University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 71 Issue 1, Winter 1999

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

Peter Margulies, Democratic Transitions and the Future of Asylum Law. B.A., Colgate University; J.D., Columbia University. Peter Margulies is a Professor of Law and the Director of the Immigration Clinic at the St. Thomas University School of Law. Prior to his tenure at St. Thomas, Professor Margulies taught at New York, Hofstra, and CUNY Law Schools. He has written extensively in the areas of immigration, domestic violence, and cross-cultural lawyering.

Vincent M. Di Lorenzo, Equal Economic Opportunity: Corporate Social Responsibility in the New Millennium. B.A., Pace University; J.D., Columbia University. Vincent Di Lorenzo is a Professor of Law at St. John's University where his teaching and research primarily focus on the areas of property law, legislation, and banking law. Professor Di Lorenzo also taught in the legal studies department of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and practiced in the law firm of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft. Professor Di Lorenzo is the author of numerous works on banking law on the application of chaos theory to Law.

Frank Pommersheim, "Our Federalism" in the Context of Federal Courts and Tribal Courts: An Open Letter to the Federal Courts' Teaching and Scholarly Community. B.A., Colgate University; J.D., Columbia University; M.P.A., Harvard University. Frank Pommersheim teaches the University of South Dakota School of Law, where his specialty is Indian Law. He currently serves as Chief Justice of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Court of Appeals and an Associate Justice on both the Rosebud Sioux Supreme Court and the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribal Court of Appeals. Professor Pommersheim's extensive writings in the field of Indian Law include Braid of Feathers (American Indian Law and Contemporary Tribal Life) and numerous scholarly articles.