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Former Williams Institute Fellows
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Zachary A. Kramer, 2004 Law Teaching
Fellow
Zachary A. Kramer was the first
Williams Law Teaching Fellow. Professor Kramer received his
B.A. from the University of Wisconsin (2001) and his
J.D. from the University of Illinois College of Law
(2004), where he was Editor-in-Chief of the University
of Illinois Law Review (2003-04). At UCLA, Professor
Kramer taught Law & Sexuality in the fall
semester. Professor Kramer’s publications have appeared
in the University of Illinois Law Review, the Seattle
Journal for Social Justice, and the Chicago Tribune.
Professor Kramer now holds an Assistant Professor
position at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
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Elizabeth Kukura, 2004 Public
Policy Fellow
Elizabeth Kukura
came to the
UCLA School of Law as the 2004 Public Policy Fellow.
Ms. Kukura joined the Williams Institute after completing a M.Sc. in
Human Rights from the London School of Economics (LSE).
At the LSE, Ms. Kukura focused on international law,
women's human rights and sexual orientation policy
issues where she produced her Master's thesis on
same-sex marriage and the definition of family under
human rights law.
Ms. Kukura is currently a student at New York University Law
School. |
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Holning S. Lau, 2006
- 2007 Harvey S. Shipley Miller Teaching Fellow
Holning Lau researches and writes on antidiscrimination
law, international human rights, and children's rights.
While a law teaching fellow for the Williams Institute,
he taught Law & Sexuality at the UCLA School of
Law. Lau completed his undergraduate studies at
the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated Phi
Beta Kappa and magna cum laude. He received his
J.D. from the University of Chicago, where he served as
the Executive Topics & Comments Editor of the
University of Chicago Law Review and as a staff
member of the
Chicago Journal of International Law. At
the University of Chicago, Lau was named a Stonewall
Scholar for excellence in his work related to LGBT
rights and was awarded the Ignacio Martín-Baró Award for
the best human rights paper by a professional or
master’s degree student.
Full biographical sketch including
list of publications
Professor Lau now holds an Assistant Professor position
at Hofstra Law School in New York, where he is also the
Director of their LGBT Studies Program.
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Deborah Ho, 2006-2007 Public
Policy Fellow
A
graduate of UCLA, Deborah Ho worked at the International
Migration Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace where she became interested in
refugee issues. Deborah then went to study at the
University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South
Africa on a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship where she
conducted research on the South African asylum system
anaylzing the shortcomings the country’s international
legal obligations and practice. While in South
Africa, she interned with the International Organization
for Migration in Tirana, Albania shortly after the end
of the conflict in Kosovo working on refugee
resettlement and local development. Deborah decided to
attend law school as a result of her experiences working
with refugees in South Africa. While at UCLA Law, she
interned with the Office of the Prosecutor at the UN
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and served as
the Editor-in-Chief of UCLA's Journal of Int'l Law &
Foreign Affairs. Deborah graduated from UCLA in
May 2006.
After leaving the Williams Institute, Deborah clerked
for the Honorable Judge Spencer Letts in the Central
District of California.
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Rebecca Stotzer, 2006-2007 Public
Policy Fellow
After earning her B.A. in Psychology and
English from Carnegie Mellon University, Rebecca spent
her Master’s in Social Work internship at the American
Red Cross of Washtenaw County, where she specialized in
Community Programming and Health and Safety Services.
She came to the Williams Institute following the completion of her joint
Ph.D. in Social Work and Psychology from the University
of Michigan, where her dissertation focused on how
threats to masculinity encourage men to commit acts of
violence against gay men. Her research included
analyzing patterns of hate crime offenses, determining
factors that generate positive attitudes toward the LGBT
community among heterosexuals, and exploring the role of
stereotypes in predicting types of violence for
different categories of hate crime victims.Rebecca now holds an
Associate Professor position at the University of Hawaii,
Manoa, where she teaches Social Work.
