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Margalynne Armstrong, Associate
Professor of Law:
Teaching Race/Teaching Whiteness: Transforming Colorblindness
to Color Insight, 86 North Carolina Law Review 635 (2008) also
available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1108476;
"Can Good Samaritan Laws Fit into the United States Legal/Political
Framework?" Santa Clara Law Review 40/4 (2000);
"Race and Property Values in Entrenched Segregation,"
52 Miami Law Review 1051 (1998); contributing author
to Privilege Revealed: How Invisible Preference Undermines
America (1996); "Desegregation through Private Litigation:
Using Equitable Remedies to Achieve the Purposes of the Fair
Housing Act," 64 Temple Law Review 909 (1991); "Meditations
on Being Good," 6 Berkeley Women's Law Journal 42
(1991).
Robert Audi, Distinguished Professor
of the College of Arts & Sciences, SCU, and David E. Gallo,
Professor of Business Ethics, Notre Dame University:
Moral Value and Human Diversity, (Oxford University Press,
2007), pp. xiv + 144; Belief, Intention, and Reasons for Action,
in Mark Timmons, John Greco, and Alfred R. Mele, eds., Rationality
and the Good: Critical Essays on the Ethics and Epistemology
of Robert Audi, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2007 (A collection
of thirteen critical papers on my work, cloth and paperback),
248- 282; Can Utilitarianism Be Distributive? Maximization and
Distribution as Standards in Managerial Decisions, Business
Ethics Quarterly 17, 4, 2007, 593- 611; Divine Command Morality
and the Autonomy of Ethics, Faith and Philosophy 24, 2, 2007,
121- 143; The Grounds and Structure of Reasons for Action, in
Christoph Lumer and Sandro Nannini, eds., Intentionality, Deliberation
and Autonomy: The Action- Theoretic Basis of Practical Philosophy,
Aldershott, Ashgate, 2007, 135- 66; Intuition, Reflection, and
Justification, in Timmons, Greco, and Mele, eds., 201- 221;
Religion and Public Education in Constitutional Democracies,
Virginia Law Review 93, 4, 2007, 1175- 1195; The Place
of Cost-Benefit Analysis in Business and the Professions,
Business and Professional Ethics Journal (2007); The Many
Faces of Integrity, Business Ethics Quarterly 16:1 (2006);
"Moral Foundations of Liberal Democracy, Secular Reasons,
and Liberal Neutrality Toward the Good," Notre Dame
Journal of Law, Ethics, & Public Policy, 19:1 (2005);
The Good in the Right: A Theory of Intuition and Intrinsic
Value (Princeton University Press, 2004); Rationality,
Rules, and Ideals: Critical Essays on Bernard Gert's Moral Theory
(2001); "Religion, Law, and Morality in Democratic Societies:
Divine Command Ethics and the Separation of Religion and Politics,"
The Modern Schoolman 78/2-3 (2001); "Religious Values,
Political Action, and Civic Discourse," Indiana University
Law Journal 75/1 (2000); "Moderate Intuitionism and
the Epistemology of Moral Judgment," Ethical Theory
and Moral Practice 1/1 (1998); "The Axiology of Moral
Experience," Journal of Ethics 2/4 (1998); Moral
Knowledge and Ethical Character (1997); "Preventing
Abortion as a Test Case for the Justifiability of Violence,"
Journal of Ethics 1/2 (1997); "The Ethics of Advocacy,"
Legal Theory 1/3 (1995); "Moral Epistemology and
the Supervenience of Ethical Concepts," Southern Journal
of Philosophy (1990); editor of Rationality, Religious
Belief, and Moral Commitment (1986).
Christine Bachen, Associate Professor
of Communication:
scholar (communication), "Portrayals of Information and
Communication Technology on World Wide Web Sites for Girls,"
The Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 11:3 (May
2006). The article was co-authored with former student Kathleen
M. Lynn and current students Jessica Baldwin-Philippi and Kristen
McKee. Co-author "Bridging the Gender Gap in Computing:
An Integrative Approach to Content Design for Girls," Journal
of Educational Computing Research 28:2; Co-author of "Support
for FCC Minority Ownership Policy: How Broadcast Station Owner
Race or Ethnicity Affects News and Public Affairs Programming
Diversity," Communication Law and Policy 6 (2001);
co-author of "Assessing the Role of Gender in College Students'
Evaluations of Faculty," Communication Education
48 (1999); Diversity of Programming in the Broadcast Spectrum:
Is There a Link between Owner Race or Ethnicity and News and
Public Affairs Programming? (1999).
