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Faculty Profiles

Ahmed Tahadownload image icon

Ahmed Taha

Professor of Law

Phone: 336.758.5433
Email: tahaa@wfu.edu
Location: Worrell 3334

Presentations

  • Address to Newly Naturalized U.S. Citizens, U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, May 2011.
  • Are College Athletes Economically Exploited?, Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy Symposium: "Losing to Win: Discussions of Race and Intercollegiate Sports," April 2011.
  • Using Information to Debias Consumers: An Examination of Mail-In Rebates, Stetson Law School Faculty Colloquium, October 2010.
  • Worthless Warnings: Testing the Effectiveness of Disclaimers in Mutual Fund Advertisements, American Law and Economics Association Annual Conference, May 2010.
  • Worthless Warnings: Testing the Effectiveness of Disclaimers in Mutual Fund Advertisements, Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, November 2009.
  • Worthless Warnings: Testing the Effectiveness of Disclaimers in Mutual Fund Advertisements, William and Mary Law School Faculty Colloquium, March 2009.
  • Discussant, Use of Judicial Doctrines in Federal Tax Cases Decided by Trial Courts, Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, September 2008.
  • Star Creation: The Incubation of Mutual Funds, University of Georgia Law School Faculty Colloquium, February 2008.
  • Mutual Fund Investors: Divergent Profiles, Duke Law School Law and Markets Workshop, October 2007.
  • Judge Shopping: Testing Whether Judges' Political Orientations Affect Case Filings, Wake Forest University Department of Economics Faculty Colloquium, October 2007.
  • Discussant, The Law Review Article Selection Process, Guest Blogger -- Empirical Legal Studies Blog, August 2007.
  • Pitfalls of Empirical Research, Southeastern Association of Law Schools Annual Meeting, July 2007.
  • How Panels Affect Judges: Evidence from U. S. District Courts, Association of American Law Schools Annual Meeting, January 2007.
  • Discussant, Congressional Oversight of Supreme Court Decisions, University of North Carolina Law School Faculty Colloquium, November 2006.
  • Judge Shopping: Testing Whether Judges' Political Orientations Affect Case Filings, University of Iowa Law School Faculty Colloquium, October 2006.
  • Judge Shopping: Testing Whether Judges' Political Orientations Affect Case Filings, Duke Law School Faculty Colloquium, August 2006.
  • Judge Shopping: Testing Whether Judges' Political Orientations Affect Case Filings, Junior Empirical Legal Scholars Conference (at Cornell Law School), October 2005.
  • Data and Selection Bias -- a Case Study, National Archives and Records Administration's Federal Civil Court Records Conference, October 2005.
  • Controlling Conflicts of Interest: A Tale of Two Industries, Case Western Reserve Law School Faculty Colloquium, September 2005.
  • Data and Selection Bias -- a Case Study, Southeastern Association of Law Schools Annual Meeting, July 2005.
  • Controlling Conflicts of Interest: A Tale of Two Industries, Law and Society Association Annual Meeting, June 2005.
  • Data and Selection Bias -- a Case Study, University of North Carolina Law School Faculty Colloquium, May 2005.
  • Controlling Conflicts of Interest: A Tale of Two Industries, Babcock Graduate School of Management Faculty Colloquium, November 2004.
  • Chair and Discussant, Panel on Empirical Studies of Judicial Behavior, Law and Society Association Annual Meeting, May 2004.