Associate Professor of Law.
(Family Law, Civil Procedure, Gender and the Law.) Professor Kim joined the Rutgers faculty in 2006.
Her
scholarship broadly addresses the interaction between law and evolving
social understandings of family, gender, race, and ethnicity. She has
written in the areas of family law, violence against women, and
critical theory. Her article, "Reconstructing Family
Privacy," was published in the Hastings Law Journal. Her work has also appeared in Boalt Hall's Asian Law Journal, the Cardozo Women's Law Journal, and the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law.
Prior to joining the faculty, Professor Kim was a lecturer and teaching fellow at Stanford Law School. She earned a
B.A. with distinction from
Yale
College, where she was a Bouchet Fellow and received the Meeker Writing Prize,
and a J.D. cum
laude from
Georgetown
University
Law
Center, where she served as the senior articles editor of
the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the
Law. After law school, she practiced
law as a litigation associate with Weil, Gotshal & Manges in
New York
and received the firm's Pro Bono Service Award. She also served as a law clerk to the Hon. Denny Chin of the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of New York.
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