Denise Lardner Carmody, Provost
and Jesuit Community Professor of Religious Studies:
Co-author of Serene Compassion: A Christian Appreciation
of Buddhism (1996); "Lonergan's Transcendental Precepts
and the Foundations of Christian Feminist Ethics," in Lonergan
and Feminism (1994); Christian Ethics: An Introduction
through History and Current Issues (1993); The Future
of Prophetic Christianity: Essays in Honor of Robert McAfee
Brown (1993); Virtuous Woman: Reflections on Christian
Feminist Ethics (1992); "Authority & Responsibility
in the Classroom," in Bulletin of the Council for the
Societies Studying Religion (1990); Peace and Justice
in the Scriptures of the World Religions (1988); How
to Live Well: Ethics in the World Religions (1987).
David DeCosse, Director of Campus
Ethics Programs:
"Freedom of the Press and Catholic Social Thought: Reflections
on the Sexual Abuse Scandal in the U.S. Catholic Church,"
Theological Studies, December 2007; Review: "Deporting
Our Souls: Values, Morality, and Immigration Policy" by
Bill Ong Hing (Cambridge University Press, 2006), Theological
Studies, December 2007; "Authority, Lies, and War,"
Theological Studies (forthcoming)."The Church, the Political
Community, and the Compendium," America (forthcoming).A
book review essay on "The Just War Revisited" by Oliver
O'Donovan (Cambridge University Press, 2003) and "Arguing
About War" by Michael Walzer (Yale University Press, 2004)
in Theological Studies, forthcoming; "Rahner's Ethics
and the Pacific Rim," in Karl Rahner at the Pacific
Rim: The Encounter of Spiritualities, Religions, and Cultures,
Paul Cowley, S.J., ed., (Sheed & Ward, forthcoming); review
of The Bonds of Freedom: Feminist Theology and Christian
Realism by Rebekah L. Miles, Journal of the College Theology
Society (Spring 2004); "Authority, Democracy, and the Iraq
War," The Heythrop Journal: A Quarterly Review of Philosophy
and Theology, forthcoming.
Marilyn Edelstein, Associate
Professor of English:
"My Mother's Legacy: Trying to Make a Difference through
Teaching and Research," explore 3/3 (2000); "Ethics
and Contemporary American Literature: Revisiting the Controversy
over John Gardners On Moral Fiction," Pacific
Coast Philology 31 (1996); "Toward a Feminist Postmodern
Polethique: Kristeva on Ethics and Politics," in K. Oliver,
ed., Ethics, Politics, and Difference in Julia Kristevas
Writing (1993); "Ethics, Education, and Political Correctness,"
Issues in Ethics 5/2 (1992).
Marilyn Fernandez, Associate
Professor of Anthropology and Sociology:
"My Journey into the World of Justice Research," explore
3/3 (2000); co-author of "Ecological Analysis of Program
Impact: A Site Analysis of Programs for Pregnant and Parenting
Adolescents in Illinois," Journal of Applied Sociology
15/1 (1998); co-author of "Dominant and Minority Couples:
An Exploratory Analysis of Strategies for Family Economic Well-Being,"
in Dana Vannoy and Paula Dubeck, eds., Issues for Integrating
Work and Family in the 21st Century (1998); "Asian
Indian Americans in the Bay Area and the Glass Ceiling,"
Sociological Perspectives 41/1 (1998); "Domestic
Violence by Extended Family Members in India: Interplay of Gender
and Generation," Journal of Interpersonal Violence 12/3
(1997); co-author of "Dependency and Severity of Abuse:
Impact on Women's Persistence in Utilizing the Court System
as Protection Against Domestic Violence," Women &
Criminal Justice 9/1 (1997); co-author of "Liberation
of Asian American Women: An Uncertain Quest," International
Journal of Sociology of the Family 24 (1994); co-author
of "Ethnicity and Effects of Age Gap Between Unmarried
Adolescent Mothers and Partners," Journal of Adolescent
Research 8/4 (1993); co-author of "Alcohol Use, Abuse,
and Dependency in Shanghai," in John Helzer and Glorisa
Canino, eds., Alcoholism in North America, Europe, and Asia
(1992); "Suicide among Asian American Youth," in Marcia
Feinleib, ed., Report on the Prevention and Intervention
of Youth Suicide, Volume III (1989).
Karen Fox, Associate Professor of
Marketing:
Co-author of Social Marketing for Noncommercial Organizations
(1997); "The Use of Social Marketing to Encourage Organ
Donation," in James Shanteau and Richard Harris, eds.,
Organ Donation and Transplantation (1990); "Oral
Rehydration Therapy and Contraceptive Social Marketing in Egypt,"
Studies in Family Planning (1988); "The Impact of
Social Marketing on Mass Health Promotion Campaigns," in
Scott Smith and M. Venkatesan, eds., Advances in Health Care
Research (1982).
