Professor of law
and
Arthur C. Clapp Public Service Scholar (Constitutional Rights Clinic; negotiation, mediation, and alternate dispute resolution; contracts)
Professor Hyman received his A.B. from Harvard and his LL.B. from
Yale. He specializes in litigation and alternative dispute resolution.
He was codirector of the legal clinic at Northwestern Law School before
joining the Rutgers faculty in 1975. He has devoted much of his
teaching to the Constitutional Litigation Clinic (now known as the Constitutional Rights Clinic), where he has litigated
civil rights and civil liberties cases, including cases that ended race
and sex discrimination in police and fire departments.
An active arbitrator and mediator, Professor Hyman has also written
extensively in the field of alternative dispute resolution, with a
particular focus on how lawyers settle cases, on the role of lawyers in
mediation, and on the relationship between mediation and justice. He
serves on several statewide organizations devoted to mediation and
alternative dispute resolution. He has lectured on alternate dispute
resolution to judges and lawyers and has designed and conducted
mediation training programs. While on leave from the law school,
Professor Hyman was of counsel to the litigation department of a large
law firm, and taught at UCLA Law School and at the University of Essex,
England. He served on the board of editors of the Clinical Law Review.