December 2024 Law Faculty Publications & News

Throughout the month of December, the Law Library received alerts for full-time TTU Law Faculty publications and news. Below is a compilation of those daily alerts for December 1st to December 31st, 2024.

Articles, Books, and More

  1. Stephen T. Black, Taxing the Digital Economy, 25 Wake Forest J. Bus. & Intell. Prop. L. 1 (2024).
  2. Gerry W. Beyer, Potpourri, 62-4 Real Est., Prob., & Tr. L. Rep., at 4 (2024).
  3. Gerry W. Beyer, Intestacy, Wills, Estate Administration, and Trusts Update, 62-4 Real Est., Prob., & Tr. L. Rep., at 5 (2024).
  4. Amy Hardberger et.al., Innovative Approach to Sustainable Fertilizer Production: Leveraging Electrically Assisted Conversion of Sewage Sludge for Nutrient Recovery, ACS Omega 2024 9 (50), 49692-49706.

Quotations

  1. Prof. Corn is quoted in the following article: Sig Christenson, Disgraced Air Force General Tried to Have Reprimand Watered Down. A Judge Said No., San Antonio Express News, (9:00am; Dec. 4, 2024), available at: https://www.expressnews.com/news/article/air-force-phillip-stewart-rape-reprimand-upheld-19958115.php.
  2. Prof. Beyer is quoted in the following article: Ashlea Ebeling, His Will Was a Selfie Video, but Courts Ruled It Didn’t Count, Wall Street Journal, (9:00am; Dec. 14, 2024), available at: https://www.wsj.com/personal-finance/his-will-was-a-selfie-video-but-courts-ruled-it-didnt-count-75e90cf8?mod=hp_featst_pos3.

Citations

  1. Prof. James’ article Twenty-First Century Pirates of the Caribbean: How the Organizaton for Economic Cooperation and Development Robbed Fourteen CARICOM Countries of their Tax and Economic Policy Sovereignty is cited in the following article: Stephen T. Black, Taxing the Digital Economy, 25 Wake Forest J. Bus. & Intell. Prop. L. 1 (2024).
  2. Prof. Murphy’s article Can They Do That? The Due Process and Article III Problems of Proposed Findings of Criminal Contempt in Bankruptcy Courts is cited in § 2:23 of Bankruptcy Law Manual 5th Ed (December 2024 Update).
  3. Prof. Murphy’s article Enhancing the Role of Public Interest Organizations in Rulemaking Via Pre-Notice Transparency is cited in the following article: Sharon Jacobs, The Challenges of Participatory Administration, 58 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 323 (2024).
  4. Prof. Rosen’s article Targeting Enemy Forces in the War on Terror: Preserving Civilian Immunity is cited in the following article: Steffi Colao, Back Again: How Airborne Strikes Against Al-Shabaab Further U.S. Imperialism, 28 UCLA J. Int’l L. & Foreign Aff. 131 (2024).
  5. Prof. Corn’s article The Political Balance of Power Over the Military: Rethinking the Relationship Between the Armed Forces, the President, and Congress is cited in the following article: John C. Dehn, The Good Officer: President Trump, General Milley, and the “Necessity” of Constitutional Fidelity, 90 Brook. L. Rev. 1 (2024).
  6. Prof. Corn’s article Strange Bedfellows: How Expanding the Public Safety Exception to Miranda Benefits Terrorism Subjects is cited in § 17:4 of Maryland Law of Confessions (December 2024 Update).
  7. Prof. Brie Sherwin’s article Anatomy of a Conspiracy Theory: Law, Politics, and Science Denialism in the Era of COVID-19 is cited in the following article: Christine Billy, Preparing for the Climate Crisis: OSHA, Deadly Heat, and Emergency Powers, 51 Ecology L.Q. 57 (2024).
  8. Prof. Murphy’s article Constraining White House Political Control of Agency Rulemaking Through the Duty of Reasoned Explanation is cited in the following article: Christine Billy, Preparing for the Climate Crisis: OSHA, Deadly Heat, and Emergency Powers, 51 Ecology L.Q. 57 (2024).
  9. Prof. Bubany’s article Taming the Dragon: An Administrative Law for Prosecutorial Decision Making is cited in the following article: Luca Azzariti Crousillat, The Badges and Incidents of Capital Punishment, 103 Tex. L. Rev. 459 (2024).
  10. Prof. Baker’s article The Intersectionality of Law and Gender is cited in the following article: Erin Gow, The Value of Law and Library Degrees in the Legal Information Profession, 116 Law Libr. J. 369 (2024).
  11. Prof. Murphy’s article The DIY Unitary Executive is cited in the following article: Andrew F. Popper, Democracy on the Brink, Down but Not Defeated, 10 U. Pa. J. L. & Pub. Aff. 1 (2024).
  12. Prof. Soonpaa’s article The Continued Vitality of IRAC is cited in the following article: Scott Caron, The NextGen Bar Exam Meets the Next Generation Law Student: A Revised Approach to Legal Analysis, 50 U. Dayton L. Rev. 43 (2024).
  13. Prof. Murphy’s book Federal Practice and Procedure 2nd is cited in the following article: Steven Michael McKevett, Between Sky and Space: NEPA’s Extraterritorial Application to the Stratosphere and Implications for SpaceX’s Starlink Satellite Constellation, 36 Geo. Envtl. L. Rev. 375 (2024).
  14. Prof. Beyer’s book Texas Law of Wills is cited in the following article: Diane Kemker, Pro-Natalism in Probate Law, 74 Am. U. L. Rev. 367 (2024).
  15. Prof. Murphy’s book Administrative Law & Practice is cited in the following article: Bradley Krause, Ghost Guns: A Case Study on the Tension Between Public Exigencies and Statutory Construction, 74 Cath. U. L. Rev. 121 (2025).

