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FULL-TIME FACULTY
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Jeffrey Lipshaw |
Associate Professor of Law
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| S H O R T B I O G R A P H Y |
Jeffrey Lipshaw received his undergraduate education at the University of Michigan and is a graduate of Stanford Law School. Following law school graduation, Professor Lipshaw practiced with the law firm of Dykema Gossett of Detroit, Bloomfield Hills and Ann Arbor, Michigan. He has also served as a Vice President and General Counsel for two corporations. In 2005, he moved from the corporate world to teach as a visiting professor at Wake Forest University School of Law and later at Tulane University Law School. Professor Lipshaw has written extensively in the areas of contracts and business law. At Suffolk University Law School, Professor Lipshaw will teach Agency, Partnership & The LLC and Securities Regulation.
Degrees: AB, University of Michigan; JD, Stanford University
Bar Admittance: MI; IN; MA
Subjects: Agency, Partnership & The LLC and Securities Regulation
| S E L E C T E D P U B L I C A T I O N S |
UNINCORPORATED BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS (4th ed.,2009 ) (with Larry Ribstein)
The Epistemology of the Financial Crisis: Complexity, Causation, Law and Judgment, (forthcoming 2010)
Beetles, Frogs, and Lawyers: The Scientific Demarcation Problem in the Gilson Theory of Value Creation, WILLAMETTE L. REV. (forthcoming 2010)
Disclosure and Judgment: "We Have Met Madoff and He is Ours", U. DAYTON L. REV. (forthcoming 2009)
Jonathan M. Wender's POLICING AND THE POETICS OF EVERYDAY LIFE, (forthcoming 2009) (Book Review)
Memo to Lawyers: How Not to 'Retire and Teach', N.C. CENT. L.J. (forthcoming 2008)
Why the Law of Entrepreneurship Barely Matters, 31 W. NEW ENG. L. REV. 701 (2009)
Models and Games: The Difference Between Explanation and Understanding for Lawyers and Ethicists, (2008) (working paper)
Why the Law of Entrepreneurship Barely Matters: Rules, Cognition, and the Antinomies of Transactional Practice, (2007) (working paper)
Screed or Scholarship: The Days of Whine and Roses, 9 LEGAL ETHICS 233 (2007) (reviewing Douglas Litowitz's The Destruction of Young Lawyers: Beyond One L. (2006)).
Freedom, Compulsion, Compliance, and Mystery: Reflections on the Duty Not to Enforce a Promise, 3 LAW, CULTURE & THE HUMANITIES 82 (2007)
Of Fine Lines, Blunt Instruments, and Half-Truths: Business Acquisition Agreements and the Right to Lie, 32 DEL. J. CORP. L. 431 (2007)
Instrumentality, Objectivity, Self-Reference, and the Futility of Justifying Contract Law, (2007) (working paper)
Contract Formalism, Scientism, and the M-Word: A Comment on Professor Movsesian's Under-Theorization Thesis, 35 HOFSTRA L. REV. 23 (2006)
Duty and Consequence: A Non-Conflating Theory of Promise and Contract, 36 CUMB. L. REV. 321 (2006)
Law as Rationalization: Getting Beyond Reason to Business Ethics, 37 U. TOL. L. REV. 959 (2006) (reprinted in Nancy B. Rapoport, Jeffrey D. Van Niel & Bala G. Dharan, eds., ENRON AND OTHER CORPORATE FIASCOS: THE CORPORATE SCANDAL READER, 2009).
Contingency and Contracts: A Philosophy of Complex Business Transactions, 54 DEPAUL L. REV. 1007 (2005)
The Bewitchment of Intelligence: Language and Ex Post Illusions of Intention, 78 TEMP. L. REV. 99 (2005)
Sarbanes-Oxley, Jurisprudence, Game Theory, Insurance and Kant: Toward a Moral Theory of Good Governance, 50 WAYNE L. REV. 1083 (2005) (reprinted in Nancy B. Rapoport, Jeffrey D. Van Niel & Bala G. Dharan, eds., ENRON AND OTHER CORPORATE FIASCOS: THE CORPORATE SCANDAL READER, 2009).
LEGAL PROFESSION BLOG,
http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legal_profession/
C O N T A C T I N F O  |
Prof. Jeffrey Lipshaw
Suffolk University Law School 120 Tremont Street
, Suite 250-B
Boston, MA 02108
t. 617.305-1657
f. 617-305-3079
e.
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