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Danielle MacCartney, 2006-2007
Public Policy Fellow
Danielle MacCartney earned her Ph.D. in sociology
from the University of California, Irvine. Her
dissertation analyzed the effect of both geographic
location and occupation percent female on the wages of cohabiting
gays and lesbians, and also analyzed levels of family
inequality in married, heterosexual cohabiting, and
homosexual cohabiting couples. Her research
interests while at the Williams Institute included wage and labor market differences by
race, class, gender, and sexual orientation, focusing on
occupational characteristics such as occupational
percent female and occupational status.Danielle is
currently in a tenure-track position, teaching Sociology
at Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri. |
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Amanda Baumle, 2007-2008 Public
Policy Fellow
Amanda K. Baumle, J.D., Ph.D., specializes in demography,
social inequality, and the sociology of law. Prior to
obtaining her Ph.D. in sociology at Texas A&M
University, she earned a J.D. from the University of
Texas and practiced labor and employment law. Her
current research explores issues involving the
demography of sexual orientation, labor demography, and
gender inequality in the legal practice. In these areas,
she has published a variety of books, articles, and book
chapters examining issues of inequality and
discrimination, as well as the manner in which the law
might be activated as a means to challenge existing
inequalities. She recently completed a coauthored book,
The Demography of Sexual Orientation, which draws on
2000 U.S. Census data to examine the manner in which
sexual orientation affects a variety of demographic
processes.
Amanda is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
Sociology at the University of Houston.
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Dean Spade, 2006-2008 Law
Teaching Fellow
In 2002, Dean Spade founded the
Sylvia Rivera Law Project (www.srlp.org),
a non-profit law collective that provides free legal
services to transgender, intersex and gender
non-conforming people who are low-income and/or people
of color. SRLP also engages in litigation, policy reform
and public education on issues affecting these
communities. Dean received his J.D. from UCLA Law
School. He has taught classes focusing on sexual
orientation, gender identity and law at Columbia and
Harvard Law Schools. Dean's writing has appeared in the
Berkeley Women's Law Journal, the Harvard Lesbian and
Gay Review, the Widener Law Review, the Chicano Latino
Law Review, the Georgetown Journal of Gender and Law and
several anthologies.
Full
biographical sketch including list of publications
Dean is currently a law professor at the Seattle
University School of Law.
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Cliff Rosky, 2007 Law Teaching Fellow
Cliff Rosky writes on family law, antidiscrimination
law, and criminal law, with a focus on the intersections
of gender, sexuality, and violence. Before joining the
Williams Institute, Cliff was an associate at the law
firms of Covington & Burling and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer
& Feld, where he focused on criminal and pro bono
matters, including the reform of child molestation
statutes and the representation of human sex trafficking
victims. Cliff received his B.A. from Amherst College
with honors in Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought,
graduating Phi Beta Kappa and summa cum laude.
His honors thesis won the Robert Cover Prize and the Law
& Society Association’s Prize for Best Undergraduate
Paper. He received his J.D. from Yale Law School, where
he served as the Co-Editor-in-Chief of the Yale
Journal of Law & the Humanities and the Irving S.
Ribicoff Postgraduate Research Fellow. His current
research analyzes the significance of gender in more
than 200 family law opinions involving gay, lesbian and
bisexual parents. His writing has appeared in the
Connecticut Law Review.
Cliff is now a law professor at the S.J Quinney College of Law at
the University of Utah.
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Christian Cooper, 2007 Research Fellow
Christian Cooper
graduated with honors from the University of Southern
California in 1998 with a degree in Spanish and
international relations. Before attending Loyola Law
School, he produced and edited on-air features and the
websites for two nationally-syndicated public radio
shows, was involved in the launch of Univision.com, and
was a writer and editor for the Recording Academy, home
of the Grammy Awards and Latin Grammys. Christian was
the president of Loyola’s gay/straight alliance and
competed in the first-ever National Sexual Orientation
Moot Court Competition at UCLA. While at Loyola, he
clerked at the HIV & AIDS Legal Services Alliance,
Lambda Legal, the Los Angeles County Public Defender’s
Office and the United States Attorney’s Office. At the
Williams Institute, Christian conducted a multilingual
study of HIV discrimination in dental care in Los
Angeles County.
Christian is now a campaign manager in San Francisco.
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