Sara Garcia, Director, Teacher
Education Program, Associate Professor, Department of Education:
ed., Educacion Ecologica: Praxis Interdisciplinaria en Torno
a la Sequia en Chihuahua (Jalapa Veracruz, Mexico: Instituto
de Ecologia, forthcoming).
Kirk O. Hanson, executive director, Markkula Center
for Applied Ethics:
The Case of Nutritional Foods, International Food
and Agribusiness Management Review, http://ifama.org/dispatch.asp?page=ifamr_journal,
(2008). The case will be used in the Student Case Competition
of the International Food and Agribusiness Management Association.
The Accountable Corporation, four volumes (Praeger, 2006).
Timothy Healy, Thomas Bannan Professor
of Electrical Engineering:
"Assessment of Proposed Technologies," American Society
of Electrical Engineers Conference, Albuquerque, NM, June 2001;
"After Dolly," Issues in Ethics 8/3 (1997);
"The Bewitching Miss Julia," Issues in Ethics
7/2 (1996).
Francisco Jimenez, Professor of
Modern Languages:
An essay on Home in Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives, John
Edwards, ed. (HarperCollins, 2006); Breaking Through (2001);
The Christmas Gift/El Regalo de Navidad (2000); La
Mariposa (1998); The Circuit: Stories from the Life of
a Migrant Child (1997); edited Poverty and Social Justice:
Critical Perspectives (1987).
Stephen Johnson, Director of Character
Education, Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, and Lecturer
in Education:
"Character-based Literacy," keynote talk, Juvenile
Court Community School Administrators of California Convention,
Nov. 16, 2001; "Building a Positive School Climate,"
weeklong presentation for the Juneau, Alaska, public school
system, Nov. 19-23, 2001; Dozens of articles on character-based
literacy programs, at http://www.scu.edu/publications/cblp/;
"An Education in Ethics," Issues in Ethics
10/1 (1999).
Diane Jonte-Pace, Professor
of Religious Studies:
"Tracking the Emotion in the Stone: An Essay in Psychoanalysis
and Architecture," The Annual of Psychoanalysis 1 (2006)."Psychoanalysis,
Colonialism, and Modernity," Religious Studies Review 31:
1 (January 2006)."The Impact of Womens Studies on
the Psychology of Religion: Feminist Critique, Gender Analysis,
and the Inclusion of Women,", Methodology in Religious
Studies: The Interface with Women's Studies, Sharma ed.
(SUNY, 2002); Speaking the Unspeakable: Religion, Misogyny,
and the Uncanny Mother in Freuds Cultural Texts (2001);
co-editor of Mapping Religion and Psychological Studies
(2001), and author of "Analysts, Critics, and Inclusivists:
Feminist Voices in the Psychology of Religion" in that
anthology; "'Legitimation of Hatred or Inversion into Love:
Religion in Kristeva's Re-Reading of Freud," Research
in the Social Scientific Study of Religion 10 (1999); "In
Defense of an Unfriendly Freud: Psychoanalysis, Feminism, and
Theology," Pastoral Psychology 47/3 (1999); "New
Directions in Feminist Psychology of Religion: An Introduction,"
Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, 13/1 (1997);
"Julia Kristeva and the Psychoanalytic Study of Religion:
Rethinking Freud's Cultural Texts," in Janet Jacobs and
Donald Capps, eds., Religion, Society, and Psychoanalysis:
Readings in Contemporary Theory (1997); "At Home in
the Uncanny: Freudian Representations of Death, Mothers, and
the Afterlife," Journal of the American Academy of Religion
64/1 (1996); "The Quest for the Religious Freud: Faith,
Morality, and Gender in Psychoanalysis," Annals of Scholarship
6/4 (1989).
Philip Kain, Professor of Philosophy:
"Hegel's Critique of Kantian Practical Reason," Canadian
Journal of Philosophy 28 (1998); "Nietzschean Genealogy
and Hegelian History in the Genealogy of Morals," Canadian
Journal of Philosophy 26 (1996); "Rousseau, the General
Will, and Individual Liberty," History of Philosophy
Quarterly 7 (1990); Marx and Ethics (1988); "Marx,
Justice, and the Dialectic Method," Journal of the History
of Philosophy 24 (1986); "The Young Marx and Kantian
Ethics," Studies in Soviet Thought 31 (1986); "Marx
and the Abolition of Morality," Journal of Value Inquiry
18 (1984).
