Professor
of Law. Professor Goldfarb is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Yale
University, where she earned her B.A. degree summa cum laude in 1978.
She earned her J.D. at Yale Law School in 1982. She was a law clerk to Chief
Judge Barbara B. Crabb of the U.S. District Court in Madison, Wisconsin; a
Georgetown University Women's Law and Public Policy fellow; an assistant
attorney general for the State of Wisconsin; and a senior staff attorney at the
NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund. She has taught at Harvard Law School, New
York University School of Law, and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Among
her publications are "Reconceiving Civil Protection Orders for Domestic
Violence: Can Law Help End the Abuse Without Ending the Relationship," (Cardozo
Law Review),"Granting Same-Sex Couples the Full Rights and Benefits of
Marriage: Easier Said Than Done" (Rutgers Law Review),
"Applying the Discrimination Model to Violence against Women" (American
University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law), "The
Supreme Court, the Violence Against Women Act, and the Use and Abuse of
Federalism" (Fordham Law Review), "Violence against Women and
the Persistence of Privacy" (Ohio State Law Journal), "Family
Law, Marriage, and Heterosexuality: Questioning the Assumptions" (Temple
Political and Civil Rights Law Review), "Marital Partnership and the
Case for Permanent Alimony" (Journal of Family Law), and "Child
Support Guidelines: A Model for Fair Allocation of Child Care, Medical, and
Educational Expenses" (Family Law Quarterly). She has served on a
number of boards and commissions, including the New Jersey Supreme Court
Committee on Women in the Courts, the Board of Advisers for the American Law
Institute's Project on the Law of Family Dissolution, and the United Nations
Division for the Advancement of Women Expert Group on Violence Against Women.
She was elected Professor of the Year at Rutgers School of Law-Camden three times and
received the Rutgers Camden Provost's Award for Teaching Excellence in 2004.
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