Alan Hyde is an expert in labor, employment, immigration law, global
labor rights, and the economics of labor mobility. He has taught at
Yale, Columbia, Toronto, New York University, and the University of Michigan. He is the
author of Working in Silicon Valley (2003) and Bodies of Law (1997), a
member of the American Law Institute, and consultant to their
Restatement of Employment Law.
Professor Hyde earned his A.B. from Stanford and his J.D. from Yale.
Before coming to Rutgers, he was an instructor at New York University
School of Law and represented the National Labor Relations Board in
federal courts of appeals. He has been a visiting professor at Yale,
Columbia, Cornell, New York University, Cardozo, Fordham, the University
of Michigan, and the University of Toronto law schools. He is a member
of the American Law Institute and consultant to their current
Restatement of Employment Law.
Professor Hyde's current research interest is the economics of labor
mobility. Current projects include the economic analysis of restraints
on employee mobility, such as restrictive covenants and trade secrets,
economic analysis of visas for family unification and other visas, game
theory analysis of transnational labor standards, and the design of a
North American free labor market. He also studies the changing meaning
of citizenship and low naturalization rates among immigrants to the United States.
He is a director of the Association for Union Democracy, and writes
briefs in labor and employment cases on behalf of the association and
other employee rights organizations.
Professor Hyde lives in Manhattan. He enjoys reading, swimming, yoga,
and attending opera and dance performances, and plays the oboe in a
community orchestra and chamber groups.