Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
School of Law-Newark
 
Dean's Message
About the University
The School of Law-Newark
Faculty and Administration
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
Marjorie E. Crawford
Sarah Dadush
Donna I. Dennis
Stuart L. Deutsch
Janet Donohue
Jon C. Dubin
Douglas S. Eakeley
Wei Fang
Jack Feinstein
Nicky Fornarotto
Gary L. Francione
Sandy Freund
Karen Fromkes
Linda Garbaccio
Matteo Gatti
Steve C. Gold
Carlos González
Stuart P. Green
Anjum Gupta
Yuliya Guseva
Adil Ahmad Haque
Taja-Nia Y. Henderson
Christina S. Ho
Robert C. Holmes
Alan Hyde
Jonathan M. Hyman
John P. Joergensen
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
Andrew Rothman
Sabrina Safrin
Phyllis Schultze
Diana Sclar
Fadi Shaheen
Peter Simmons
Lee Sims
George C. Thomas III
Paul L. Tractenberg
David Dante Troutt
Jennnifer N. Rosen Valverde
Penny M. Venetis
Anita Walton
Mark S. Weiner
Reid Kress Weisbord
Caroline Young
Emeritae/i Professors of Law
Legal Research and Writing Faculty
Adjunct Faculty
Administration
Library Staff
Beth Stephens
Erica Eisinger
Elizabeth A. Wilson
The Law Program
Admissions
Minority Student Program
Tuition and Fees
Financial Aid Overview
Student Services
Student Activities
Honors, Prizes, and Awards
Course Listing
Academic Policies and Procedures
Divisions of the University
Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  The School of Law - Newark 2013–2015 Faculty and Administration Beth Stephens  

Beth Stephens


Visiting professor of law (foreign relations and national security law)

Professor Stephens has published a variety of articles on the relationship between international and domestic law, focusing on the enforcement of international human rights norms through domestic courts. She coauthored a book analyzing U.S. enforcement of human rights norms, International Human Rights Litigation in U.S. Courts (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, second edition 2008).

From 1990-1995, she was in charge of the international human rights docket at the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York, where she litigated a series of cases addressing human rights violations in countries around the world, including Bosnia, Guatemala, Haiti, East Timor and Ethiopia. In 1995, Professor Stephens received the Trial Lawyers of the Year Award from Trial Lawyers for Public Justice in recognition of her work litigating international human rights claims. She was a finalist for the same award in 2001 and 2010. As a cooperating attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights and a former member of the board of directors of the Center for Justice and Accountability, Professor Stephens continues to litigate human rights cases, including cases filed against U.S.-based corporations alleging responsibility for human rights violations committed in the course of their activities abroad. She was co-counsel for the plaintiffs in Samantar v. Yousuf, a human rights case decided by the Supreme Court in May 2010, in which the Court ruled 9-0 for her clients.

Professor Stephens graduated magna cum laude from Harvard University, received her J.D. degree from the law school of the University of California at Berkeley, and clerked for Chief Justice Rose Bird of the California Supreme Court. She spent six years studying the changing of the legal system in Nicaragua in the 1980s.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732-445-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
Comments and corrections to: Campus Information Services.

© 2014 Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. All rights reserved.