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Bundle: Wills, Trusts, and Estates, Twelfth Edition and PracticePerfect

Authors
  • Robert H. Sitkoff
  • Jesse Dukeminier
  • Deborah Gordon
  • Emily Grant
  • Karen J. Sneddon
Series / Aspen Bundle Series
Description

Bundle: Print + eBook + Video Learning - This bundle includes both print and digital versions of ISBN 9798892075107 as well as PracticePerfect, ISBN 9798892078603.

Bundle: eBook + Video Learning - This bundle includes a digital-only version of ISBN 9798892075114 as well as PracticePerfect, ISBN 9798892078603.

More about Wills, Trusts, and Estates, Twelfth Edition: Widely hailed as one of the best casebooks in legal education, this comprehensive text combines interesting cases, thoughtful analysis, notes, images, and a clear organization for an excellent teaching tool. Cartoons, illustrations, case documents, and photographs provide useful visual commentary. Sidebars on relevant persons, places, and things provide interesting and sometimes humorous context. A comprehensive Teacher’s Manual provides a complete teaching summary of all materials in the book, and comprehensive PowerPoint slides provide helpful structure for classroom organization. 


Bundle also includes PracticePerfect: Wills, Trusts, and Estates, a visually engaging, interactive study aid designed to help students review core course topics and test their ability to recall and correctly apply the law. PracticePerfect contains a library of animated videos that explain course topics through hypothetical situations, quizzes to test knowledge and understanding, and progress trackers so students can identify their strengths and weaknesses in the course. Designed to work with all major casebooks, PracticePerfect is the ideal study companion for today's law students.
 

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About the authors
Robert H. Sitkoff
Professor
Harvard University

Robert H. Sitkoff is the Austin Wakeman Scott Professor of Law and the John L. Gray Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. He was the youngest professor with tenure to receive a chair in the history of the school, and he is the only current member of the faculty to hold two chairs within the law school. He has won several teaching awards. Sitkoff’s research focuses on economic and empirical analysis of trusts, estates, and fiduciary administration. His work has been published in leading scholarly journals such as the Yale Law Journal, the Stanford Law Review, and the Journal of Law and Economics, and he is a coeditor of The Oxford Handbook of Fiduciary Law (2019).

A Uniform Law Commissioner from Massachusetts, Sitkoff is the Chair for the drafting committee for an Act on Conflict of Trust and Estate Laws, is a liaison member of the Joint Editorial Board for Uniform Trust and Estate Acts, and was the Chair for the drafting committee for the Uniform Directed Trust Act (2017). He is also a member of the Council of the American Law Institute. Sitkoff serves as an advisory consultant and expert witness in litigation and regulatory matters involving wills, trusts, estates, and fiduciary administration. He has also led training workshops for trust officers and other professional fiduciaries. Sitkoff edits the Wills, Trusts, and Estates abstracting journal in the Social Science Research Network and is an academic fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel.

Jesse Dukeminier
Late Maxwell Professor of Law
University of California, Los Angeles

Jesse Dukeminier is the late Maxwell Professor of Law at UCLA Law School. A professor of law at UCLA for over 40 years, Jesse Dukeminier was renowned for his contributions to the field of property law. His casebooks on property and wills, trusts, and estates are among the most widely used in the country in their fields. For four decades, Dukeminier was widely respected by students and was honored twice as professor of the year by the UCLA School of Law's graduating classes.

Dukeminier received a Lifetime Achievement Award in Teaching and became the first UCLA Law faculty member to receive a University Distinguished Teaching Award. He also received the School of Law's Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching.

Dukeminier was born in West Point, Mississippi, and studied at Harvard University, receiving his bachelor's degree in 1948. He received his law degree from Yale in 1951 and practiced law with a Wall Street firm. Dukeminier joined UCLA in 1963. He also taught at the University of Kentucky, and he visited at Harvard and the University of Chicago.

