Professor
of Law.
Professor
Goodman earned her B.A. magna cum laude
at Harvard College in 1988 and her J.D. cum
laude at Harvard Law School in 1992. Professor Goodman clerked for the
Honorable Norma L. Shapiro in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Before
joining the Rutgers School of Law–Camden faculty in 2003, Professor Goodman was a partner at
the law firm of Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C., where she
practiced for nine years. While in practice, Professor Goodman specialized in
information law and policy, including telecommunications, media, and
intellectual property law. She is
admitted to the bars of Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. Professor Goodman's
research interests include the use of information policies as regulation, the
design of media policy for the digital age, and the allocation of property
rights in electromagnetic spectrum. She is also a scholar of animal law.
Professor Goodman's publications include: "Stealth Marketing" (Texas Law Review), "Spectrum Rights in
the Telecosm to Come" (San Diego Law Review),
"Media Policy Out of the Box:
Content Abundance, Attention Scarcity, and the Failures of Digital
Markets"
(Berkeley Technology Law Journal),
"New Media Speech Subsidies:
Bargains in the Marketplace of Information"
(Journal of Information and
High Technology Law),
and "Digital Television and the Allure of Auctions: The Birth and
Stillbirth of DTV Legislation" (Federal
Communications Law Journal). Professor Goodman teaches intellectual
property, media law, advertising law, animal law, and property law. She advised the Obama-Biden transition team
as well as the Obama campaign on media law issues, and has visited at the
University of Pennsylvania schools of law and communications and the Wharton
School of Business. She is also a Ford
Foundation grantee and a research fellow at American University's Center for
Social Media.
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