Third Party Litigation Financing Research Roundtable
“From Patents to Guns: Examining Third-Party Litigation Funding”
Jonas Anderson, Professor of Law, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law
“Do TPLF Disclosure Requirements Deter Patent Trolls?”
Natalie Berfeld, Assistant Professor, Boston College Carroll School of Management
Luke Martin, Senior Economist, Legal Economics LLC
“Targeting Third-Party Litigation Funding Reform”
Seth Katsuya Endo, Associate Professor of Law, Seattle University School of Law
“Litigation Finance as Intermediation”
Adrian Ivashkiv, Judicial Law Clerk, Third Circuit Court of Appeals
“A Comparative Analysis of Third-Party Litigation Funding in the United States and the United Kingdom”
Gary Myers, Earl F. Nelson Professor of Law, University of Missouri School of Law
“TPLF As Quasi-Partnership”
Omer Pelled, Assistant Professor, Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law
Yifat Naftali Ben Zion, Assistant Professor, Tel Aviv University Buchmann Faculty of Law
“The Alchemist’s Inversion”
Samir D. Parikh, Professor of Law, Wake Forest University School of Law
“Economics of Litigation Financing” (Forthcoming 2025, Eur. Rev. Priv. Law)
Francesco Parisi, Oppenheimer Wolff and Donnelly Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School
“Optimizing the Litigation Funding Ecosystem”
Cassandra Burke Robertson, John Deaver Drinko–BakerHostetler Professor of Law and Director, Center for Professional Ethics, Case Western Reserve University School of Law
“Valuing Litigation Assets”
Robert F. Weber, Associate Professor of Law, Georgia State University College of Law
Research Roundtable on the Emerging Law & Political Economy Movement
“‘Law and Political Economy’: A Solution in Search of a Problem”
David E. Bernstein, University Professor of Law and Executive Director, Liberty & Law Center, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
“Good Law & Economics, Bad Law & Political Economy”
Peter. J. Boettke, Distinguished University Professor, George Mason University
Rosolino Candela, Program Director, Academic and Student Programs and Senior Fellow, F.A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics, Mercatus Center at George Mason University
“A Theory for All and None: A Neo-schumpeterian Model of Antitrust Law and Political Economy”
Joseph V. Coniglio, Director, Antitrust and Innovation Policy, Information Technology & Innovation Foundation
“Redistribution without Romance”
Charles Delmotte, Assistant Professor of Law, Michigan State University College of Law
“LPE and the Death of the Individual”
Jeremy Kidd, Professor of Law, Drake University Law School
“The Problems with Piketty’s Data”
Phillip W. Magness, Senior Fellow and David J. Theroux Chair in Political Economy, Independent Institute
“Law and Political Economy: Missing Markets, Missing Laws, and Missing Political Economy”
Roger E. Meiners, Professor of Economics, University of Texas at Arlington
Andrew P. Morriss, Professor, Texas A&M University Bush School of Government & Public Service
“The Wrath of Khan: The Left Rediscovers Originalism, and Ignores the Arguments for Capitalism” (Forthcoming)
Michael C. Munger, Professor of Political Science, Duke University
“The Law and Political Economy Project: A Critical Analysis”
Todd J. Zywicki, George Mason University Foundation Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
14th Annual Henry G. Manne Faculty Forum
“Searching for the Appropriate Judicial Interest Rate: Theory and Experimental Evidence”
Yijia Lu, Assistant Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School
“The Arrest Penalty: Empirical Evidence on Job Discharge Following Arrest”
Erin E. Meyers, Assistant Professor of Law, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School