Michael Kevane, Associate Professor
of Economics:
scholar (economics),Sweatshops: Ethical Aspects,
in Sweatshops, Sumathi Reddy, ed. (Hyderabad: The Institute
of Chartered Financial Analysts of India University Press, 2006);
Freedom, Servitude and Voluntary Contracts, in Freedom:
The Ethics and Economics of Slave Redemption, Martin Bunzl and
K. Anthony Appiah, eds. (Princeton University Press, 2007; reviews
in the Sudan Studies Association Newsletter of Darfur:
The Ambiguous Genocide by Gerard Prunier, 24:1 (October
2005); Darfur: A Short History of a Long War by Alex
de Waal and Julie Flint, 24:2 (February 2006); and "All
About Darfur," a film by Taghreed ElSahnhouri, 24:2 (February
2006). Women and Development in Africa: How Gender Works (Boulder,
CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2004).
Christopher Kulp, Associate Professor
of Philosophy:
"Demonizing Our Opponents," Issues in Ethics
7/3 (1996).
Scott LaBarge, scholar (classics), "Socrates and
Moral Expertise," Ethics Expertise: History, Contemporary
Perspectives, and Applications, Lisa Rasmussen, ed. (Springer
Press, 2005).
Dale Larson, Professor of Counseling Psychology:
scholar (counseling psychology), with J.B. Engelhardt, K.P.
McClive-Reed, R.W. Toseland, T.L. Smith, and D.R. Tobin, "Effects
of a Program for Coordinated Care of Advanced Illness on Patients,
Surrogates, and Healthcare Costs: A Randomized Trial,"
American Journal of Managed Care 12, (2006)."Becky's
Legacy: More Lessons," Death Studies 29 (2005).Senior editor
and contributing author Finding Our Way: Living With Dying
(2002); Co-author "Interdisciplinary Approaches to
Assisting With End-of-life Care and Decision Making," American
Behavioral Scientist, 46 (2002); "End-of-Life Conversations:
Evolving Practice and Theory," JAMA 284 (2000);
"Anticipatory Mourning: Challenges for Professional and
Volunteer Caregivers," in T. A. Rando, ed., Clinical
Dimensions of Anticipatory Mourning (2000); The Helper's
Journey: Working with People Facing Grief, Loss, and Life-Threatening
Illness (1993); "Self-Concealment: Implications for
Stress and Empathy in Oncology Care," Journal of Psychosocial
Oncology 11 (1993); "The Challenge of Caring in Oncology
Nursing," Oncology Nursing Forum 19 (1992); "Helper
Secrets: Invisible Stressors in Hospice Work," American
Journal of Hospice Care 2 (1985).
Margaret R. McLean, Director of
Biotechnology and Healthcare Ethics, Markkula Center for Applied
Ethics, Director of OConnor Hospitals Applied Ethics
Center, and Lecturer in Religious Studies:
To Boldly Go: Ethical Considerations for Space Exploration,
to be reprinted by the Educational Testing Service in a forthcoming
AP Examination; Religion, Ethics, and the Human Genome
Project, in Science, Religion, and Society: An Encyclopedia
of History, Culture, and Controversy, Arri Eisen and Gary Laderman,
eds. (M. E. Sharpe, 2007); Reviews of Compassionate Respect
by Margaret A. Farley and Crowned with Glory and Honor
by Christopher D. Marshall, Religious Studies Review 30: 2,3
(April, July 2004); "Heredity," "Behavioral Genetics,"
and "Behavioral Research," Religion in Geschichte
und Gegenwart 4 (forthcoming); review of Catholic Health
Care Ethics: A Manual for Ethics Committees, ed. by Peter
Cataldo and Albert S. Moraczeweski in Religious Studies Review
29:3 (July 2003); "Biotech Ethics Must Be Supported With
Facts," Silicon Valley Biz Ink (Aug. 29-Sept. 4, 2003);
"The Ethical Meets the Political," BioProcess International,
1:4, (April 2003); "What's in a Name? 'Nuclear Transplantation'
and the Ethics of Stem Cell Research," and "Seeing
Double: The Ethics of Human Cloning," Hastings Law Journal,
53 (2002); "Red Light, Green Light: The California Cloning
and Stem Cell Laws," Hastings Center Report (Nov.-Dec.
