The Risks and Benefits of Disclosing Psychotherapy Records to the Legal System: What Psychologists and Patients Need to Know for Informed Consent, 42-43 INT’L J.L. & PSYCHIATRY 19 (2015) (with Bruce Borkosky, Ph.D.). [ScienceDirect]
Bringing Mindfulness Practices to the Law School Clinic, Equipoise, Newsletter of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Balance in Legal Education (Dec. 2018).
Electronic Evidence and the Right to Confrontation, 83 FORDHAM L. REV. 1216 (2014) (remarks during 2014 Federal Rules of Evidence Advisory Committee Symposium “The Challenges of Electronic Evidence”).
Diagnosing Liability: The Legal History of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, 84 TEMP. L. REV. 1 (2011). [PDF] [SSRN]
An Uncertain Privilege: Implied Waiver and the Evisceration of the Psychotherapist-Patient Privilege in the Federal Courts, 58 DePAUL L. REV. 79 (2008). [PDF] [SSRN]
Who Says You’re Disabled? The Role of Medical Evidence in the ADA Definition of Disability, 82 TUL. L. REV. 1 (2007). [PDF] [SSRN]
The Paradox of Personality: Mental Illness, Employment Discrimination and the Americans with Disabilities Act, 17 GEO. MASON U. C. R. L.J. 79 (2006). [PDF] [SSRN]
MAINE SCHOOL LAW (Harry Pringle & Amy Tchao, eds., 2001) (co-author of Chapter 6: “School Litigation and Liability”).
Representing Deaf Clients: What Every Lawyer Should Know, 15 ME. B.J. 128 (2000) (with Elizabeth Gallie, Esq.).
Confronting Silence: The Constitution, Deaf Criminal Defendants and the Right to Interpretation During Trial, 46 ME. L. REV. 87 (1994) (winner of 1994 SCRIBES Award). [PDF]