Writing Competition – 2024 Winners
Writing Competition – 2024 Winners Professional Category Alexandra P.E. Sickler Archie Unterseher Endowed Professor of Law University of North Dakota School of Law Big Banks & Small Consequences in Chapter 13 Student Category Zachary Hunt J.D. Candidate 2024 Cornell Law School Port in a Storm Colorado’s Safe Harbor Settlement as a Template for Online Lending […]
Writing Competition 2006 Winner
Best Book
Prof. Ronald J. Mann
CHARGING AHEAD: THE GROWTH AND REGULATION OF PAYMENT CARD MARKETS AROUND THE WORLD – Cambridge Univ. Press 2006
Best Professional Article
Assoc. Prof. Kathleen C. Engel
Prof. Patricia A. McCoy
TURNING A BLIND EYE: WALL STREET FINANCE OF PREDATORY LENDING – 75 Fordham L. Rev. 2039 (2006-2007)
Best Student Article
Derrick M. Land
Residential Mortgage Securitization and Consumer Welfare – 61 Cons. Fin. Law Quarterly Report 208
Writing Competition – 2012 Winner
Best Professional Articles
James Hawkins
Credit on Wheels: The Law and Business of Auto Title Lending
69 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. xx
(forthcoming 2012)
Michael Simkovic
Competition and Crisis in Mortgage Securitization
88 Ind. L. J.
(forthcoming 2013)
Best Student Work
Tiffany Lee
No More Abuse: The Dodd-Frank and Consumer Financial Protection Act’s “Abusive” Standard
14 Journal of Consumer & Commercial Law 118 (2011)
Writing Competition – 2013 Winner
Best Professional Article
Assistant Professor Lea Shepard
Toward a Stronger Financial History Antidiscrimination Norm
Vol. 53, Boston College Law Review 1695
Writing Competition – 2014 Winner
Best Professional Article
Professor Adam Levitin
Georgetown University Law Center
The Paper Chase
Duke Law Journal Vol. 63:636
Best Student Note
Molly Rose Goodman
Suffolk University Law School ’13
The Buck Stops Here: Toxic Titles and Title Insurance
Real Estate Law Journal Volume 42 Summer 2013
Writing Competition – 2015 Winner
Best Professional Article
Professor Dori K. Bailey
Syracuse University School of Law
A Defense of the Doctrine of Preemption: Revealing the Fallacy that Federal Preemption Contributed to the Financial Crisis
16 U. Pa. J. Const. L. 1041 (2014)
Best Student Note
Tami Hines
Oklahoma City School of Law, 2014
MERS: Sometimes Agent, Sometimes Principal, Often Misconstrued
This article was published in the Consumer Finance Law Quarterly Report (vol. 68, no.1, 2014). Reprinted with permission.
Writing Competition – 2016 Winner
Best Professional Article
Professor John E. Campbell
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
WHERE KAFKA REIGNS: A Call for Metamorphosis in Unlawful Detainer Law
Best Student Note
Daniel O’Connell
Catholic University of America
Confounded Collectors, Confused Consumers: Time to Close the Circuit Split on Whether the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act Requires a Consumer to Dispute a Debt in Writing