2002); Co-author of "Genetically Modified Foods,"
Business and Professional Ethics Journal (forthcoming);
"Stem Cells: Shaping the Future in Public Policy,"
in Suzanne Holland et al., eds., The Human Embryonic Stem
Cell Debate: Science, Ethics and Public Policy (2001); "Genetics,"
in Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart (2001); "Much
Ado about Cloning in the Public Square," University
of Toledo Law Review 32/3 (2001); "A Step into the
Private Lives of Stem Cells," Journal of Lutheran Ethics,
September 2001; "What Will We Face in the Coming Genetic
Century?" San Jose Mercury News, 14 January 1999;
"When What We Know Outstrips What We Can Do," Issues
in Ethics 9/2 (1998), 6-10; "Just Because We Can, Should
We?" San Jose Mercury News, 18 January 1998; "Confronting
the Ultimate Questions," Issues in Ethics 8/1 (1997);
"A Moral World Red in Tooth and Claw,"
CTNS Bulletin 11 (1991).
Peter Minowitz, Professor of
Political Science:
"Adam Smith's Invisible Hands," Economics
Journal Watch, 1:3 (December, 2004);"Political
Philosophy and the Religious Issue: From the Ancient Regime
to Modern Capitalism," in William Kristol and Mark Blitz,
eds., Educating the Prince: Essays in Honor of Harvey Mansfield
(2000); "The Ethics of Impeachment," San Jose Mercury
News, 20 December 1998; "Prince versus Prophet: Machiavellianism
in Frank Herberts Dune Epic," in D. Hassler and C.
Wilcox, eds., Political Science Fiction (1997); Prophets,
Priests, and Princes: Adam Smiths Emancipation of Economics
from Politics and Religion (1993); "Crimes and Controversies:
Nihilism from Machiavelli to Woody Allen," Literature
& Film Quarterly 19/2 (1991); "Invisible Hand,
Invisible Death: Adam Smith on War and Socioeconomic Development,"
Journal of Political/Military Sociology 17 (1989).
Dennis Moberg, Professor of Management:
scholar (management), "Ethics Blind Spots in Organizations:
How Systematic Errors in Person Perception Undermine Moral Agency,"
Organization Studies, 27:3 (2006). "Managers as
Judges in Employee Disputes: An Occassion for Moral Imagination,"
Business Ethics Quarterly 13:4 (2003); coeditor and contributing
author, The Next Phase of Business Ethics: Integrating Psychology
and Ethics, (Elsevier Science, 2002); with Martin
Calkins, S.J., "Reflection in Business Ethics: Insights
from St. Ignatius' Spiritual Exercises," Journal of
Business Ethics, 33; "The Aging Workforce: Prospects
for Ethical Behavior in Organizations," Business and
Society Review (forthcoming); co-editor of The Next Phase
of Business Ethics: Integrating Psychology and Ethics (2002);
co-author of "Reflection in Business Ethics: Insights from
St. Ignatius' Spiritual Exercises," Journal of Business
Ethics 33/3 (2001); "Time Pressure and Ethical Decision
Making," Business and Professional Ethics Journal
19 (2000); co-author of "The Development of Moral Imagination,"
Business Ethics Quarterly 10 (2000); "Role Models
and Moral Exemplars," Business Ethics Quarterly
10/3 (2000); "The Big Five and Organizational Virtue,"
Business Ethics Quarterly 9 (1999); "Interpersonal
Manipulation: Its Nature and Moral Limits," in M. Schminke,
ed., Managerial Ethics (1998); "Trustworthiness
and Conscientiousness as Managerial Virtues," Business
& Professional Ethics Journal 16/1-3 (1997-98); "On
Employee Vice," Business Ethics Quarterly 7 (1997).
Lawrence Nelson, Adjunct Associate
Professor of Philosophy and Women and Gender Studies:
"Confronting Deep Moral Disagreement: The President's Council
on Bioethics, Moral Status, and Human Embryos," The American
Journal of Bioethics 5:6 (December 2005)."Is There an Indication
for Ethics Evidence? An Argument for the Admissibility of Some
Expert Bioethics Testimony," The Journal of Law, Medicine
& Ethics, 33:2 (2005); "Preimplantation Diagnosis,"
in A Textbook of Perinatal Medicine, A. Kurjak, ed.,
2005 edition (CRC Press-Parthenon Publishers, forthcoming);
"Wendland and Forgoing Life-Sustaining Treatment for the
Incompetent," The Health Lawyer, 14:3 (April 2002); Co-author
of "Respecting What We Destroy: Reflections on Human Embryo
Research," Hastings Center Report (January-February
2001); "Ethical Issues in the Perinatal Period,"
in Care of the High Risk Neonate, edited by M. Klaus and
A. Faranoff, 5th edition (2000); co-author of "Michael
Martin and Robert Wendland: Beyond the Vegetative State,"
The Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy 15
(1999); co-author of "Forgoing Medically Provided Nutrition
and Hydration in Pediatric Patients," Journal of Law,
Medicine & Ethics 23/1 (1995); "Medical Futility
and the Clinician's Conscience," in R. Misbin, et al.,
eds., Health Care Crisis? The Search for Answers (1995);
co-author of "Ethics and the Provision of Futile, Harmful,
or Burdensome Treatment to Children," Critical Care
Medicine 20/3 (1992); co-author of "Advocacy, Ethics,
and the Law," in M. Jessup, ed., Drug Dependency in
Pregnancy: Managing Withdrawal (1992); co-author of "Legal
Advice, Moral Paralysis, and the Death of Samuel Linares,"
Law, Medicine & Health Care 17/4 (1989); "Law,
Ethics, and Advance Directives Regarding the Medical Care of
AIDS Patients," in E. Juengst and B. Koenig, eds., The
Meaning of AIDS (1989); co-author of "Compelled Medical
Treatment of Pregnant Women: Life, Liberty and Law in Conflict,"
JAMA 259 (1988).
