Donna Dennis specializes in legal history and corporate law and governance.
Professor Dennis received a B.A. from Yale College, where she
graduated summa cum laude and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She also
holds a master's degree in history from Yale University and a J.D. from
Yale Law School. In 2005, Professor Dennis received a Ph.D. in history
from Princeton University, where she taught American legal history and
was awarded a Whiting Fellowship in the Humanities. Before joining the
Rutgers faculty, Professor Dennis practiced law in New York at Debevoise
& Plimpton; with the Civil Rights Bureau of the New York Attorney
General's Office; and as a partner at Richard Spears Kibbe & Orbe,
where she specialized in corporate governance, internal investigations,
and securities enforcement matters.
Professor Dennis's first book, Licentious Gotham: Erotic Publishing and Its Prosecution in Nineteenth Century New York
(Harvard University Press, 2009), explores the origins of obscenity
regulation and the "indecent" publishing trade in 19th-century New York
City. In addition, she has published articles, book chapters, and book
reviews in the areas of legal history; corporate and securities law; and
law, gender, and sexuality. She has been an invited speaker at the Yale
Legal History Forum and the UCLA Legal History Workshop and has
presented papers to the American Society for Legal History, the American
Studies Association, and the Law and Society Association, among others.