her second year at the University of Colorado School of Law. This article has its origins in a paper she wrote in 2003 to complete the requirements for her M.A. in Journalism at the University of Colorado-Boulder.

HILLARY POTTER, Race, Gender, Region and Death Sentencing in Colorado, 1980-1999. Professor Potter received her B.A. in sociology from the University of Colorado-Boulder in 1991, and her M.A. in criminal justice from the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in 1996. She received her Ph.D in sociology from CU-Boulder in 2004 after completing a dissertation that focused on the experiences of battered Black women. She is now an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Colorado-Boulder.

MICHAEL L. REDELET,
Race, Gender, Region and Death Sentencing in Colorado, 1980-1999. Professor Radelet is Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology at the University of Colorado-Boulder He served on the faculty at the University of Florida from 1979 until moving to Boulder in 2001. He has published several books and six dozen scholarly papers on different aspects of the death penalty, mainly focusing on erroneous convictions and on racial disparities in death sentencing.

ANNE BOWEN POULIN, Double Jeopardy and Multiple Punishment: Cutting the Gordian Knot. Professor Poulin is Professor of Law at Villanova University School of Law. Prior to joining Villanova, she was an Assistant Professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago-Kent College of Law and worked as an Assistant United States Attorney in Chicago from 1975 to 1979. Professor Poulin earned her A.B. from Harvard University, Radcliffe College, her J.D. degree from the University of Maine School of Law, and her LL.M. from the University of Michigan Law School. She is a Co-Reporter for the Committee on Model Criminal Jury Instructions for the Third Circuit and has served as a Commissioner for the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Law. Professor Poulin is the co-author of Pennsylvania Evidence (West 1999). Her recent publications include Double Jeopardy Protection from Successive Prosecution: A Proposed Approach, 92 GEO. L. J. 1183 (2004), Party Admissions in Criminal Cases: Should the Government Have to Eat its Words?, 87 MINN. L. REV. 401 (2002), and Prosecutorial Inconsistency, Estoppel and Due Process: Making the Prosecution Get its Story Straight, 89 CAL. L. REV. 1423 (2001).

DEREK E. BAMBAUER, Shopping Badly: Cognitive Biases, Communications, and the Fallacy of the Marketplace of Ideas. Professor Bambauer holds an A.B. from Harvard College and a J.D. from Harvard Law School. He spent five years working for the software company Lotus Development Corp. (now part of IBM), and has spent the past two years as a Research Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. As a member of the OpenNet Initiative, Professor Bambauer works on issues related to information control on-line. In fall 2006, he will join Wayne State University Law School as an assistant professor, where he will teach intellectual property law.

EMILY SHERWIN, Love, Money, and Justice: Restitution Between Cohabitants. Professor Sherwin is a member of the faculty at Cornell Law School, where she teaches property, remedies, and other subjects. She has published numerous articles in the areas of jurisprudence, remedies, and property law, and is co-author, with Larry Alexander, of The Rule of Rules: Morality, Rules, and the Dilemmas of Law (2000). She is also a member of the advisory committee for the American Law Institute's Restatement (Third) of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment.

DAVID P. VANDENBERG, In the Wake of Republic of Austria v. Altmann: The Current Status of Foreign Sovereign Immunity in United States Courts. David Vandenberg is a candidate for Juris Doctor at the University of Colorado School of Law. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in International Affairs from the University of Colorado. As a law student, he has worked as a summer associate at Donelson, Goodwin & Juarez and as a law clerk with Tri-State Generation and Transmission Cooperative.

TONI WEHMAN, Not Part of the Game Plan: School District Liability for the Creation of a Hostile Athletic Environment. Toni Wehman is a candidate for Juris Doctor at the University of Colorado School of Law. She attended the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics. Later she attended the University of Minnesota's Hubert H. Humphrey Institute and received a Master of Public Policy degree. Before becoming a law student, Toni worked for the General Accounting Office and several members of Congress as a Press Secretary and Legislative Assistant in Washington, D.C. While in law school, she worked as a law clerk for Caplan & Earnest, LLC in Boulder, Colorado. After graduation, she will clerk for the Honorable Nancy Rice of the Colorado Supreme Court.

JEANNE L. SCHROEDER, Beautiful Dreamer: Review of A Life of H.L.A. Hart: The Nightmare and the Noble Dream, by Nicola Lacey. Professor Schroeder is Professor of Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University, New York City. She has developed a feminist jurisprudential theory derived primarily from Hegelian philosophy and Lacanian psychoanalysis that she has applied to a wide variety of topics concerning law, property, and economics. She is the author of The Triumph of Venus: The Erotics of the Market (2004) and The Vestal and the Fasces: Hegel, Lacan, Property and the Feminine (1998), both published by the University of California Press. She is a graduate of Stanford Law School and Williams College. She has been a visiting professor or scholar at the University of Miami School of Law, the George Washington University Law School, Washington and Lee University School of Law and University of Michigan Law School. Prior to entering academics, she was a partner in the New York City law firm of Milgrim, Thomajan & Lee P.C.