Berkeley Law professors are prolific, insightful scholars with broad and significant influence felt well beyond the school’s walls through their research, legal advocacy, policymaking and commentary.
New Research

Flourishing Faculty
Four members of the Berkeley Law faculty were named to the annual “Top 100 Legal Scholars of 2025” list, an analysis by George Mason Law Librarians Rob Willey and Melanie […]
Data Privacy Details
Professor Paul Schwartz recently gave the keynote address at the Chapman Law Review symposium “Data Flow Frontiers: Privacy, Policy, Practice.” Schwartz, a faculty co-director of the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology, gave a talk titled “Data Privacy Federalism 3.0,” discussing how the landscape around privacy data federalism has been altered by recent changes. As federal lawmakers have stood on the sidelines, individual states have passed a flurry of privacy laws, Schwartz noted.
Tracking Immigration Enforcement
The Deportation Data Project, co-directed by Berkeley Law Professor David Hausman, recently released a report analyzing immigration enforcement in the first nine months of the Trump administration. The analysis shows that deportations from within the United States increased by a factor of 4.6 in the first nine months of the administration’s crackdown. During that period, ICE arrests quadrupled, and street arrests spiked by a factor of over 11 — with a sevenfold increase in arrests of people without criminal convictions.
‘Secret Settlements’ Study Wins Civil Justice Award
A team of scholars including Professor Jonah B. Gelbach is one of two recipients of the 2026 Civil Justice Scholarship Award from the National Civil Justice Institute for an article published in the University of Chicago Law Review last year. “Shedding Light on Secret Settlements: An Empirical Study of California’s STAND Act” is an empirical and qualitative study analyzing how California’s ban on secrecy in sexual-misconduct settlements has functioned in practice, testing longstanding assumptions about the effects of restricting non-disclosure agreements.
Avoiding the ‘Uninsurable Future’
Dave Jones, director of the Climate Risk Initiative at the Center for Law, Energy & the Environment, recently published an article in the Yale Law Journal analyzing how climate change is driving the growing property-insurance crisis and suggesting federal and state policy solutions. “The Uninsurable Future: The Climate Threat to Property Insurance, and How to Stop It” compares the response of two states — Florida and California — and finds that neither approach will keep insurance available and affordable in the long run. Insurance is the canary in the climate crisis coal mine, Jones argues, and the bird is dying.