News

  1. On December 6, 2024, Prof. Beck gave a guest lecture to the combined third-grade classes at Ramirez Elementary School titled “Lawyers and the Constitution” (45 min.).
  2. On December 20, 2024, Prof. Beck gave a CLE presentation, by Zoom, to the Wyoming Bar Association titled “Federal Crime Policy and the Second Amendment” (1 hour). Brandon was invited by the University of Wyoming Firearms Research Center.

December 2024 New Books

In December 2024, the Law Library added the following new titles to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

1. Suzana Tavares da Salva, Administrative Law for the 21st Century” Administrative Law on an Illiberal and Post-Democratic Context (2024).

CIVIL LAW

1.  Elizabeth J. Cabraser, 2024 Survey of Federal Class Action Law: A U.S. Supreme Court and Circuit by Circuit Analysis (2024).

CONTRACTS

1. Marilyn Klinger and Will Beasley, Construction Project: Phases, People, Terms, Paperwork, Processes (2023).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

1. Tony Y. Yang and Dorit R. Reiss, Vaccine Law and Policy (2024).

IMMIGRATION LAW

1. Harold Holzer, Brought Forth on this Continent: Abraham Lincoln and American Immigration (2024).

2. Calum TM Nicolson and Benoit Mayer, Climate Migration: Critical Perspectives for Law, Policy, and Research (2023).

All of these books are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu.  Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items.

November 2024 Law Faculty Publications & News

Throughout the month of November, the Law Library received alerts for full-time TTU Law Faculty publications and news. Below is a compilation of those daily alerts for November 1st to November 30th, 2024.

Articles, Books, and More

  1. Gerry W. Beyer, Texas Law of Wills (9 & 10 Tex. Prac. 2024-2025 ed.).
  2. Gerry W. Beyer & James M. Kosakow, Irrevocable Trusts (4th ed. 2024-2025).
  3. Gerry W. Beyer, ed., Keeping Current—Probate, Prob. & Prop., Nov./Dec. 2024, at 26.
  4. Gerry W. Beyer, Estate Planning and Probate Law, 87 Tex. B.J. 868 (2024).
  5. Brian D. Shannon & Daniel H. Benson, Texas Criminal Procedure and the Offender with Mental Illness (7th Ed).

Quotations

  1. Prof. Corn is quoted in the following article: Sig Christenson, Would Trump try to use the armed forces against “the enemy from within’? We asked the generals, San Antonio Express-News (Nov. 1, 2024; 9:00am), available at: https://www.expressnews.com/news/texas/article/trump-military-enemy-within-crush-dissent-19871215.php

Citations

  1. Prof. Beyer’s book Texas Law of Wills is cited in the following article: Elizabeth S. Miller, Is a Will the Only Way? Transfers on Death and Transfer Restrictions in LLC Agreements, 22 Fla. St. U. Bus. Rev 107 (2024).
  2. Prof Beyer’s article Estate Planning in the Digital Age is cited in §2:8, §12:5, and §15:12 of Georgia Trusts and Trustees (November 2024 Update).
  3. Prof Beyer’s article Estate Planning in the Digital Age is cited in §2:14, §2:3, and §6:25 of Redfearn Wills and Administration in Georgia (November 2024 Update).
  4. Prof. Beyer’s book Modern Dictionary for the Legal Profession is cited in §59:20 of Comparative Environmental Law and Regulation (November 2024 Update).
  5. Prof. Watts’ article A Confused Sea: Vicarious Liability for Punitive Damages Under Maritime Law is cited in §5:10 of Admiralty and Maritime Law (November 2024 Update).
  6. Prof. Casto’s article The Origins of Federal Admiralty Jurisdiction in an Age of Privateers, Smugglers, and Pirates is cited in §3:1 of Admiralty and Maritime Law (November 2024 Update).
  7. Prof. Murphy’s book Federal Practice and Procedure is cited in the following article: David Hutchison, Standing in Texas: Exploring Standing under the Original Meaning of the Texas Constitution, 103 Tex. L. Rev. 227 (2024).
  8. Prof. Pawlowic’s article Letters of Credit: A Framework for Analysis Transfer, Assignment, Negotiation and Transfer by Operation of Law is cited in §5 of Uniform Commercial Code (November 2024 Update).

News

  1. On November 2, 2024, Prof. Beyer was in Austin where he was a faculty member at the Rocky Mountain Fellows Institute of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel. Prof. Beyer’s presentations and accompany articles were entitled AI in the Trusts & Estates Field and Estate Planning for Cyber Property.
  2. On November 7, 2024, a four-part documentary series titled The Rain We Keep featuring Prof. Hardberger’s participation began airing on Panhandle PBS. The series intends to educate viewers about the depletion of the Ogallala Aquifer and describe how affected people are trying to manage, change, and forestall that drawdown. The series can be viewed on demand here: https://www.panhandlepbs.org/Rain/.
  3. On November 7, 2024, Prof. Beck gave a guest lecture (by Zoom) to Duke University School of Law’s Second Amendment Seminar. The title of the 1-hour lecture was “Federal Crime Policy, Rahimi, and the Supreme Court.”  Brandon’s article, “The Federal War on Guns,” was an assigned reading in the course.
  4. On November 8, 2024, Prof. Beyer was in Des Moines, Iowa where he was an invited speaker for the Iowa Academy of Trust & Estate Counsel. To an audience of approximately 100 estate planning attorneys, Prof. Beyer presented his paper entitled Predicting and Preventing Will Contests.
  5. On November 12, 2024, Prof. Gerry W. Beyer was an invited co-panelist for a program sponsored by the American Bar Association’s Section of Real Property, Trust, and Estate Law entitled Professors’ Corner—AI Is My Paralegal: Uses of New Technology in Practice.
  6. On November 15, 2024, Prof. Beyer was an invited speaker at the 2024 Fall Conference of the National College of Probate Judges in Gulf Shores, Alabama. His presentation and accompanying article were entitled Estate Planning for Cyber Property: Electronic Communications, Cryptocurrency, Non-Fungible Tokens, and the Metaverse.
  7. On October 18, 2024, Prof. Beck gave a CLE presentation to the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. The title of the 1-hour presentation was “Search and Seizure Issues in the Post-Carpenter Era.”
  8. On November 22, 2024, Prof. Henry spoke at the Oklahoma Bar Center on Banking Law Update.

