Sally F. Goldfarb's teaching and scholarship focus on family law, sex
discrimination, and torts. In recognition of her expertise on legal
remedies for violence against women, Professor Goldfarb has advised the
United Nations, was invited to the White House, and received a 20/20
Vision Award from the American Bar Association Commission on Domestic
and Sexual Violence.
Before joining the Rutgers faculty, Professor Goldfarb was a senior
staff attorney at the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund, where she
helped draft the federal Violence Against Women Act and founded and
chaired the national coalition that spurred its passage. Previously, she
worked as a judicial clerk in the U.S. District Court for the Western
District of Wisconsin; as a Georgetown University Women's Law and Public
Policy Fellow at National Women's Law Center; and as an assistant
attorney general in the Wisconsin Department of Justice.
Professor Goldfarb is a frequent participant in academic symposia and
is the author of many articles and book chapters. Several of her
publications have been excerpted in casebooks that are used at law
schools throughout the country. She has served on many boards and
commissions, including the New Jersey Supreme Court Committee on Women
in the Courts and the board of advisers for the American Law Institute's
Principles of the Law of Family Dissolution. Professor Goldfarb is the
recipient of four teaching awards at Rutgers and has also taught at
Harvard Law School, New York University School of Law, and University of
Pennsylvania Law School. She graduated summa cum laude from Yale College, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and received her law degree from Yale Law School.