David Palmer, Senior Lecturer in
Management:
"Schumpeter and Reconciling Divisive Responses to the Bishops
Letter," Journal of Business Ethics, November 1988;
co-author of "Issues Management and Ethics," Journal
of Business Ethics, March 1988.
Thomas Plante, Professor of Psychology:
scholar (psychology), with F. Barry, "Homosexual Candidates,
the Seminary and the Priesthood,"The Priest 62 (2006).
"Ethics for Dummies: Keeping the Ethics Code Simple,"
The California Psychologist, 37, 23-24 (2004); "Ethics
Made Simple: Using the RRICC Model of Personal and Professional
Ethics," The Clinical Psychologist, 57, 28-30 (2004);
"After the Earthquake," (on clergy sexual abuse) America
190:1 (Jan. 5, 2004); "Priests Behaving Badly: What Do
We Know About Priest Sex Offenders?" Journal of Sexual
Addiction and Compulsivity 9 (2003); "The Sexual Abuse
Crisis in the Roman Catholic Church,"The California
Psychologist, 35, 26-27 (2002); Do the Right Thing: Living
Ethically in an Unethical World (Oakland, CA: New Harbinger,
2004); Sin against the Innocents: Sexual Abuse by Priests
and the Role of the Catholic Church (Westport, CT: Greenwood,
2004); "Won't you be my neighbor? Mr. Rogers as an Ethical
Model," Clio's Psyche: Understanding the 'Why' of Culture,
Current Events, History, and Society, 10, 23; "Mirror
Me: Is This the Message Graduate Students in Clinical Psychology
Get From Their Graduate School Faculty?" The Clinical
Psychologist, 56, 10-13.; "Promoting Justice in the
Curriculum: Integrating Service-Learning and Ethical Decision
Making," Blueprint for Social Justice 54 (2000);
"Ethical Standards in Contemporary Clinical Psychology,"
in his book, Contemporary Clinical Psychology (1999);
"Ten Strategies for Psychological Trainees and Practicing
Psychologists Interested in Avoiding Ethical and Legal Perils,"
Psychotherapy 36 (1999); edited and authored two chapters
in Bless Me Father for I Have Sinned: Perspectives on Sexual
Abuse Committed by Roman Catholic Priests (1999); "Teaching
Psychology Ethics to Undergraduates," Teaching of Psychology
25 (1998); co-authored "Attitudes Concerning Professional
Issues Impacting Psychotherapy Practice among Members of the
American Board of Professional Psychology," Psychotherapy
35 (1998); "Training Child Clinical Predoctoral Interns
and Postdoctoral Fellows in Ethics and Professional Issues:
An Experiential Model," Professional Psychology: Research
and Practice 26 (1995).
Barry Posner, Dean and Professor
of Leadership, Leavey School of Business:
The Leadership Challenge, third edition (forthcoming);
"What Does It Mean to Act with Integrity," Teaching
Business Ethics (forthcoming); co-author of "Managerial
Values Across Cultures: Australia, Hong Kong and the U.S.,"
Asia-Pacific Journal of Management 14 (1997); co-author
of "The Values of Business and Federal Government Executives:
More Different Than Alike," Public Personnel Management
25/3 (1996); co-author of "A Cross-Cultural Investigation
of the Shared Values Relationship" International Journal
of Value-Based Management 11/4 (1995); co-author of "Demographic
Characteristics and Shared Values" International Journal
of Value-Based Management 5/1 (1992); co-author of "Values
Congruence and Differences between the Interplay of Personal
and Organizational Value Systems," Journal of Business
Ethics 12 (1992); co-author of "Ethical Leaders: An
Essay About Being in Love," Journal of Business Ethics
11 (1992); co-author of "The Values of American Managers:
Then and Now," Management Review 81/2 (1992); co-author
of Managerial Values in Perspective (1983).