Deborah Gordon
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
DREXEL UNIVERSIY THOMAS R. KLINE SCHOOL OF LAW

Deborah Gordon’s scholarship explores the intersection of language, emotion, and gender in inheritance law. Professor Gordon’s publications include “Mor(t)ality & Identity: Wills, Narratives, and Personal Possessions,” in the Yale Journal for Law & the Humanities, “Forfeiting Trust,” in the William & Mary Law Review, “Trusting Trust,” in the University of Kansas Law Review, "Letters Non-Testamentary," also in the University of Kansas Law Review, and “Reflecting on the Language of Death,” in the Seattle University Law Review. Professor Gordon also is a co-author of the casebook Experiencing Trusts & Estates and a contributor to U.S. Feminist Judgments Project. Professor Gordon has served on the Governing Board of the Legal Writing Institute’s Writer’s Workshop, on the Executive Board of the American Association of Law School’s Trusts & Estates section, and on the Scholarship Development Committee of the Legal Writing Institute. Before joining the law school faculty, Professor Gordon practiced at Day Berry & Howard (now Day, Pitney) in Stamford, Connecticut, where she handled sophisticated estate planning, business and succession planning, pre-marital planning, estate administration, and litigation involving fiduciaries and beneficiaries. A graduate (magna cum laude) of New York University School of Law, Professor Gordon served as editor-in-chief of The New York University Law Review. After law school, she clerked for Judge I. Leo Glasser of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York and served as Sullivan & Cromwell’s pro bono fellow. Professor Gordon was chosen by graduating students to receive the Dean Jennifer L. Rosato Excellence in the Classroom Award in 2017.

Emily Grant
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
WASHBURN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

Professor Emily Grant joined the faculty at Washburn University School of Law in 2011, where she teaches courses in legal writing and estates and trusts. Prior to coming to Washburn, she taught legal writing courses at her alma mater, the University of Illinois College of Law, where as a student she served as articles editor for the University of Illinois Law Review. Professor Grant then joined the University of Kansas School of Law faculty as a part-time lecturer in the Lawyering Program; she was later named as a full-time lawyering professor while also working with students as part of the Academic Resources Program. Before transitioning to a teaching career, Professor Grant was senior court counsel for the Palau Supreme Court, which serves the small island nation located in the Pacific Ocean. She also clerked for the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois, and the United States District Court for the District of Kansas. Professor Grant is a co-director of the Institute for Law Teaching and Learning and teaches in the law school's Legal Analysis, Research, and Writing Program.

Karen J. Sneddon
Dean
Mercer Law School

Karen J. Sneddon became Dean of the Mercer University School of Law on May 31, 2023. As a Professor of Law she taught legal writing and trusts & estates. She continues to write and present in those areas as well as classroom instruction and pedagogy. After graduating summa cum laude from Tulane Law School, she practiced in the area of trusts & estates. Two years later, she became a Forrester Fellow at Tulane Law School before joining the Mercer faculty in 2006. She has been a Visiting Professor of Law at the William S. Boyd School of Law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and taught a short course in Comparative Succession at ELTE Law, Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary. Her most recent law review article is Dead Men (and Women) Should Tell Tales: Narrative, Intent, and Construction Proceedings, 46 ACTEC Law J. 301 (2021). In 2021, she received the 2020 Teresa G. Phelps Scholarship Award for Legal Communication for Clause A to Clause Z: Narrative Transportation and the Transactional Reader, 71 S.C. L. Rev. 247 (2019) (with Professor Susan M. Chesler, co-author and co-recipient of the award). In addition to authoring law review articles, Professor Sneddon co-authored with Moot Court Workbook with Professor Sue Painter-Thorne. Professor Sneddon has also co-authored Experiencing Trusts & Estates with Professor Deborah Gordon, Professor Carla Spivak, & Professor Alison Tait. Professor Sneddon has also contributed a rewritten judgment to Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Trusts and Estates Opinions (eds. Deborah S Gordon, Browne C. Lewis, & Carla Spivack) (Cambridge Univ. Press 2020). Since 2008, Professor Sneddon has co-authored with Professor David Hricik the regular column “Writing Matters” for the Georgia Bar Journal. She is an active member of the Legal Writing Institute, Association of Legal Writing Directors, and the Southeastern Association of Law Schools.

Product Information
Edition
Twelfth Edition
Publication date
2025-11-20
Copyright Year
2025
Pages
1088
Bundle: Print + eBook + Video Learning
9798899638312
Bundle: eBook + Video Learning
9798899638329
Subject
Wills, Trusts, and Estates
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