Seven New Faculty And Visitors Join
University Of Richmond School Of Law
The University of Richmond School of Law is pleased to announce the arrival of four new faculty and three visiting faculty for the 2007–08 academic year. Continuing a tradition of scholarship, public service and exceptional teaching, these professors bring skills and talents that will enrich the law school’s curriculum and its role as a civic partner in Richmond.
Tara Louise Casey is director of pro bono services, where she will serve to promote and coordinate pro bono activities by law students in connection with area lawyers, legal service agencies and nonprofits. Professor Casey will also work in conjunction with the Center for Civic Engagement in a coordinated program (called the "Richmond Families Initiative") which will include pro bono legal services by law students and related service learning opportunities for undergraduates.
Professor Casey is a 1994 graduate of UVa and received her JD in 1999 from
Washington University in St. Louis. Since 2002, she has served as assistant
United States attorney in Richmond, and has taught in our Law skills I-II
program since 2003.
She won the Richmond Bar Association's Pro Bono Award in 2005 for leadership
in a broad range of pro bono activities in the Richmond community. In
2007, Professor Casey was selected as the Richmond YWCA’s Outstanding
Women of Achievement in Law.
Suzanne Corriell joins the Law Library staff as Reference and Research Services Librarian, and will teach in the Legal Research portion of the first-year Lawyering Skills course. Ms. Corriell received her M.L.I.S and J.D. degrees from the University of Iowa, and her A.B. degree from Mount Holyoke College. As a law student, she served as managing editor of the Iowa Law Review. She most recently served as Circulation/Reference Librarian at the University of Iowa College of Law Library.
Jessica Morrell Erickson joins the faculty as an assistant professor of law. She has been an associate at Hunton & Williams since 2003 focusing on corporate governance and securities litigation, appellate litigation, commercial contract disputes, and business torts. She will teach Corporations, Contracts, and advanced courses in the corporate and business areas.
Professor Erickson graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she served as editor-in-chief of The Harvard Journal of Law & Technology. She also taught Legal Research and Analysis as a 2L and 3L as a member of the Board of Student Advisers. She received her B.A. summa cum laude from Amherst College with a dual degree in economics and law, jurisprudence, and social thought. Following law school, Professor Erickson clerked for Chief Judge Michael Boudin, U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Melanie Holloway is the new director of the Intellectual Property Institute. The institute promotes the study of contemporary intellectual property issues and increases curricular and other learning opportunities for law students. She will teach Computer Law.
Professor Holloway was a senior associate in the Intellectual Property, Data & Privacy Group at McGuireWoods in Richmond. Her practice focused on intellectual property development, protection, licensing and enforcement, with particular emphasis on trademark and copyright law. She also served as co-chair of the Women’s Leadership Forum for the Richmond office of McGuireWoods. Professor Holloway is a 2000 graduate of the University of Richmond School of Law where she was annual survey editor of the Richmond Law Review. She is past president of the Greater Richmond Intellectual Property Law Association and is a member of the Board of Governors for the Intellectual Property Section of the Virginia State Bar. In 2007, Holloway was named a Virginia Rising Star by Super Lawyers Magazine.
VISITING FACULTY
Lisa H. Nicholson will teach Corporations and Mergers
and Acquisitions in the spring of 2008. She is visiting from the University
of Louisville Louis D. Brandeis School of Law.
Professor Nicholson joined the Brandeis faculty in 2000 following seven
years of combined experience working in private practice in New York City
and with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in New York. Her research
and teaching interests are in securities regulation and corporate law. She
has a B.S. from Virginia Tech and a J.D. from the College of William and Mary
School of Law where she was assistant business editor of the William and Mary
Bill of Rights Journal and vice president of the Black Law Student Association.
Sean A. Pager will teach Intellectual Property Fundamentals and Cultural Protection and Intellectual Property in the fall of 2007 and Copyright and International Intellectual Property in the spring. He comes to us from Seattle University School of Law, where he spent 2006-2007 as a visiting professor, and previously was a visiting assistant professor at the University of Indiana—Bloomington School of Law where he taught Intellectual Property and International IP. He was also a visiting scholar at the UC Berkeley Center for the Study of Law & Society and a visiting professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law. Professor Pager received his A.B. magna cum laude from Harvard University, his J.D. from UC Berkeley Boalt Hall School of Law, Order of the Coif, and an LL.M. in International Law from the European University Institute in Florence, Italy.

