{"id":364,"date":"2012-01-31T12:10:29","date_gmt":"2012-01-31T17:10:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/lvi2012\/?page_id=364"},"modified":"2012-06-01T15:27:55","modified_gmt":"2012-06-01T20:27:55","slug":"track-chairs","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/lvi2012\/schedule\/track-chairs\/","title":{"rendered":"Track Chairs"},"content":{"rendered":"
Her scholarship and teaching focuses on administrative law and electronic government, the presidency, and due process and separation of powers. Co-author of the leading casebook in administrative law, she is also a Lifetime Fellow of the Administrative Law Section of the American Bar Association and a member of the Administrative Conference of the United States. A nationally known scholar of the administrative process, Professor\u00a0Farina\u00a0has served as reporter on a number of national administrative law projects. Most recently, she completed the report of a blue-ribbon cross-disciplinary committee who studied the emerging federal e-rulemaking system, to make recommendations to Congress and the new Administration. Previously, as one of the reporters of the European Union Project, she assessed the EU’s use of the Internet to increase transparency of, access to, and participation in the Union’s very complex government processes. As part of the multi-disciplinary CeRI team, she works with agencies in the Departments of Transportation and Commerce on theoretical and applied research, funded by the National Science Foundation, to improve agency management of and public access to e-rulemaking.<\/p>\n Following her graduation summa cum laude from Boston University School of Law, Professor\u00a0Farina\u00a0clerked for the Hon. Raymond J. Pettine, Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court of Rhode Island, and for the Hon. Spottswood Robinson, III, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals, D.C. Circuit. She spent three years as a litigator in private practice before she joined the Cornell Law School Faculty.<\/p>\n Before founding Fastcase, Ed worked at Covington & Burling, inWashingtonD.C.andBrussels, where he advised Microsoft, Merck, SmithKline, the Business Software Alliance, the National Football League, and the National Hockey League. His practice focused on corporate advisory work for software companies and sports leagues, and intellectual property litigation.<\/p>\n Ed worked in the White House from 1991-1993, first in the Office of Media Affairs and then in the Office of Presidential Speechwriting.\u00a0 After working in the White House, he was the lead account executive in an influential Washingtonpublic relations boutique.\u00a0 He has written for The Washington Post<\/em>, The New York Times<\/em>, The University of Chicago Law Review, The Green Bag<\/em>, and Legal Times<\/em>, and has spoken extensively on legal publishing around the country.<\/p>\n Ed earned an A.B. in government from Georgetown University and a J.D. from the University of Chicago.\u00a0 He served as the Editor-in-Chief and Chairman of the Board of Directors of The Hoya<\/em>, Georgetown University\u2019s college newspaper, and during law school, he served as an editor of The University of Chicago Law Review<\/em>.\u00a0 From 1996-97, he served as a judicial clerk with the Hon. Emilio M. Garza on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.\u00a0 He is a member of the Virginia State Bar, and the District of Columbia Bar, and he has been admitted to practice in the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and Fifth Circuit.\u00a0 He serves on the boards of Pro Bono Net, Democracy in Action, Friends of Telecom Without Borders, and Save a Child\u2019s Heart Foundation.\u00a0 He has served on the Visiting Committee for the University of Chicago Law School, and the Visiting Committee for the University of Chicago Main Campus Library System.<\/p>\n An expert on the U.S. Congress, Daniel regularly works with congressional and executive branch staff to craft transparency and ethics legislation and policies. He directs the Advisory Committee on Transparency, a project of the Sunlight Foundation that educations policymakers on transparency-related issues, problems, and solutions, and shares ideas with members of the Congressional Transparency Caucus.<\/p>\n Daniel regularly speaks and writes about transparency and technology issues, and has appeared on NPR and C-SPAN and been cited by the New York Times, the Washington Post, and other media outlets. He also serves on the ABA\u2019s Lobbying Reform Task Force. Contact Daniel on twitter @danielschuman or by email at dschuman(at)sunlightfoundation.com.<\/p>\nCynthia\u00a0Farina<\/strong>\u00a0is the McRoberts Research Professor in Administration of the Law at Cornell University and a principal researcher in the Cornell e-Rulemaking Initiative (CeRI).<\/p>\n
Dmitry Epstein<\/strong> is the Cornell eRulemaking Initiative Postdoctoral Fellow at the Cornell Law School, where he conducts research on online policy deliberations and the link between inequalities and online civic engagement. Dmitry earned his PhD from Cornell University, where he studied the policymaking processes and the international governance of information and communication, as well as the social and political implications of information and communication technologies, specifically the practices of technology use and the politics of communication platforms. He earned his BA in Economics from Tel-Aviv University and MA in Comparative Media Studies (cum laude) from the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.<\/p>\n
Ed Walters<\/strong> is the CEO, member of the board of directors, and co-founder of Fastcase, an online legal research software company based in Washington, D.C.\u00a0 Under Ed\u2019s leadership, Fastcase has grown to one of the world\u2019s largest legal publishers, <\/strong>currently serving more than 500,000 subscribers from around the world.<\/p>\n
Daniel Schuman<\/strong> is the Sunlight Foundation’s policy counsel and director of the Advisory Committee on Transparency. He works to develop policies that further Sunlight’s mission of catalyzing greater government openness and transparency.<\/p>\n