William Prior, Professor of Philosophy:
"The Virtue of Generosity," Explore (Fall 2005)."Eudaimonism
and Virtue," Journal of Value Enquiry 35/3 (2001);
"'We Aren't Here to Do the Decent Thing': Saving Private
Ryan and the Morality of War," Parameters, Autumn
2000; "Teaching Compassion Philosophically," explore
3/3 (2000); co-author of "Thomson on the Moral Specification
of Rights," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
56 (1996); Virtue and Knowledge: An Introduction to Ancient
Greek Ethics (1991); "Can Virtue be Taught?" Laetaberis:
The Journal of the California Classical Association 8 (1990-91);
editor of "Reason and Moral Judgment," Logos
10 (1989); editor of "Manufactured Motherhood: The Ethics
of the New Reproductive Techniques," Logos 9 (1988);
"Compassion: A Critique of Moral Rationalism," Philosophy
& Theology 2 (1987); "Abortion and the Good Samaritan,"
Logos 3 (1982).
Elizabeth Radcliffe, Associate
Professor of Philosophy:
"Moral Sense Theory" and "Sentimentalism,"
in Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy (1999); "Morality
(Ethics)," in E. Barbarell and D. Garrett, eds., Encyclopedia
of Empiricism (1997); "Kantian Tunes on a Humean Instrument:
Why Hume Is Not Really a Skeptic about Practical Reasoning,"
Canadian Journal of Philosophy 27 (1997); "How Does
the Humean Sense of Duty Motivate?" Journal of the History
of Philosophy 34 (1996); "Hume on Passion, Pleasure,
and the Reasonableness of Ends," Southwest Philosophy
Review 10 (1994); "Hume on Motivating Sentiments, the
General Point of View, and the Inculcation of Morality,"
Hume Studies 20 (1994); "Hutchesons Perceptual
and Moral Subjectivism," History of Philosophy Quarterly
3 (1986).
Chad Raphael, Assistant Professor
of Communication:
scholar (communication), "Portrayals of Information and
Communication Technology on World Wide Web Sites for Girls,"
The Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 11:3 (May
2006). The article was co-authored with former student Kathleen
M. Lynn and current students Jessica Baldwin-Philippi and Kristen
McKee. Investigated Reporting: Muckrakers, Regulators, and the
Struggle Over Television Documentary (University of Illinois
Press, 2005)."The political-economic origins of Reali-TV,"
S. Murray and L. Ouel-lette, eds., Reality TV: The Re-making
of Television Culture (New York: New York University Press,
2004); with Tokunaga, L., and Wai, C., "Who is the real
target? Media response to controversial investigative reporting
on corporations," Journalism Studies 5:2 (2004);
Co-author "High Tech Goes Green," Yes! A Journal
of Positive Futures (Spring 2003); Co-author "Bridging
the Gender Gap in Computing: An Integrative Approach to Content
Design for Girls," Journal of Educational Computing
Research 28:2; "The Web," in Richard Maxwell,
ed., Culture Works: Essays on the Political Economy of Culture
(2001); "The FCC's Broadcast News Distortion Rules: Regulation
by Drooping Eyelid," Communication Law and Policy
6 (2001); "Utopia Out of Place: Studs' Place, Popular Front
Culture, and the Blacklist in Early Chicago Television,"
Quarterly Review of Film and Video 16 (1999).
Margaret Russell, Professor School
of Law:
"Reopening the Emmett Till Case: Challenges for Critical
Race Practice," Fordham Law Review, April, 2005;
"Foreword: A New Journal of Race and Poverty Law,"
1 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal (Fall 2003);
"Cleansing Moments and Retrospective Justice," Michigan
Law Review (2003); "Update on Post 9/11 Civil Liberties
Developments," Los Angeles Daily Journal (October
2002); "McLaurin's Seat: The Need for Racial Inclusion
in Legal Education, " in Fordham Law Review (March
2002); "African American Women and Reproductive Rights,"
Historical and Multicultural Encyclopedia of Reproductive
Rights, ed. Judith Baer (Greenwood 2002).
Hersh Shefrin, Professor of Finance:
Co-author of "On Financial Ethics," Financial Management,
Autumn 1993; co-author of "Ethics, Fairness and Efficiency
in Financial Markets," Financial Analysts Journal,
November/December 1993; co-author of Fairness, Efficiency,
and the Regulation of Financial Markets (1992); co-author
of "Ex-Post Efficiency and Ex-Post Welfare: Some Fundamental
Considerations," Economica, 55 (1988); co-author
of "Welfare Losses Arising from Increased Public Information
and/or the Opening of New Security Markets," in B. Stigum
and F. Wenstop, eds., Foundations of Utility and Risk Theory
With Applications (1983).
