

After law school, she clerked for Judge J. Kaufman received her undergraduate degree summa cum laude from Columbia, her law degree from Yale Law School, and her doctorate from the University of Oxford, where she was a Marshall Scholar. In 2015, Oxford University Press published her book, Punish and Expel: Border Control, Nationalism, and the New Purpose of the Prison, which draws on a year of ethnographic research inside men’s prisons to offer a new account of the relationship between punishment and immigration enforcement. Her writing has appeared in the Harvard Law Review, The University of Chicago Law Review, and many other academic publications, and her recent work on the rise of prisons segregated by citizenship status was featured in The New Yorker.

Kaufman's research focuses on the intersection of criminal, immigration, constitutional, and administrative law.

She joined NYU from the University of Chicago Law School, where she was a Bigelow Fellow. Kravitch of the US Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.Įmma Kaufman is an Assistant Professor of Law at New York University Law School. Friedman graduated with honors from the University of Chicago and received his law degree magna cum laude from Georgetown University Law Center. Friedman is also the author of Open Book: The Inside Track to Law School Success, and talks frequently on the subject. He and a set of co-authors from law and the social sciences are writing a course book for the Judicial Decisionmaking course. In addition to his conventional courses in Constitutional Law, Federal Courts, and Criminal Procedure, Friedman teaches seminars in policing, and a new course entitled Judicial Decisionmaking that marries social science about judging with normative and institutional legal questions. Friedman has served as a litigator or litigation consultant on a variety of matters in the federal and state courts, and has had a long involvement with social change issues. He publishes regularly in the nation’s leading academic journals, in the fields of law, politics, and history his work also appears frequently in the popular press, including the New York Times, Slate, the Los Angeles Times, Politico, and the New Republic. Friedman is the founding director of NYU Law’s Policing Project, and the reporter for the American Law Institute’s Principles of Law: Policing. He is the author of the The Will of the People: How Public Opinion Has Influenced the Supreme Court and Shaped the Meaning of the Constitution (2009), and Unwarranted: Policing without Permission (2017). Fuchsberg Professor of Law and Affiliated Professor of Politicsīarry Friedman is one of the country’s leading authorities on constitutional law, policing, criminal procedure, and the federal courts.
