University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 75 Issue 3, Summer 2004

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

AHMED A. WHITE, A Different Kind of Labor Law: Vagrancy Law and the Regulation of Harvest Labor, 1913-1924. Ahmed White joined the faculty at the CU School of Law in 2000, after spending three semesters as a visiting professor at Northwestern University School of Law. Professor White's interest in legal scholarship and teaching was first developed during his time as a student at Yale Law School and during a two-year research fellowship that followed. Before entering teaching, he served as a legal analyst at the Louisiana State Senate. His scholarship centers on the intersection of labor and criminal law and on the concept of rule of law. He received his J.D. from Yale University School of Law in 1994.

REZA DIBADJ
, Saving Antitrust. Reza Dibadj is an Assistant Professor at the University of Miami whose research focuses on the intersection of regulation and competition. His work has been published (or is forthcoming) in a variety of academic journals, including the Washington University Law Quarterly, Ohio State Law Journal, Utah Law Review, and NYU Journal of Legislation and Public Policy. His opinion pieces have appeared in newspapers such as the Washington Post and Financial Times. Professor Dibadj is a graduate of Harvard College, Harvard Business School, and Harvard Law School.

JULIAN A. COOK, All Aboard! The Supreme Court, Guilty Pleas, and the Railroading of Criminal Defendants. A graduate of Duke University (A.B.), Columbia University (M.P.A.) and the University of Virginia School of Law (J.D.), Professor Cook clerked for the Honorable Philip M. Pro, United States District Court Judge for the District of Nevada, and served for several years as an Assistant United States Attorney in the District of Nevada and the District of Columbia prior to commencing his career in law teaching. While a federal prosecutor and a member of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, he was responsible for the handling of an array of felony criminal matters, including felony narcotic, white-collar and various arrest-generated cases during the trial and appellate stages. As an Associate Professor of Law, Professor Cook teaches Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure and Evidence. His publications have appeared in the University of Colorado Law Review, the Notre Dame Law Review, the Brigham Young University Law Review, and the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy.