In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

255 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS PAUL W. ARMSTRONG has been a superior court judge in Somerset and Hunterdon counties since 2000 with a special focus on drug issues and treatment, an adjunct faculty member at Rutgers School of Law–Newark, and a longtime practicing lawyer. In the last capacity, he was a pioneer of patients’ rights, representing patients and their families in a number of important, high-profile cases, including Quinlan. Judge Armstrong also served as chair of both the New Jersey Bioethics Commission and the New Jersey Governor’s Advisory Council on AIDS. RONALD K. CHEN is a graduate of Rutgers School of Law–Newark who moved over to the faculty and administration. He is currently vice dean and a clinical professor of law. Starting in 2006, he served for four years as the Public Advocate of New Jersey. Throughout his career, Chen has been deeply engaged in litigating civil rights, civil liberties, and other constitutional law cases, and his commitment and excellence have been widely recognized. RICHARD H. CHUSED joined the faculty of New York Law School in 2008 after a thirty-five-year career at Georgetown Law School, but it all began at Rutgers School of Law–Newark, where Chused was on the faculty from 1968 to 1973, when Marini was decided. Throughout his career, he has focused on property law and gender and law in American legal history. Cases such as Marini have particularly attracted him because of his interest in housing for the impoverished . He wrote the definitive history of Javins v. First National Realty, a sister case to Marini. Not surprisingly, Chused’s interests include Mount Laurel, about which he has written a contrarian article, like his chapter on Marini, arguing that Mount Laurel was, in some ways, wrongly decided. In March 2010, he lectured about the Marini case as the first Allen Axelrod Visiting Scholar at Rutgers School of Law–Newark. CAITLIN EDWARDS is a 2011 graduate of Rutgers School of Law–Camden. 256 NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS JAY M. FEINMAN is a senior faculty member at Rutgers School of Law–Camden, where he is also a member of the Rutgers Center for Risk and Responsibility and a longtime teacher of tort law. He is a member of the prestigious American Law Institute and an adviser for the Restatement Third of Torts: Liability for Economic Loss. Feinman is the author or editor of seven books and more than fifty scholarly articles. FREDRIC J. GROSS returned to Rutgers School of Law–Newark after being an academic in anthropology; graduated with honors and hung out a shingle. More than thirty-five years later, he continues to litigate important public interest cases, such as Lehmann, largely as a solo practitioner. He also is coauthor of the now-outdated ACLU handbook, The Rights of Veterans (1978). ROBERT C. HOLMES is the deputy director of the Rutgers School of Law– Newark Clinical Programs and director of its Community Law Clinic. Between 1971 and 1987 he served in a series of public positions that related to housing in New Jersey, including being executive director of the Newark Housing Development and Rehabilitation Corporation, assistant and then acting commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, chief executive of the Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corporation, member of the original State Planning Commission and a member of a task force charged with drafting the 1985 Fair Housing Act. SUZANNE A. KIM is a member of the faculty at Rutgers School of Law–Newark. Her work focuses on intersections of family law, gender, culture, work, and critical theory. She has won or been nominated for several prestigious national awards for articles about marriage, parenthood, and family privacy. She is currently at work on a book about the social relationship between marriage and gender in same-sex couples. Kim offers many thanks to Heidi Arnesen, Carlys Lemler, Timothy Pedergnana, and Mia Volkening for their excellent research assistance. ROBERT S. OLICK, who has both a J.D. and a Ph.D., is a professor at SUNY Upstate Medical University where he directs the Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues in Medicine component of the first-year curriculum. He also served previously as executive director of the New Jersey Bioethics Commission and as chief consultant to the New Jersey Governor’s Advisory Council on AIDS. DEBORAH T. PORITZ is a retired chief justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court. She began her legal career in the New Jersey Department of Law and Public Safety, where she served...

Share