January 16, 2013 - Danielle Gorman '13 was recently selected as a winner in the NYSBA's Phil Cowan Memorial/BMI Scholarship writing competition. Her paper, A Red-Letter Year: Single Color Trademark Protection in the Fashion Industry, explores the Louboutin v. Yves Saint Laurent cases.
Gorman will be honored at the annual meeting of the Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Section of the NY State Bar Association on January 22, 2013. In addition, she will be awarded a $2,500 scholarship and her paper will be published in the forthcoming issue of the EASL Journal.
Danielle Gorman '13 Wins Prestigious Writing Competition
Cardozo Alumna's Innocence Project Client Exonerated
Bennie Starks with Cardozo Law alumni Lauren Kaeseberg who helped win his release. Photo: Ingrid Bonne
January 7, 2013 - Innocence Project client Bennie Starks walked out of a Lake County, Illinois, courthouse today a free man, ending a 25-year struggle to clear his name, including multiple rounds of DNA testing and three separate appeals. Newly elected State’s Attorney Mike Nerheim agreed to dismiss the remaining charges pending against Starks from a 1986 rape and battery. Though DNA testing from as early as 2000 excluded
Starks as the perpetrator, former Lake County prosecutors repeatedly refused to acknowledge the results, coming up with improbable theories to deny Starks’ innocence.
Starks’ exoneration comes one month after a court date last month was rescheduled due to a legal technicality. The Chicago Tribune reports:
The Innocence Project first agreed to represent Starks in 1996. Lauren Kaeseberg, a criminal defense attorney in the Chicago who worked on Starks’ case since she was a Cardozo law clinic student at the Innocence Project in 2004, joined Starks in court today.
Read the full Chicago Tribune article and watch a video of Starks immediately after the hearing.
Read the press release.
Read more about the case here and here.

Cardozo Clinic students defend Occupy Wall Street protestors in court.
Cardozo Law Review Ranked Among Top 25 Law Journals in US.
Contact: Sheri Adler, Editor-in-Chief
Email: cardozo.l.rev@gmail.com
February 18, 2013 – New York, NY – The Cardozo Law Review now occupies the #23 slot for best law journal in the country, according to the most recent law journal rankings released by the Washington and Lee University School of Law. The Law Review has seen an impressive rise in prestige over the last two years, jumping from the #37 to #27 slot in 2012, and up to #23 in 2013. The Law Journal Rankings look at a journal’s impact and the number of times it is cited in a given year to determine its annual rank. You can view the rankings at http://lawlib.wlu.edu/LJ/index.aspx (under "Choose Ranking Criteria," check "Combined Score," and then click “Submit”.) The Cardozo Law Review is now accepting submissions for publication in Volume 35 (2013-2014).
To submit an article for consideration, please visit https://scholasticahq.com/cardozo-law-review/for_authors or email the manuscript to cardozo.submissions@gmail.com.
The Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution Moves Up to #8 in the Nation
February 19, 2013 - The Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution increased its ranking in the broad field of "Civil Litigation and Dispute Resolution" in the 2012 Washington & Lee rankings of law reviews, released February 18, 2013.
The Journal moved to number 8 in 2012, up from from number 9 in 2011.
The CJCR is now ahead of Pepperdine's competing ADR journal for the first time in the Journal's history. U.S. News & World Report ranks Pepperdine as the number 1 Dispute Resolution program in the country.
The Journal had a banner year in other ways as well. They have expanded from two annual issues to three. This extra issue will allow Cardozo to attract even more first-rate scholarship, making the publication more competitive with ADR journals at Harvard, Ohio State and Pepperdine. They also launched a revitalized website (www.cardozojcr.com) and new Twitter account (@cardozojcr), which already has nearly 400 followers.
Most importantly, this year has seen contributions from some of the nation’s foremost thinkers in arbitration, mediation and negotiation, including groundbreaking scholarship from: Thomas Carbonneau (Penn State), Robert Condlin (University of Maryland), Charles Craver (George Washington), Heather Scheiwe Kulp (Harvard), Janet Martinez (Stanford), and Stephen Ware (University of Kansas).