William Sundstrom, Professor
of Economics:
Co-author of "The Emergence, Persistence, and Recent Widening
of the Racial Unemployment Gap," Industrial and Labor
Relations Review 52 (1999); The Geography of Wage
Discrimination in the Pre-Civil Rights South, Journal
of Economic History 67:2 (June 2007), pp. 410-44; "The
Income Gap," Issues in Ethics 9 (1998); co-author
of "The Racial Unemployment Gap in Long-Run Perspective,"
American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 87 (1997);
"Explaining the Racial Unemployment Gap: Race, Region,
and the Employment Status of Men, 1940," Industrial
and Labor Relations Review 50 (1997); "Down or Out:
Changes in the Employment and Occupational Status of Urban Black
Men During the Great Depression," Research in Economic
History 16 (1996); "The Color Line: Racial Norms and
Discrimination in Urban Labor Markets, 1910-1950," Journal
of Economic History 54 (1994); "Half a Career: Discrimination
and Railroad Internal Labor Markets," Industrial Relations
29 (1990).
Jiri Toman, Professor of Law:
with Dietrich Schindler, eds., The Laws of Armed Conflicts,
4th Revised Edition (Brill Academic Publishers, 2004); The
Protection of Cultural Property in The Event of Armed Conflict
(1996); "Quasi-Legal Standards and Guidelines for Protecting
Human Rights," in H. Hannum, ed., Guide to International
Human Rights Practice, 2nd ed. (1992); co-editor of The
Laws of Armed Conflicts. A Collection of Conventions, Resolutions
and Other Documents, 3rd ed. (1988); "Quasi-Legal Standards
and Guidelines for Protecting the Human Rights of Detained Persons,"
in H. Hannum, ed., Guide to International Human Rights Practice
(1984); co-editor of Bibliography of International Humanitarian
Law Applicable in Armed Conflicts (1980); Index of the
Geneva Conventions for the Protection of War Victims of 12 August
1949 (1973).
Gerald Uelmen, Professor of Law:
scholar (law), "Catholic Jurors and the Death Penalty,"
Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 44 (2005). "Fighting
Fire With Fire: A Reflection on the Ethics of Clarence Darrow,"
Symposium on Legal Ethics in the Fordham Law Review (March,
2003); "Cleaning Up Judicial Elections," California
Lawyer 21/4 (2001); "Justice in the Law School Curriculum,"
explore 3/1 (1999); "Leaks, Gags and Shields: Taking
Responsibility," 37 Santa Clara Law Review 943 (1997);
"The Five Hardest Lessons of the O.J. Trial," Issues
in Ethics 7/1 (1996); "Justice Thurgood Marshall and
the Death Penalty: A Former Criminal Defense Lawyer on the Supreme
Court," Arizona State Law Journal 26/2 (1994); "The
Price of Free Speech: Campus Hate-Speech Codes," Issues
in Ethics 5/2 (1992); "Mortal Decisions: Who Decides?"
Issues in Ethics 4/2 (1991); "Disqualification of
Judges for Campaign Support or Opposition," 3 Georgia
Journal of Legal Ethics 419 (1990); "Converting Retained
Lawyers Into Appointed Lawyers: The Ethical and Tactical Implications,"
27 Santa Clara Law Review 1 (1987); California Death
Penalty Laws and the California Supreme Court: A Ten Year Perspective
(1986).
Manuel Velasquez, Charles Dirksen
Professor of Business Ethics, Management Department:
"Ethical Relativism and the International Business Manager,"
in Studies in Economic Ethics and Philosophy (forthcoming);
Business Ethics: Concepts and Cases, 5th edition (2002);
co-author of "Natural Law and Business Ethics," Business
Ethics Quarterly 7/2 (1997); "Business Ethics, the
Social Sciences, and Moral Philosophy," Social Justice
Research (1996); "Immigration: Is Exclusion Just?"
Issues in Ethics 7/2 (1996); co-author of "Why Ethics
Matters: A Defense of Ethics in Business Organizations,"
Business Ethics Quarterly (1996); "Making Business
Ethics Practical," Business Ethics Quarterly 5/3
(1995); "International Business Ethics: The Aluminum Companies
in Jamaica," Business Ethics Quarterly (1995); "International
Business, Morality, and the Common Good," Business Ethics
Quarterly 12/2 (1992); "Religion and Business: The
Catholic Church and the U.S. Economy," California Management
Review 30/4 (1988); co-author of Ethics: Theory and Practice
(1985).
Revised April 2007.
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