College of Law teams up with Nuclear Engineering to further safe regulation of advanced nuclear reactors

Professor Arden Rowell has teamed up with the Socio-Technical Risk Analysis (SoTeRiA) Research Laboratory, led by Nuclear, Plasma, & Radiological Engineering Associate Professor Zahra Mohaghegh on a new research grant from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The grant, titled “Context-Based Analysis of a Risk-informed, Performance-based Regulatory Approach for Advanced Nuclear Reactors,” will span from 2024 to 2027. The project aims to help the NRC—the agency responsible for regulating the safety of civilian nuclear reactors—identify how to effectively use its aging statutory mandates to address new and emerging nuclear technologies. 

“The NRC’s legal responsibility to regulate nuclear energy has never been more important,” Prof. Rowell emphasizes. “Reactor technology is advancing rapidly even as the risks of relying on fossil fuels become increasingly apparent. How can NRC best regulate the risks and opportunities presented by advanced reactor technologies, while still staying true to its legal and democratic mandate to protect people and the environment? This is a legitimately difficult question, and I hope that our collaboration can help NRC craft a creative but implementable answer.”   

NPRE Associate Professor Zahra Mohaghegh, has highlighted the value of this project as a collaboration between engineering and law experts. “Because accident scenarios must consider social and environmental distress, managerial deficiency, and human error as well as physical and technical system failures, I believe that risk analysis and risk-informed regulation require the development of a common vocabulary within diverse engineering and social science domains to address risk emerging from the interface of social and technical systems,” said Prof. Mohaghegh.  

Professors Rowell and Mohaghegh are affiliated with the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where engineering and non-engineering experts collaborate to address complex real-world problems. They have previously collaborated on a DOE project and are now looking forward to a new collaboration under this NRC grant, supporting development and enhancement of risk-informed performance-based regulatory approaches. This project will aid decision-makers and stakeholders in ensuring safe, resilient, sustainable, and socially and environmentally responsible technological advancements for nuclear energy.

Jehong (Joseph) Park ’25 awarded a Peggy Browning Fellowship

For Immediate Release | May 2024
Contact: Rachel Del Rossi, PBF Executive Director
RDelRossi@PeggyBrowningFund.org

Philadelphia, PA, May 2024 – Jehong (Joseph) Park from the University of Illinois College of Law has been awarded a Peggy Browning Fund fellowship in workplace justice advocacy. The application process is highly competitive, and the award is a tribute to Jehong’s outstanding qualifications.

This year, the Peggy Browning Fund is proud to announce we have accepted 117 law students into our nationwide fellowship program, the largest cohort in our history! Securing a Peggy Browning Fellowship is a challenging process, with over 3,950 applications for our 2024 program. As the country continues to face unprecedented challenges to workers’ rights, the fight for workplace justice has never been more pressing. Labor needs lawyers and we are inspired by the passion and dedication this year’s Fellows bring to the movement. These Fellows are distinguished students who have not only excelled in law school but who have also demonstrated their commitment to workers’ rights through their previous educational, organizing, work, volunteer, and personal experiences. 

Jehong (Joseph) Park (J.D. candidate, 2025) will be at Strategic Organizing Center (SOC) in Washington, D.C. Joseph’s professional background in filmmaking exposed him first-hand to the post-pandemic labor movement in the entertainment industry and shaped his interest in workers’ rights and labor law. Born in South Korea, Joseph grew up in New Jersey, Seoul, and San Diego. After attending film school at NYU, Joseph worked as a special education classroom assistant and a film producer, producing narrative shorts and documentaries, one of which was featured live on ABC in 2023. As a rising third-year at the University of Illinois College of Law, he developed his interests in labor and employment law by working as a research assistant to Professor Matthew W. Finkin and as an intern for the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of the Solicitor. He is also involved in the Journal of Law, Technology & Policy and the National Asian Pacific American Law Students Association. Joseph is excited to be a Peggy Browning Fellow and looks forward to contributing to the labor movement at the Strategic Organizing Center.

100 S. Broad St, Suite 1218
Philadelphia, PA 19110
267-273-7990
info@peggybrowningfund.org
www.peggybrowningfund.org 

College of Law congratulates 2024 Rickert Award recipients

The Rickert Awards are the most prestigious awards conferred upon students at the University of Illinois College of Law and recognize excellence in student achievement. The Rickert Awards Program was established in the fall of 1976 and was named in memory of Joseph W. Rickert, a distinguished lawyer who practiced law in southern Illinois for many years. The Rickert gift paved the way for the College of Law to recognize outstanding third-year law students for their achievements. Congratulations to all of our 2024 honorees!