November 2024 New Resources

In November 2024, the Law Library added the following new resources to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

New Resources

New York Times

  • To access The New York Times, Law School users must create a personal account using the following steps: 
  • Step 1: Go to nytimes.com/activate-access/edu-access
  • Step 2: Search and select Texas Tech University Law School.
  • Step 3: On the new page, click icon “Go”.
  • Step 4: Activate your law school subscription using your TTU email login.
  • Step 5: Create a personal NY Times account.
  • Users will use the newly created account to access NYTimes

New Books

BANKRUPTCY LAW

1. Emilie Ghio, John Wood, and Jennifer Gant, Re-Examining Insolvency Law and Theory: Perspectives for the 21st Century (2023).

COMMERCIAL LAW

1. David Collins and Michael Geist, Research Handbook on Digital Trade (2023).

COMPARATIVE AND FOREIGN LAW

1. Roberto Scarciglia, Methods and Legal Comparison: Challenges for Methodological Pluralism (2023).

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

1. Thomas A. (Tad) DiBiase, No-Body Homicide Cases: A practical Guide to Investigating, Prosecuting, and Winning Cases When the Victim is Missing (2024).

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

 1. Ignacio Anchustegui Herrera and Tina Soliman Hunter, Offshore Wind Licensing (2024).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

1. Emily Gold Waldman, Bridget J. Crawford, and Naomi R. Cahn, Hot Flash: How the Law Ignores Menopause and What We Can Do About It (2024).

HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

1. Arlette Ingram Willis, Anti-Black Literacy Laws and Policies (2023).

INFORMATION PRIVACY

1. Ari Ezra Waldman, Advanced Introduction to U.S. Data Privacy Law (2023).

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

1. Enrico Bonadio and Chen Wei Zhu, Music Borrowing and Copyright Law: A Genre-by-Genre Analysis (2023).

2. Shaun M. Van Horn, Antitrust Issues in Intellectual Property Law (2024).

INTERNATIONAL LAW

1. Andrea Bianchi and Fuad Zarbiyev, Demystifying Treaty Interpretation (2024).

2. Lang Thai, Corporate Governance and Statutory Derivative Actions: Comparative Approach to Shareholder Litigation (2024).

LAND USE

1. John J. Infranca and Sarah Schindler, A Research Agenda for US Land Use and Planning Law (2023).

LEGAL PROFESSION

1. Scott Hershovitz, Law is a Moral Practice (2023).

2. Travis Hreno, Jury Nullification: The Jurisprudence of Jurors’ Privilege (2024).

MILITARY LAW AND PEACE

1. Geoffrey S. Corn, Ken Watkins, and Jamie Williamson, The Law in War: A Concise Overview (2023).

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

1. Marco Segatti, Equal Access to Justice: On the Duty to Pause, Cool Down, and Listen (2024).

RACE AND ETHNICITY

1. Alfredo, Mirande, Ordinary Injustice: Rascuache Lawyering and the Anatomy of a Criminal Case (2023).

All resources are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu

All electronic databases are available through the Library’s webpage, http://www.depts.ttu.edu/law/lawlibrary/index.php.   

Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items or helping you contact the Librarian on call for questions about electronic resources.

October 2024 Law Faculty Publications & News

Throughout the month of October, the Law Library received alerts for full-time TTU Law Faculty publications and news. Below is a compilation of those daily alerts for October 1st to October 31st, 2024.

