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School of Law-Newark
 
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The School of Law-Newark
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John J. Farmer Jr.
Ronald K. Chen
Frank Askin
Charles I. Auffant
Carlos A. Ball
Bernard W. Bell
Vera Bergelson
Cynthia A. Blum
Elise Boddie
Frances V. Bouchoux
Yvette Bravo-Weber
Esther Canty-Barnes
Laura Cohen
Jean-Marc Coicaud
Jorge Contesse
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Sarah Dadush
Donna I. Dennis
Stuart L. Deutsch
Janet Donohue
Jon C. Dubin
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Wei Fang
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Gary L. Francione
Sandy Freund
Karen Fromkes
Linda Garbaccio
Matteo Gatti
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Yuliya Guseva
Adil Ahmad Haque
Taja-Nia Y. Henderson
Christina S. Ho
Robert C. Holmes
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John R. Kettle III
Suzanne A. Kim
Dennis Kim-Prieto
Jessica Kitson
Howard Latin
John Leubsdorf
Ji Li
Susan Lyons
Ava Majlesi
Randi Mandelbaum
Marie Melito
Saul Mendlovitz
David L. Noll
Chrystin Ondersma
Brandon Paradise
Twila L. Perry
James Gray Pope
Louis Raveson
Stephanie Richman
Andrew Rossner
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Sabrina Safrin
Phyllis Schultze
Diana Sclar
Fadi Shaheen
Peter Simmons
Lee Sims
George C. Thomas III
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David Dante Troutt
Jennnifer N. Rosen Valverde
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  The School of Law - Newark 2013–2015 Faculty and Administration  

Faculty and Administration

Our law professors are nationally and internationally renowned scholars and experts in established and emerging areas of law who challenge and inspire students in an intense yet supportive environment. Particular concentrations of academic strength in the faculty lie in the fields of criminal law, civil rights and civil liberties, constitutional law, corporate transactions, international law, family law, intellectual property, labor and employment law, and taxation. In addition, as part of the school's commitment to law reform, faculty have also litigated a remarkable number of precedent-setting state and federal court cases. Dedicated to academic excellence and innovation in legal pedagogy, Rutgers School of Law-Newark has a notable history of hiring rising scholars and welcoming progressive thinkers. By any measure--experience, interest, ethnicity, or gender--the faculty is diverse, ensuring the kind of intellectual inquiry and discovery that provides a rich foundation for a career in law.

The law school has long recognized the value of different perspectives and is proud to have been the first institutional home of many prominent women academics and African-American scholars. Today 40% of our faculty are women and 29% are minorities. Faculty engage students through teaching styles that range from the traditional Socratic method to interactive problem solving, from required courses to research seminars and clinical practice. Outside the classroom, they share their knowledge of the law, give career advice, and provide a supportive environment for the study of law.

 

 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732-445-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: Campus Information Services.

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