| Professor Lois Lupica
Resident Scholar Final
Report
Spring 2007
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During the Spring 2007
semester, I followed in the footsteps of many of my friends and
colleagues, serving as the twelfth ABI Robert M. Zinman Scholar in
Residence. The
experience as Resident Scholar was interesting, educational, and lots of
fun. I had the
pleasure of getting to know the dedicated, talented and oft-time
irreverent ABI staff – both in and out of the office. This is a group of people who take
their jobs, their softball and their next meal very
seriously. I do hope
the future Resident Scholars make at least as vital a contribution to
the team, “Going for Broke” as I did this semester
(didn’t quite make it to bat, but I did walk away with a
jersey). I shall also
miss the regular in-house e-mails announcing the presence of chocolate
cake, or “goodies from Poland” in the kitchen.
My law school should take a page from their book . .
.
As was the case with my
predecessors, my job responsibilities varied from week to week, but
rarely a day went by when I didn’t speak to members of the media
about a recent bankruptcy related development, a new bankruptcy case, or
about an economic, sociological or political trend and its impact on
bankruptcy filings. I
appreciated the professionalism of the reporters, and their interest in
“getting it right,” even when the issue being discussed was
complex and esoteric. On behalf of ABI, I was quoted in scores of stories over the
past months.
I also had the
opportunity to work with the publications’ staff and ABI authors
on a variety of editing projects.
I would like to express my thanks to the dedicated
authors who tolerated my editorial “suggestions” with good
grace and a sense of humor. I also put my rusty graphics skills to work on updating
the Nuts and
Bolts conference materials and
slides.
I spent some time
consulting with the IT staff about a variety of substantive Website
improvements and conducted peer reviews of two empirical studies of new
BAPCPA provisions. Now
that the issue of consumer over-indebtedness garnered the attention of
legislators, a series of Congressional Hearings on credit card and other
fringe banking practices and their impact on consumers were
held. I attended a
number of these hearings and wrote articles for the electronic
ABI Update newsletter on this issue and on a myriad of other current cases
and developments. I
also crafted many of the recent Quick Poll questions.
The Podcast Project
(brainchild of ABI staffer Karim
Guirguis) was one of my favorite
projects this term. I
endeavored to develop an “author series,” interviewing a
variety of scholars and experts whose work I admired. I had the privilege of
interviewing Dr. Robert Manning, (Credit Card
Nation), Anya Kamenetz (Generation Debt), Professor Thomas Ward
(Intellectual Property in Commerce) and Dr. Karen Gross (Failure and
Forgiveness), among others. It was not only fascinating to
explore a variety of issues with some very smart and thoughtful people,
it also gave me a renewed respect for the skills Terri Gross, and others
journalists like her, bring to their jobs.
I appreciated the
opportunity as Resident Scholar to meet and work with a broad range of
ABI members from around the country.
I attended and/or spoke at three ABI
conferences: The Rocky
Mountain Bankruptcy Conference, and the Annual Spring Meeting,
Bankruptcy Fundamentals: Nuts
& Bolts for New and Young Practitioners and the New York
City Nuts and Bolts program. At these conferences, I had the
pleasure and the privilege to share conversations, and the podium with
some very impressive members of the bankruptcy bench and
bar. I also attended
the quarter-final, semi-final and final Conrad R. Duberstein Moot Court
Competition arguments and Banquet.
It was both gratifying and humbling to see such
excellence in oral advocacy from so many law students.
Before my tenure as
Resident Scholar began, I committed to teach a class at my law
school. I designed a
course called “Hot Topics in Bankruptcy,” with the ABI
Journal as the assigned “text.” In order to give the students
access to a variety of bankruptcy-related resources, a further
requirement of enrollment was a membership in ABI. My experiences as ABI’s
Resident Scholar enabled me to bring a very practical and current
dimension to the classroom. The students deemed the course to be a
success.
This past semester has
been an enriching personal and professional experience for
me. It has been
heartening to be a part of an organization that has such a dedicated and
loyal membership. I
extend my admiration and thanks to Executive Director
Sam
Gerdano for overseeing such a
successful enterprise. As Resident Scholar, it was an honor to make even a small
contribution to ABI’s mission and I am grateful to have been
granted this opportunity.
I offer a warm welcome the next
Resident Scholar, Professor Mark S. Scarberry of Pepperdine University
School of Law.
Lois R. Lupica
Professor of Law
University of
Maine School of
Law
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