Articles, Books, and More

  1. Gerry W. Beyer & James M. Kosakow, Revocable Trusts (5th ed. 2024-2025 update).

Quotations

  1. Prof. Corn is quoted in the following article: Marc Levy, Pennsylvania Republican in key swing-state Senate race backs using military to fight fentanyl, Associated Press (Oct. 2, 2024; 9:00pm), available at: https://apnews.com/article/pennsylvania-senate-mccormick-casey-fentanyl-military-trump-mexico-cartel-5bb7129c955756010eecc81cfcf1c8fd.
  2. Prof. Hardberger is quoted in the following article: Marina Zhang, The Debate Around Fluoride is Changing: What it Means for Your Drinking Water, Epoch Health (Oct. 4, 2024), available at: https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/the-debate-around-fluoride-is-changing-what-it-means-for-your-drinking-water-5735673?utm_source=partner&utm_campaign=ZeroHedge&src_src=partner&src_cmp=ZeroHedge.
  3. Prof. Hardberger is quoted in the following article: Lindsey Carnett, Meteorologists say severe drought is over in San Antonio. Local experts beg to differ., San Antonio Report (Oct. 9, 2024), available at: https://sanantonioreport.org/meteorologists-say-severe-drought-is-over-in-san-antonio-local-experts-beg-to-differ/.
  4. Prof. Williams is quoted in the following article: Terri Langford, As Robert Roberson’s execution neared, Gov. Greg Abbott stuck to silence, The Texas Tribune, (Oct. 19, 2024; 3:00p,), available at: https://www.texastribune.org/2024/10/19/greg-abbott-robert-roberson-death-penalty/.
  5. Prof Hardberger is interviewed in the following article: Lucy Greenberg, Texas Tech Law Professor Advocates for a Different Approach to Water, Texas Tech Now, (Oct. 24, 2024), available at: https://www.ttu.edu/now/posts/2024/10/texas-tech-law-professor-advocates-for-a-different-approach-to-water.php.