Arts & Entertainment Law Journal Ranked #1
Contact: Sarah Farhadian, Editor-in-Chief FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Phone: (212) 790-0292
E-mail: editorinchief@cardozoaelj.com
CARDOZO AELJ MAINTAINS #1 SPOT IN RANKINGS
February 26, 2013
NEW YORK, N.Y. —The Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal (AELJ) is proud to have maintained its spot as the #1 journal in the country for arts, entertainment, and sports law and the #1 journal for intellectual property law in the state of New York, according to the most recent law journal rankings released by the Washington and Lee University School of Law. The AELJ also maintained its rank among the top five print journals in the country for intellectual property law. The law journal rankings are primarily based on the total number of times that articles in the journal have been cited, and also consider a journal’s impact, as measured by the average number of annual citations to the journal. To view the rankings, click here (under “Choose Ranking Criteria,” check “Combined Score,” and then click “Submit.”).
In addition, Google Scholar recently ranked AELJ as the third best journal in the nation for technology law. Google Scholar looks at the five-year h-index and h-median metrics, which measure both the productivity and impact of the journal, to determine its annual rankings. Google’s ranking of the top technology law publications nationally can be found here.
The Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal (ISSN 0736-7694) is entirely run and edited by Cardozo law students. Each year, AELJ publishes three issues focused on arts, entertainment, intellectual property, the First Amendment, sports, cyberlaw, and media and telecommunications law. The Journal invites scholars, professors, and practitioners to submit articles for consideration. Submissions can be submitted for review and consideration by emailing submissions@cardozoaelj.com or through ExpressO.
Cardozo Team Wins LL.M. Moot Competition
The competition sought to foster the study of international arbitration for the resolution of international business disputes and investment disputes.
It focused primarily on oral advocacy before a panel of arbitration experts. Participants were required to submit a brief argument outline.
Teams competing in the competition included:
- University of California, Berkeley School of Law (two teams)
- Duke University School of Law
- Georgetown University Law Center (two teams)
- University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law
- Penn State University Dickinson School of Law
- Michigan State University College of Law
- American University Washington College of Law
- Boston University School of Law
- Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law (two teams)
Cardozo Team Places in Finals at Transactional Law Meet
Congratulations to the Cardozo team of students who placed as a Mid-Atlantic Regional Finalist at the 2013 National Transactional LawMeet at Drexel University Earle Mack School of Law in Philadelphia.
The team was composed of Mark Guffanti '13, Cindy Horowitz '14, and Shalinthia Miles '14.
Jon English and Simon Elkharrat ’13 competed on another team and received 2nd place for their draft.
Alumni Julia Rubin '04 of White & Case and Sarah Jones '02 of Credit Suisse served as coaches to both of our teams, and were instrumental to the strong showing.
Students in Cardozo Clinics File Suit to Protect Elderly Woman from Losing Housing
Pearl Gabel/Pearl Gabel/ New York Daily News
March 21, 2013 New York Daily News -
By John Marzulli -A 74-year-old Brooklyn woman suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and unable to sign paperwork has been threatened with the termination of a rent subsidy by heartless bureaucrats at the city Housing Authority, a lawsuit says.
Legal advocates for Luz Ortega have filed suit in Brooklyn Federal Court to stop the madness that could result in the elderly woman losing the apartment she’s lived in for 15 years.
“If she loses the benefits, she can’t pay for the apartment on her own,” lawyer Rebekah Diller of the Benjamin Cardozo Law School told the Daily News.
Ortega receives a federal Section 8 subsidy that covers more than half the rent for her flat in a private building in Sunset Park.
Under the aid program, which is administered by NYCHA, Ortega is required to sign an income verification form that gives the city agency permission to perform a search of Social Security records
But Ortega’s mental and physical condition has dramatically worsened in the past year and she is no longer able to sign her name, according to the suit.
Ortega’s daughter Ada Aviles signed the verification form for her mother, but a NYCHA caseworker noticed the signature was different from the documents Ortega signed in the past. Aviles is her mother’s principal caregiver, cooking her meals, bathing her and shopping and cleaning for her mother, the suit says.
NYCHA was provided with documentation that Ortega’s only income besides food stamps is a $797 payment from Social Security, which is transferred to a cash card administered by her daughter.
But NYCHA responded that was insufficient and advised the daughter to seek court-ordered appointment as a legal guardian for Ortega.
