Professor of Law. Professor Dane is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Yale College, where he earned his bachelor`s degree summa cum laude in 1978. He received his J.D. from the Yale Law School in 1981. Professor Dane was a note editor of the Yale Law Journal and received the Israel H. Peres Prize awarded by the faculty for the best student contribution to the Yale Law Journal. After law school, he was a law clerk to Judge David L. Bazelon of the U.S. Court of Appeals in 1981-1982 and to Justice William J. Brennan of the U.S. Supreme Court in 1982-1983. Professor Dane taught at the Yale Law School from 1983 to 1992. He joined the Rutgers-Camden faculty in 1992 and has served as its director of faculty development. He also has been a research affiliate at the Yale University Institution for Social and Policy Studies (1992-1993), an adjunct professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School (1996), a distinguished visiting professor at the Faculty of Law of the University of Toronto (1997), and a Fellow of the Center for Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture at Rutgers New Brunswick (2000-2001). Professor Dane`s interests include choice of law, religion and law, constitutional law, American Indian law, jurisdiction, Jewish law, contracts, and legal process. His publications include "Vested Rights, ´Vestedness,` and Choice of Law" (Yale Law Journal), "The Public, the Private, and the Sacred: Variations on a Theme of Nomos and Narrative" (Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature), "Jurisdictionality, Time, and the Legal Imagination" (Hofstra Law Review), "The Yoke of Heaven, the Question of Sinai, and the Life of Law" (University of Toronto Law Journal), "The Oral Law and the Jurisprudence of a Text-Less Text" (S`Vara: A Journal of Philosophy, Law, and Judaism), "Maps of Sovereignty: A Meditation" (Cardozo Law Review), "The Corporation Sole and the Encounter of Law and Church" (in Sacred Companies: Organizational Aspects of Religion and Religious Aspects of Organizations, Oxford University Press, edited by Nicholas Jay Demerath III, et al.), "Whereof One Cannot Speak: Legal Diversity and the Limits of a Restatement of Conflict of Laws" (Indiana Law Journal), "Pluralities of Justice, Modalities of Peace: The Role of Law(s) in a Palestinian-Israeli Accommodation," (Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law), "The Intersecting Worlds of Religious and Secular Marriage" (in Current Legal Issues: Law and Religion, Oxford University Press, edited by Richard O`Dair & Andrew Lewis), and "The Varieties of Religious Autonomy" (in Church Autonomy: A Comparative Survey, edited by Gerhard Robbers). He also contributed two essays, one on conflict of laws and the other on religion and the law, to the Blackwell Companion to the Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory, edited by Dennis Patterson.