Citations

  1. Prof. Murphy’s book Administrative Law and Practice is cited in the following article: Mila Sohoni, The Past and Future of Universal Vacatur, 133 Yale L.J. 2304 (2024).
  2. Prof. Casto’s article The Tort Liability of Insane Persons for Negligence: A Critique is cited in §9 and §11 of Restatement 3rd of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm (October 2024 Update).
  3. Prof. Casto’s article The Early Supreme Court Justices’ Most Significant Opinion is cited in the following article: Joshua J. Schroeder,“Improve your Privileges While They Stay”: A Guide to Improve the Privileges of U.S. Citizenship for Everybody, 39 Touro L. Rev. 657 (2024).
  4. Prof. Soonpaa’s article Using Composition Theory and Scholarship to Teach Legal Writing More Effectively is cited in the following article: Carolyn V. Williams, Bracing for Impact: Revising Legal Writing Assessments Ahead of the Collision of Generative AI and the NextGen Bar Exam, 28 Legal Writing: J. Legal Writing Inst. 1 (2024).
  5. Prof. Murphy’s book Administrative Law and Practice is cited in the following article: Erin Lee, Surviving the Rule of Reason: An Antitrust Analysis of Employment Noncompetes, 93 Fordham L. Rev. 225 (2024).
  6. Prof. Corn’s article Imputed Liability for Supervising Prosecutors: Applying Military Doctrine of Command Responsibility to Reduce Prosecutorial Misconduct is cited in the following article: Caitlin Glass, Kat M. Albrecht, & Perry Moriearty, Prosecutorial Data Transparency and Data Justice, 119 Nw. U. L. Rev. 193 (2024).
  7. Prof. Pawlowic’s article Letters of Credit: A Framework for Analysis of Transfer, Assignment, Negotiation and Transfer by Operation of Law is cited in the annotations of §5-102, 5-106, 5-111, and 5-116 of Uniform Laws Annotated Uniform Commercial Code (October 2024 Update).
  8. Prof. Beyer’s article Enhancing Self-determination Through Guardian Self-Declaration is cited in the annotations of §2-205116 of Uniform Probate Code (October 2024 Update).
  9. Prof. Baker’s article 2018: A Legal Research Odyssey: Artificial Intelligence as Disruptor is cited in the following article: Jennifer Elisa Chapman, Teaching Critical Use of Legal Research Technology, 28 Legal Writing: J. Legal Writing Inst. 123 (2024).
  10. Prof. Baker’s article 2018: A Legal Research Odyssey: Artificial Intelligence as Disruptor is cited in the following article: Dr. Alvin Hoi-Chung Hung, Analyzing the Primary and Attendant Risks of Gai-Based Natural Language Processing Models in Legal Research, 39 Syracuse J. Sci. & Tech. L. 15 (2024).
  11. Prof. Christipher’s article The Bridging Model: Exploring the Roles of Trust and Enforcement in Banking, Bitcoin, and the Blockchain is cited in the following article: Ellion Malin, Toke(n)s: The Juncture of Cryptocurrency and Cannabis In A Blooming Ecosystem–Their Joint Utilization As Best Buds To Blunt Legal And Societal Stresses, 39 Syracuse J. Sci. & Tech. L. 73 (2024).
  12. Prof. Christopher’s article Eye of the Beholder: How Perception Management Can Counter Stereotype Threat Among Struggling Law Students is cited in the following article: Chelsea M. Baldwin, Bad Therapy: Conceptualizing the Teaching Of “Thinking Like A Lawyer” As Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, 55 St. Mary’s L.J. 917 (2024).
  13. Prof. Christopher’s article Mobile Banking: The Answer for the Unbanked in America? is cited in the following article: Tiffany Penner, Consumer Financial Inaccessibility, 2024 U. Ill L. Rev. 1227 (2024).

News

  1. Prof. Shannon was appointed by the Dean of the Texas Tech School of Medicine as an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center.
  2. Prof. Shannon’s most recent publication, the 7th edition of his guidebook, Texas Criminal Procedure and the Offender with Mental Illness: An Analysis and Guide, is being published in October. The book was supported by a grant from the Texas Bar Foundation to NAMI-Texas. An online version was released in late September, and links are available at: https://namitexas.org/resources/family-member-arrested/texas-criminal-procedure-and-the-offender-with-mental-illness/.
  3. The 1A FAR Board of Directors named Prof. Shannon to fill a vacancy on the NCAA Division I governing Council. The slot is designated for a faculty athletics representative. Shannon previously served on the NCAA DI Council from 2015-19.
  4. In his role as Chair of the Texas Judicial Commission on Mental Health (JCMH) Legislative Drafting Committee, Prof. Shannon presented the JCMH’s 2025 legislative proposals to the Texas Judicial Council; all were approved for submission to the legislature for consideration in the upcoming session.
  5. On September 18, 2024, Prof. Stephens was a speaker at the Far West Texas County Judges & Commissioners Association Annual Conference in Terlingua, TX. The focus of his presentation were the recently refined rules around magistration (in light of S.B. 6), writs of habeas corpus, and how to handle discovery disputes.
  6. On October 16, 2024, Prof. Beyer was the invited speaker for the October meeting of the South Plains Trust & Estate Council in Lubbock. His presentation and accompanying article were entitled Confidentiality Breach or Note: Revealing Information About a Client’s Testamentary Documents Post-Mortem.
  7. On October 19, 2024, Prof. Beyer was an invited speaker at the 72nd Annual Montana Tax Institute in Missoula, Montana. The topic of both his presentation and accompany article was Artificial Intelligence and Its Impact on Today’s Estate Planner. Approximately 150 attorneys and other estate planning professionals attended in-person and about another 100 via Zoom.