New York University School of Law - Faculty

Faculty

NYU Law has the second highest number of faculty who are members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences with 19 inductees, behind only Harvard.

Some of NYU's notable professors include:

  • William Allen (Corporate Law, Chancellor of Delaware)
  • Philip Alston (Human Rights)
  • Anthony Amsterdam (Criminal Law, Capital Punishment)
  • Jennifer Arlen (White Collar Criminal Law, Law & Economics)
  • Rachel Barkow (Administrative Law, Criminal Law and Procedure)
  • Stephen Choi (Corporate Law, Securities Regulation)
  • Jerome Cohen (Chinese Law)
  • Ronald Dworkin (Legal Philosophy)
  • Richard Epstein (Law and Economics, Torts, Health Law & Policy)
  • Cynthia Estlund (Labor Law, Employment Law, Property)
  • James Eustice (Tax)
  • Barry Friedman (Constitutional Law)
  • David W. Garland (Criminal Law, Sociology)
  • Stephen Gillers (Legal Ethics)
  • Douglas H. Ginsburg (Administrative Law)
  • Roderick M. Hills (Administrative Law, Constitutional Law)
  • Samuel Issacharoff (Procedure, Democracy)
  • Marcel Kahan (Corporate Law, Mergers and Acquisitions)
  • Benedict Kingsbury (International Law)
  • Daryl Levinson (Constitutional Law)
  • Theodor Meron (International Law)
  • Arthur R. Miller (Civil Procedure, Copyright, and Privacy)
  • Thomas Nagel (Legal Philosophy)
  • Burt Neuborne (Evidence, Holocaust Litigation Expert)
  • Richard Pildes (Constitutional Law, Administrative Law, Election Law)
  • Richard Revesz (Dean, Environmental Law)
  • Catherine Sharkey (Tort Law, Empirical Legal Studies)
  • Daniel Shaviro (Tax Law, Tax Policy)
  • John Sexton (Civil Procedure)
  • Bryan Stevenson (Criminal Law, Capital Punishment)
  • Jeremy Waldron (Legal Philosophy)
  • Joseph H. H. Weiler (International Law)
  • Kenji Yoshino (Constitutional Law, LGBT Rights)

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Famous quotes containing the word faculty:

    Imagination is an almost divine faculty which, without recourse to any philosophical method, immediately perceives everything: the secret and intimate connections between things, correspondences and analogies.
    Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867)

    Truth is his inspirer, and earnestness the polisher of his sentences. He could afford to lose his Sharp’s rifles, while he retained his faculty of speech,—a Sharp’s rifle of infinitely surer and longer range.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Where is he who seeing a thousand men useless and unhappy, and making the whole region forlorn by their inaction, and conscious himself of possessing the faculty they want, does not hear his call to go and be their king?
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)