Excellence in Academic Achievement

Rachel Aranyi
Austin Archer
Henry Brunngraber
Austin Bull
Catherine Frantz
Grace Gardner
Helen Hsuan
John Keller
Jared Merens
Diana Sweeney
Andrew Watkins
Kyle Zollinger

Excellence in Advocacy

Serena Cheng
Bethany Dain
Madelyn Foster
Nina Grover
Allison Heil
Lili Klainer
Akshay Krishnamani
Mariana Rose Renke

Excellence in Legal Writing

Megan Benka
James Cheney
Kevin Estes
Mithran Kumaran
Robert Nader
Luke Nance
Dakota Richmond
Zoë Smith

Excellence in Service

Bethany Dain
Joshua Dela Pena
Nick Holy
Seon Ki Jo
Alec Klimowicz
Emma Overton
Eliza Powers
Mariana Rose Renke

USA Today quotes Johnson on shooting accountability cases

“I think the cases are a step in the right direction,” Professor Eric Johnson told USA Today about a new tactic from prosecutors in the battle against gun violence. Three separate cases have recently charged adults, such as parents and school principals, for failing to prevent adolescents from committing crimes involving firearms. This new legal approach has been successful in Michigan and Illinois and Johnson believes it could make gunowners think twice about their liability.

Hunter and Jones speak at Popular Culture Association Conference

Professors Pia Hunter and Faye Jones spoke at the 2024 Popular Culture Association Annual Conference in Chicago, Illinois, on March 27, 2024. The Popular Culture Association is a group dedicated to promoting the study of popular culture throughout the world through the establishment and promotion of conferences, publications, and discussion. With members in hundreds of specialty areas and an emphasis on scholarly exploration, the conference brought together scholars of varied backgrounds to hear Hunter and Jones deliver their presentation “The Death and Life of Privacy in Contemporary Popular Music” as part of the Law and Popular Culture section of the conference.

Kaplan files amicus brief in Fifth Circuit retirement investing case

Professor Richard Kaplan was one of six law professors who filed an amicus curiae brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit case State of Utah et al. v. Julie Su et al. The brief was filed in support of a Biden administration rule allowing retirement advisers to consider environmental, social and governance issues when making decisions for clients, with the professors arguing the move aligns with fiduciary duties to minimize risks and maximize returns for clients. The brief also urged the appeals court to reject a Utah-fronted challenge that argues the rule is inconsistent with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act and investment professionals’ obligations.

Read coverage of the case from Law360 and Bloomberg.

Delaware Bankrupcty Court relies on scholarship from Lawless in opinion

In the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, Judge Craig T. Goldblatt relied heavily upon the scholarship of Professor Robert Lawless in his opinion for Yellow Corporation’s Chapter 11 plan. Citing “Reframing Arbitration & Bankruptcy,” Judge Goldblatt ruled that Yellow Corp. must resolve issues in bankruptcy court rather than in arbitration. Speaking to the American Bankruptcy Institution about the decision, Lawless explained “Judge Goldblatt cut through the rhetoric and got it right.”

Brubaker talks Bayer, Texas Two-Step bankruptcy with Bloomberg

Bayer AG is considering employing the controversial legal tactic known as the Texas Two-Step bankruptcy to address the thousands of lawsuits alleging that its Roundup weedkiller causes cancer. The strategy, which involves splitting assets and liabilities into separate units, with the unit burdened by liabilities being placed into bankruptcy to facilitate a global settlement, is an area of expertise for Professor Ralph Brubaker. Speaking to Bloomberg, he suggested that although the courts may ultimately refuse this tactic, bankruptcy could provide Bayer with time to propose a settlement while halting ongoing litigation.

Finkin testifies before Vermont legislature and is quoted by Massachusetts Supreme Court

Professor Matthew Finkin’s scholarly expertise was recently in demand in the Northeast. On Wednesday, March 20, Professor Finkin testified before a committee of the Vermont Legislature concerning a proposal to amend the state’s constitution to add a worker rights provision. The proposal would follow Illinois in enshrining the right of collective bargaining into the state’s constitution. After his testimony, the committee voted unanimously to recommend the proposal for inclusion into the state constitution.

On March 14, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts held that the academic profession’s understanding of the meaning of academic freedom and the “economic security” of tenure had to be considered in deciding the allowability of a university’s change in salary policy for tenured faculty. The Court’s decision resisted on the analysis of an amicus brief on behalf of a nationwide group of tenured faculty submitted by Professor Finkin. The Court expressly rejected contrary precedent in New York, citing Finkin’s published criticism of the New York decision.

Mazzone pens op-ed on Trump for the News-Gazette

Former President Donald Trump’s bid for a second term is generating a lot of constitutional questions, which is keeping Professor Jason Mazzone busy. Writing at the News-Gazette, Mazzone explores the question of whether a state has the power to exclude a candidate from the ballot because of the insurrection act. He examines what the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Trump v. Anderson and where his understanding of the Constitution differs from the justices.

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