Peter Fitzgerald

. . . whose op/ed, "Tallahassee shouldn't run U.S. foreign policy," appears in today's St. Petersburg Times.


Luz Nagle

Tampa, FL. – WRMD Telemundo Tampa is honoring four Hispanic leaders for outstanding service and dedication to the Tampa Bay community with the Triunfadores campaign. Triunfadores is Spanish for achievers or victors and are people who have overcome obstacles to accomplish their goals. Telemundo Tampa recognizes Triunfadores who make positive contributions to their communities. The campaign consists of a series of on-air vignettes that highlight life accomplishments and community service of leaders in the Tampa Bay area. This year’s honorees include Bella Canasi, Community Service Activist; Luz Nagle, International and Criminal Law Professor at Stetson University; Vivian Quinones-Solano, Regional Director for Florida Blood Services, and the Honorable Charlie Miranda, City Council Member.


Brooke Bowman, Catherine Cameron, Kirsten Davis, and Marco Jimenez.

. . . all of whom presented at the Florida Junior Faculty Forum on November 15.


Luz Nagle

On Tuesday, November 25, 2008, Professor Nagle will speak to the International Law Section of the St. Petersburg Bar Association from 6:30 - 8:30 PM at the Vinoy Social Room, 555 Fifth Ave. NE. She will be addressing "International Extradition, International Law Issues in Extradition for Crimes Beyond a Nation's Borders: Columbia a Case in Point." On Wednesday, December 3, 2008, she will address the American Committee on Foreign Relations in St. Louis. Her topic will be "Establishing the Rule of Law in the Midst of Conflict."


Michael Allen

Professor Allen's article, The Underappreciated First Amendment Importance of Lawrence v. Texas has appeared in print at 65 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1045 (2008). In addition, he has been invited to participate in a symposium on “Alternate Conceptions of the Judicial Role,” to be held in April 2009 at Seattle University Law School. The papers will be published in the Seattle University Law Review. His paper is titled "A (Limited) Defense of (at Least Some of) the Umpire Analogy."


Linda Anderson

. . . whose article "Adding Players to the Game: Parentage Determinations When Assisted Reproductive Technology Is Used to Create Families," will be published in the Spring 2009 issue of the Arkansas Law Review.


Rebecca Trammell

. . . who has been appointed to the Law Library Board of Trustees for the Sixth Judicial Circuit.


Janice McClendon

. . . who has published "The Death Knell of Traditional Defined Benefit Plans: Avoiding a Race to the 401(K) Bottom," in the Fall 2007 issue of the Temple Law Review.


Michael Allen and Rebecca Morgan

. . . who participated in a videoconference program on "Emerging Issues: Returning Veterans, PTSD and Other Injuries, and Their Impact on the Criminal Justice" on Friday, Oct. 31. The program was sponsored by National Clearinghouse for Science, Technology and the Law at Stetson University College of Law. Professor Morgan moderated the program from the Eleazer Courtroom. Professor Allen was one of two presenters in the Eleazer Courtroom who discuswsed the issues, programs, and criminal courts' responses to veterans with PTSD, with the remaining three prsenters particpating from Menlo Park, California. The program was planned by Professor Carol Henderson and Dr. Susan Zucker of the Clearinghouse.


Peter Lake

. . . who was a featured speaker earlier this month at the NACA's regional conference in Lancaster, Pa.


Candace Zierdt and Ellen Podgor

. . . on the publication of "Back Against the Wall: Corporate Deferred Prosecution Through the Lens of Contract 'Policing," in Criminal Justice, a publication of the ABA's Section of Criminal Justice (Fall 2008).


Kristen Adams

. . . who presented "It Was Homeownership: American Dream or Illusion of Empowerment," at a syposium this week at the University of South Carolina School of Law.