Faculty Visiting from Philadelphia


Marina Angel, Professor
Temple University Beasley School of Law

LL.M., University of Pennsylvania Law School
J.D., Columbia Law School
B.A., Barnard College

Marina Angel is a Professor of Law at Temple. As a writer, teacher, and scholar, Professor Marina Angel has dedicated herself to improving the status of women and minorities in the legal profession and reforming the profession in order to make their advancement possible. Professor Angel's writings have focused on sexual harassment, abuse and violence against women and girls, legal education, criminal law, and labor and employment law. She has over thirty publications to her credit. Professor Angel has taught abroad as a visiting law school professor at various universities, including Queensland Institute of Technology and Wollongong University in Australia, Tel Aviv University, and the University of Puerto Rico. She has received numerous awards, including the Pennsylvania Bar Association's Sandra Day O'Connor Award in recognition of her legal, academic, and mentoring contributions to the legal profession, and the American Bar Association's Margaret Brent Women Lawyers of Achievement Award for an unfailing commitment to advocating for women and minorities in the profession.


The following professors have previously taught during spring semesters in Tokyo.


Laura Little, Professor
Temple University Beasley School of Law

J.D., 1985, Temple University School of Law
B.A., 1979, University of Pennsylvania

Prior to joining Temple's law faculty in 1990, Professor Little served as a law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist (October Term 1986) and law clerk to Judge James Hunter III of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1985-1986). She also practiced law privately in Philadelphia from 1987-1990 where she litigated commercial and First Amendment cases, representing media clients such as the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News. Professor Little has won numerous awards for both her outstanding teaching and scholarship, and was recently appointed the James E. Beasley Professor of Law. Professor Little lectures internationally on federalism, conflict of laws, and adjudication process issues. She teaches courses in Federal Court Jurisdiction, Conflict of Laws, Civil Procedure and Remedies. The author of numerous articles in the field of federal courts and conflict of laws, Professor Little has also written a treatise on appellate advocacy. She co- taught International Criminal Law in Temple's Summer 2000 and 2003 Rome program. She also received Temple University's Great Teacher Award in April 2004.

Richard P. Barrett, Assistant United States Attorney
United States Department of Justice

J.D., 1985, Temple University School of Law
B.A., 1981, Temple University

Professor Barrett is a distinguished prosecutor with the Criminal Division of the United States Attorneys Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. He has investigated white-collar crime for over ten years and has been actively involved in international criminal prosecutions in cooperation with law enforcement agencies throughout the world. Professor Barrett has successfully prosecuted numerous high profile cases, including Russian and Asian organized crime figures, public corruption crimes, drug trafficking conspiracies, and health care fraud. Prior to joining the United States Attorneys Office, Professor Barrett prosecuted rape and child abuse cases with the Philadelphia District Attorneys Office. A frequent lecturer on criminal prosecution, Professor Barrett has taught Introduction to Trial Advocacy for several years in Philadelphia. He co-taught International Criminal Law in Temple's Rome Program in Summer 2000 and 2003.

Jan Ting, Professor
Temple University Beasley School of Law

J.D., 1975, Harvard Law School
M.A., 1972, University of Hawaii
B.A., 1970, Oberlin College

Jan Ting, Professor of Law, joined the Temple law faculty in 1977. He specialized in tax law as an attorney at the Philadelphia law firm of Pepper Hamilton & Scheetz from 1975 to 1977. He was appointed Assistant Commissioner at the Immigration & Naturalization Service of the U.S. Department of Justice in 1990, and served there until 1993. He teaches courses in taxation and immigration law, and has published articles in those areas. His summer 2002 article on "Federal Initiatives in Response to the September 11 Terrorist Attacks" appears at 34 Connecticut Law Review 1145. He has been quoted in news reports on legal developments, and has published commentary, in various media including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, National Public Radio, PBS Newshour, ABC Nightline, and the NBC Today Show, Dateline, and Evening News programs. Professor Ting was also named the 2003 Asian-American Law Professor of the Year. It is anticipated that Professor Ting will teach Immigration and National Security Law during Spring Semester 2005.

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