NYCHA sent Ortega a “notice of default” on Nov. 16, 2012, informing her that the Section 8 subsidy would be terminated for failing to supply the required form.
“What’s ridiculous about this situation is there’s no question she should get these benefits, but they want her signature on the form,” Diller said.
“You need to accommodate people with dementia or Alzheimer’s and the answer is not to clog the court system with guardianship cases,” she said.
NYCHA spokeswoman Sheila Stainback said in a statement: “The New York City Housing Authority is scheduling a hearing at which all of the issues may be resolved. In the interim, NYCHA will not terminate the subsidy and we are working with the family and their legal counsel to come up with a solution.”
The suit seeks relief under the Americans with Disabilities Act, accusing NYCHA and its chairman John Rhea of discriminating against Ortega based on her handicap.
It asks Federal Judge Eric Vitaliano to order NYCHA to accept alternative proof — other than her signature — of Ortega’s eligibility for the Section 8 subsidy.

U.S. Congressman Jerrold Nadler Speaks to Cardozo’s D.C. Seminar Class
U.S. Congressman Jerrold Nadler spoke to Cardozo’s D.C. Seminar Class, “A Capitol Practice: Lawyering in Washington DC,” at a lunchtime talk on April 2, 2013.
Zubin Soleimany '14 Awarded Prestigious Peggy Browning Fellowship
Philadelphia, PA, April 4, 2013 - The Peggy Browning Fund has awarded a 10-week summer fellowship to Zubin Soleimany, a second year student at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. Zubin will spend the fellowship working at Levy Ratner, P.C. in New York, NY. The application process is highly competitive, and the award was based on his outstanding qualifications.
In 2013, the Peggy Browning Fund will support nearly 70 public interest labor law fellowships nationwide. With more than 500 applicants from 139 participating law schools, securing a Peggy Browning Fellowship is not an easy task. Peggy Browning 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, work, volunteer and personal experiences. Zubin Soleimany is no exception.
Zubin earned an undergraduate degree from Bennington College, and a MA in Literature from CUNY-Hunter College. Prior to law school, he worked as a substitute teacher, a taxi driver, and an adjunct lecturer at Hunter College, teaching courses on American literature, medieval literature and expository writing. He is currently a member of the Organizing Committee of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance where he organizes fellow cabdrivers and is working to reform the administrative court system for New York taxi drivers. He spent last summer interning in the Worker’s Rights and Benefits Unit at South Brooklyn Legal Services. “I’m interested in the labor movement because, in my own working life, I’ve seen that all workers, no matter who their boss is, or how much prestige their job commands, need vigorous advocacy to get a fair shake,” said Zubin. He is interested in pursuing legal advocacy that supports the organization of nontraditional workers.
The Peggy Browning Fund is a not for-profit organization established in memory of Margaret A. Browning, a prominent union-side attorney who was a member of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) from 1994 until 1997. Peggy Browning Fellowships provide law students with unique, diverse and challenging work experiences fighting for social and economic justice. These experiences encourage and inspire students to pursue careers in public interest labor law.
To learn more about the Peggy Browning Fund, contact Mary Anne Moffa, executive director, by phone at 267-273-2990, ext. 2, by email mmoffa@peggybrowningfund.org or visit www.peggybrowningfund.org.
Danielle Noel '13 Selected for 2013 Mark Whitlock Scholarship
Cardozo Journal of International and Comparative Law Cited in Kiobel Ruling
Justice Breyer (and three other Justices) concurred in the outcome of the case but disagreed with Chief Justice Roberts's logic. These Justices believe that the ATS should apply to some acts taken outside the United States, but agree that the acts in Kiobel are not covered by the ATS.
Langfan Family Constitutional Oratorical Competition
The Langfan Family Constitutional Oratorical Competition took place at Cardozo on April 18. The competition has recognized student excellence in public speaking and rhetoric since its establishment in 2001. Langfan is not a traditional moot court competition where judges interrupt competitors during their argument. Instead, it is an oratorical competition in which competitors deliver a short uninterrupted speech analyzing a controversial constitutional issue.
