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Bundle: Law of Debtors and Creditors: Text, Cases, and Problems, Eighth Edition and Bankruptcy and Article 9: 2026 Statutory Supplement

Authors
  • Elizabeth Warren
  • Robert M. Lawless
  • Pamela Foohey
Series / Aspen Bundle Series
Description

Bundle: Print - This bundle includes both print and digital versions of ISBN 9781454893516 and a print version of supplement ISBN 9798899640766.

Bundle: Print + eBook - This bundle includes both print and digital versions of ISBN 9781454893516 and a digital-only version of supplement ISBN 9798899640773.

Bundle: eBook - This bundle includes a digital-only version of ISBN 9781543844122 and a digital-only version of supplement ISBN 9798899640773.


More about Law of Debtors and Creditors: Text, Cases, and Problems, Eighth Edition, one of the leading casebooks in the field, The Law of Debtors and Creditors features 39 problem sets with realistic questions a lawyer considers in managing a bankruptcy case. It also challenges the students with the major policy and theoretical questions in the field. The text features a functional organization as a bankruptcy case would unfold. The focus is on teaching through the realistic problems, complete with ethical difficulties embedded into the fact patterns. The presentation is lively and colloquial. Explanatory text throughout makes bankruptcy law accessible to students and easier to teach. Because it divides the subject between consumer and business bankruptcy, professors can select the depth of coverage for each subject in designing a two-, three-, or four-credit class. The authors—Senator Elizabeth Warren, Congresswoman Katie Porter, and Professors Pottow (Michigan) and Westbrook (Texas)—are among the most prominent in the field. Uniquely comprehensive Teacher’s Manual—chock full of material on how to design class around the problem sets, citations to new cases and literature, and suggestions for steering class discussion.

Bundle also includes Bankruptcy and Article 9: 2026 Statutory Supplement, which is smaller, lighter, and more portable than competing supplements. 

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About the authors
Elizabeth Warren
Harvard University (Emeritus)

Elizabeth Warren is the Leo Gottlieb Professor of Law Emeritus at Harvard University and the senior United States Senator from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. While in teaching, she twice won the Sacks-Freund Award for Teaching Excellence at Harvard Law School, as well as other teaching prizes at the University of Houston, the University of Michigan, and the University of Pennsylvania. She has written ten books and more than a hundred scholarly articles dealing with credit and economic stress. Warren has been a principal investigator on empirical studies funded by the National Science Foundation and more than a dozen private foundations. Warren served as Chief Adviser to the National Bankruptcy Review Commission. She also served as Vice-President of the American Law Institute, and she has been inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. During the financial crisis, Warren was the Chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, and she later served as Adviser to the President and Special Adviser to the Secretary of the Treasury to set up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Robert M. Lawless
University of Illinois College of Law

A nationally recognized expert in bankruptcy law, consumer finance, and empirical legal studies, Robert M. Lawless is the Max L. Rowe Professor of Law. Professor Lawless has published extensively on topics related to financial distress, business and consumer bankruptcy, and the intersection of law and social science. He co-directs the College of Law’s Program on Law, Behavior & Social Science and is a faculty affiliate of the university’s Center for Social & Behavioral Science and Cline Center for Advanced Social Research. Committed to bridging scholarship and real-world policy, Professor Lawless has played a key role in shaping discussions on bankruptcy reform.

Professor Lawless is a co-author of Debt’s Grip: Risk and Consumer Bankruptcy. Scheduled for release in August 2025, Debt’s Grip combines empirical data with personal narratives from bankruptcy filers to document what it means to live in financial precarity. Professor Lawless is also a co-author of leading textbooks in the fields of secured transactions and empirical methods in law. He administers and contributes to the blog Credit Slips, a discussion on credit, finance, and bankruptcy. He is a co-principal investigator in the Consumer Bankruptcy Project, a long-term research project studying persons who file bankruptcy.

Professor Lawless has served in leadership roles in major legal organizations, including the National Bankruptcy Conference and the American College of Bankruptcy. As the reporter for the American Bankruptcy Institute’s Commission on Consumer Bankruptcy (2017–2019), he played a pivotal role in shaping its findings, earning the ABI’s 2019 Annual Service Award. He has testified before the U.S. Senate on consumer protection and bankruptcy reform and has been an influential voice in policy discussions.

Born and raised in Illinois, Professor Lawless earned both his undergraduate degree in accounting and his law degree from the University of Illinois. During law school, he served as editor-in-chief of the University of Illinois Law Review. Before joining the University of Illinois, he taught at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and the University of Missouri. He also held visiting professorships at Washington University in St. Louis and The Ohio State University. He began his legal career as a law clerk for the Honorable Harlington Wood, Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit before practicing law in Washington, D.C.

Pamela Foohey

Pamela Foohey is Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. Specializing in bankruptcy, commercial law, consumer finance, and business law, Foohey’s scholarship primarily involves empirical studies of bankruptcy and related parts of the legal system. She presently is a co-investigator on the Consumer Bankruptcy Law Project, a long-term research project studying persons who file bankruptcy. Data from this research project serve as the basis of her co-authored book Debt’s Grip: Risk and Consumer Bankruptcy, University of California Press (2025). Her work in business bankruptcy focuses on nonprofit entities. Data from this project are included in her forthcoming book Forgive Us Our Debts: How Black Churches Use Bankruptcy to Survive, University of Chicago Press (2026). Leading journals publishing her work include Virginia Law Review, Southern California Law Review, Boston College Law Review, Notre Dame Law Review and Law & Contemporary Problems, among others.

Foohey is a member of the American College of Bankruptcy and the American Law Institute. She has assisted members of Congress and federal and state agencies in the areas of bankruptcy and consumer credit. She has also provided expert media commentary for high profile publications such as The New York Times, Financial Times and The Washington Post, in addition to Bloomberg and National Public Radio.

Product Information
Edition
Eighth Edition
Publication date
2026-08-05
Copyright Year
2026
Bundle: Print
9798899648373
Bundle: Print + eBook
9798899648380
Bundle: eBook
9798899648397
Subject
Bankruptcy and Debtor/Creditor Law
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