About the Blog
Concurring Opinions is a group blog with a broad emphasis on legal topics. It is run by Concurring Opinions, LLC, a Pennsylvania Limited Liability Company. Concurring Opinions regularly publishes contributions from blog members as well as guest bloggers. Members of Concurring Opinions include David Hoffman, Nathan Oman, Frank Pasquale, Daniel Solove, Melissa Waters, and Kaimipono Wenger.
About the Authors
Daniel J. Solove
Daniel J. Solove is an
associate professor of law at the George Washington University
Law School. He is the author of The
Digital Person: Technology and Privacy in the Information Age (NYU Press 2004) and Information
Privacy Law (Aspen, 2d ed., 2006) (with Marc Rotenberg & Paul
M. Schwartz). Solove has published about 20 articles, which have
appeared in leading law reviews such as the Yale Law Journal, Stanford
Law Review, California Law Review, and Duke Law Journal. He has been
interviewed
and featured in nearly 100 media broadcasts and articles,
including The New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Associated
Press, Business Week, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, and NPR. A graduate of
Yale Law School, he clerked for Judge Stanley Sporkin, U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia and Judge Pamela Ann Rymer,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. For more information,
visit his website.
Topics of interest:
- information privacy law
- criminal law and procedure
- literature and the humanities
- law
and sociology
- legal theory
- free speech
- legal pragmatism
Kaimipono Wenger
Kaimipono D. Wenger (Kaimi) is an Assistant Professor at Thomas
Jefferson School of Law. He clerked for Judge Jack B. Weinstein in
the Eastern District of New York. His articles have appeared in the
Wisconsin Law Review, the American University Law Review, and (forthcoming)
the University of San Francisco Law Review. He is ably assisted in
his blogging (and during all other hours of the day and night) by
his three children.
Topics of Interest:
- civil rights law, particularly reparations for slavery
- corporate
law
- securities
- trusts and estates
David
Hoffman
David A. Hoffman is an associate professor of law at Temple University's Beasley
School of Law. He teaches contracts, law and economics, and business associations.
His most recent scholarship has focused on empirical and behavioral investigations
of corporate and securities law. His articles have appeared in the Minnesota Law Review,
the Wisconsin Law Review, the Illinois Law Review, the Alabama Law Review and
the Iowa Law Review.
Topics of Interest:
- behavioral law and economics
- securities law
- dispute resolution
- corporate law
- legal theory
- empirical studies
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