New York State Supreme Court Associate Justice Dianne T. Renwick ’86 to Speak at 2013 Commencement
Students Help Superstorm Sandy Victims in Cardozo Clinic
Six Months After Hurricane Sandy, MFY Legal Services, Inc.’s Disaster Relief Law Field Clinic Comes To A Close
Cardozo Law Students Have Helped MFY Serve Over 500 Victims of Hurricane Sandy
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NEW YORK, NY, April 23, 2013— Today marks the last class of this semester’s Disaster Relief Law Field Clinic (the Clinic), through which Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law (Cardozo) students have been working with MFY Legal Services, Inc. (MFY) attorneys to address the legal needs of low-income New Yorkers devastated by Hurricane Sandy.
Although MFY’s offices in lower Manhattan did not have power for a week after the storm, MFY immediately mobilized with attorneys visiting shelters and going to the most seriously affected areas. The agency produced a series of seven fact sheets in English, Spanish and Chinese to give storm victims accurate information on their rights and how to access assistance. During the following weeks, MFY attorneys regularly staffed clinics in hard-hit areas, including Far Rockaway, Coney Island, the Lower East Side of Manhattan, and Staten Island. By December, however, MFY was stretched to capacity.
The Clinic grew out of discussions between Kevin M. Cremin, MFY’s Director of Litigation for Disability & Aging Rights, and Rebecca Rosenfeld, Cardozo’s Director of Externships, regarding the new 50-hour pro bono work requirement for New York State bar admission.
“After Hurricane Sandy, we were contacted by many volunteers, but we knew that we had to provide appropriate training to ensure high-quality services for our clients,” said Mr. Cremin. “We decided that a law school clinic would be the best approach.”
“Our field clinics provide students with real-world experience and build on Cardozo’s innovative clinical history and dedication to social justice,” said Ms. Rosenfeld. “When MFY approached us with the idea for a Hurricane Sandy-related project, we knew that our students would jump at the opportunity to gain real-world experience while helping their fellow New Yorkers.”
After interviews, six students were selected to participate in the Clinic. The Clinic’s seminar component, designed by Mr. Cremin, has examined how law students, not-for-profit organizations, and the three branches of government have responded to Hurricane Sandy and other disasters. Guest lecturers have included New York City Council Member Daniel R. Garodnick, who said: “Victims face so many challenges when a disaster strikes, and not least among those is navigating the bureaucracy that arises as part of any relief effort. And for these students, guiding people through this difficult time provided hands-on experience that few classes can offer.”
During this semester alone, Cardozo students have helped MFY serve over 500 victims of Hurricane Sandy. Students have provided a wide range of services, including: conducting intake; helping homeowners secure Neighborhood Recovery Fund grants; appealing denials of FEMA benefits; and helping MFY identify and begin to address the systemic problems facing victims of Hurricane Sandy by drafting FOIL requests, fact sheets, and various research memoranda.
“The Clinic gave me the chance to work with clients one-on-one,” said Tammy Kom ’14. “I had the opportunity to hear clients’ stories, to build their cases by creating legal arguments, and make a real contribution to the actions taken by the attorneys. Most importantly, the Clinic allowed me to help a lot of people affected by Hurricane Sandy, and to be rewarded daily by their genuine appreciation.”
Since Hurricane Sandy hit, MFY has served over 900 Sandy victims and provided trainings for approximately 750 additional people on their rights to FEMA and other benefits. Although the Clinic is ending, MFY’s work on behalf of Sandy victims will continue with the addition of new staff, summer interns, and help from volunteer attorneys. New Yorkers who need help with a problem stemming from Hurricane Sandy can call MFY at 212.417.3808 on Mondays or Wednesdays, between 2 p.m. – 5 p.m.
MFY Legal Services, Inc. envisions a society in which no one is denied justice because he or she cannot afford an attorney. To make this vision a reality, for 50 years MFY has provided free legal assistance to residents of New York City on a wide range of civil legal issues, prioritizing services to vulnerable and under-served populations, while simultaneously working to end the root causes of inequities through impact litigation, law reform and policy advocacy.
Founded in 1976 by Yeshiva University, one of the finest research universities in the United States, the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law has a national reputation for a top-caliber faculty and an innovative academic program that includes a wide range of exciting and practical opportunities.
For more information:
Kevin M. Cremin
212-417-3759 / kcremin@mfy.org
Rebecca Rosenfeld
(212) 790-0894 / becky.rosenfeld@yu.edu
May Mentors Complete Training
The May Mentors Program, founded and led by SBA Vice President Matthew Kriegsman '14, celebrates the completion of their mentor training.

Symposium on China’s Transition from Manufacturing to Innovation Economy Hosted by Cardozo Law Review’s Online Journal
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Symposium on China’s Transition from Manufacturing to Innovation Economy Hosted by Cardozo Law Review’s Online Journal
NEW YORK, NY, April 29, 2013 -- All eyes are on China in the twenty-first century, as it emerges as one of the fastest growing economies in the world. At the same time, losses in various industries are attributed to piracy—a substantial amount of which is alleged to occur within China’s borders—and the Chinese government is routinely criticized for its weak enforcement measures against counterfeiting activities and intellectual property infringement on its soil. Cardozo Law Reviewde•novo’s online symposium, “China Re-Rising?: Innovation and Collaboration for a Successful Twenty-First Century” focuses on China’s overall transition from a manufacturing to an innovation economy and how this transition affects IP policies and industries around the world.
The online symposium - located at http://cardozolawreview.com/de-novo-2013.html - features articles from practitioners, industry corporate counsel, professors, and Chinese IP law specialists. Esteemed participants include Chen Wang, the Deputy Chief IP Counsel of E.I. du Pont de Nemours Company; Jonathan Sallet, a Partner at O’Melveny & Myers LLP; and Professor Peter Yu, the Kern Family Chair in Intellectual Property Law and Director of the Intellectual Property Law Center at Drake University Law School.
About the Articles:
Professor Yu discusses the slowly-begun change in discourse around China’s intellectual property system, particularly in the field of patents. He presents the reader with five key questions on the state of Chinese intellectual property law and policy. His answers suggest that the future of China’s intellectual property system is dualistic and dynamic—while massive piracy and counterfeiting does continue, this ongoing issue is balanced by China’s rise as a patent power.
Professors Murphy and Orcutt discuss China’s patent subsidy program—an aspect of China’s national innovation strategy that aims to increase domestic patents and innovation through government subsidies to pay for domestic inventors’ legal costs associated with obtaining patents. Noting that the program has been criticized for failing to fund truly valuable or innovative patents, the Authors propose a unique two-stage, three-dimensional relative value technique for the Chinese government to implement in evaluating whether to fund a given patent application through the subsidy program.
Ms. Wang and Mr. Sallet in turn criticize the Chinese government’s metric-based approach to innovation. They posit that China’s emphasis on numerical goals to domestic patenting actually hampers Chinese innovation by directing resources away from research and the development of truly valuable inventions. The Authors further discuss how China’s metric-based approach frustrates the ability of multi-national corporations to collaborate effectively with Chinese companies. They conclude by identifying steps the Chinese government can take to increase local innovation through effective international collaboration.
Professor Shao calls for a holistic perspective of the Chinese innovation economy, law, and policies. His Article offers a historical and cultural perspective that aims to make a holistic approach possible for Western scholars and practitioners, who lack the knowledge of Chinese history and culture necessary to understand the context of China’s current policies. He concludes by proposing that innovation still can, and should, be the bridge to China’s successful economic transition.
Professors Murphree and Breznitz discuss China’s innovation strategy through the lens of its failed attempts to develop globally successful technology standards. The Authors attribute these failures to fragmented production and structured uncertainty implicit in the Chinese domestic market. Despite these failures, the Authors acknowledge that Chinese companies’ participation in even failed attempts does produce tangible benefits, like receiving lower royalty rates on goods they produced.
View the online symposium at http://cardozolawreview.com/de-novo-2013.html
For more information:
Lindsay Korotkin
Cardozo.l.rev.de.novo@gmail.com

New Pro Bono Rule Spurs Law Student Aid to Hurricane Sandy Victims
April 27, 2013 DNAinfo - MANHATTAN — Matt Longobardi knew when Hurricane Sandy hit that the need for legal assistance would be huge.
The second-year Cardozo Law student was busy with finals after the power was restored in his East Village apartment, so he had no time to volunteer then, but he rolled up his sleeves in a class this semester designed to help low-income New Yorkers devastated by the storm.
The Disaster Relief Law Field Clinic, which ended this week, grew out of discussions between Kevin Cremin, MFY Legal Serivice’s director of litigation for disability and aging rights, and Rebecca Rosenfeld, Cardozo’s director of externships, about the new 50-hour pro bono work requirement for New York State bar admission.
The first-of-its-kind pro bono rule — which the New York State court system announced last May for everyone seeking admission to the bar by 2015 — was intended to address the growing numbers of those who can’t afford legal services.
The six Cardozo students participating in the clinic were eager to take on the responsibility, and through the course logged about 150 hours and assisted MFY's work with 500 Sandy victims, organizers said.
“It was a way to get involved over a longer period of time, rather than just spending a weekend or something helping out,” Longobardi, 25, said. “Sometimes you almost forgot you’re working on Hurricane Sandy issues, because the storm really just worsened a lot of legal issues that people were already facing.”
The students worked with people with disabilities who were displaced from adult homes in the Rockaways, visiting with the residents of Belle Harbor Manor sent to Queens Village’s Creedmoor Psychiatric Center and residents from Rockaway Manor Home for Adults sent to Staten Island, said Cremin, who led the class. They appealed denials of FEMA benefits and played an important role in helping Staten Island homeowners successfully apply for nearly $60,000 in Neighborhood Recovery Fund grants.
“By December, many legal services offices — including MFY — were operating at capacity,” Cremin said. “Without this clinic, hundreds of Hurricane Sandy victims almost certainly would not have known their rights or had access to legal assistance to vindicate those rights.”
When the pro bono rule came down last year, there was some grumbling in the legal world about busy, cash-strapped students being required to do the work rather than actual lawyers.
But many advocates for the requirement pointed to the benefits of pro bono work through legal clinics run by law schools.
“The challenge for organizations will be to come up with projects like this to ensure that students receive appropriate training and supervision,” Cremin said.
The students worked closely with MFY lawyers, meeting with supervisors weekly. They did simulations of client interviews in class, then shadowed attorneys interviewing clients before leading interviews under the observation of attorneys, who provided feedback.
“People suffered so much loss and many are still devastated by what happened,” said Tammy Kom, 33, a second-year Carodozo student who lived in New Orleans during Katrina. “One client we helped lived in a house on the beach [in Staten Island] and actually stayed in it for the storm. The four houses on either side of him completely collapsed and were washed away. He is still there, living in a tent in his living room.”
Though New York’s pro bono requirement is still in the early stages, other states may soon follow. California and Connecticut’s bar associations have issued recommendations to adopt a similar rule, and New Jersey is also considering the requirement.
Helaine Barnett, who chairs the court’s Task Force to Expand Access to Legal Service in New York, said it was too early to report on the ruling’s impacts, but a conference in mid-May would include a workshop looking at best practices on how law schools, legal service providers and the courts can work together.
“We do think it will make a dent in the justice gap in the number of people that have needs for legal services,” she said.
Though many law schools already offer many legal clinics, the National Center for Access to Justice at Cardozo Law School is strongly urging the American Bar Association to adopt a 50-hour pro bono requirement modeled on the New York rule that would apply to all law schools across the country.
“The 50-hour rule highlights and creates additional incentives for students to jump in,” the center’s executive director David Udell said.
“When terrible things happen like Sandy, it turns out that law students can make a difference,” he said. “They’re solving legal/bureaucratic obstacles for people when government is unresponsive and action needs to be taken on behalf of vulnerable.”
The pro bono requirement, he added, “says to every student it’s partly your responsibility what happens in the justice system, [and] it partly stops students from sailing through law school.”
Law Review Article by Jared Bloch '13 Selected as Top Note
A note by Jared Bloch '13 for the Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution, "From the People's Court to American Idol: The Relationship Between Television and Arbitration,"14 Cardozo J. Conflict Resolution 503 (2013), was selected as one of the best law review articles published within the last year in the fields of entertainment, publishing and the arts. It will be included in the 2013 edition of the Entertainment, Publishing and the Arts Handbook, published annually by Thomson Reuters (West). This handbook provides in-depth treatment and comprehensive coverage of the latest issues, regulations, legislation, and case law affecting the entertainment and publishing industries and the arts.