Our Faculty

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

  • headshot of professor pamela samuelson

    Intellectual Property Influence

    An article by Professor Pamela Samuelson has been selected as one of the best intellectual property papers of 2025 and will be included in the next edition of the Intellectual Property Law Review, published annually by Thomson Reuters. “Justification for Fair Uses,” published in 2025 in the Wisconsin Law Review, is the seventh of her articles to be recognized this way. 
  • Elena Chachko

    Decoding the ‘New Emergency Law’

    In a new post for the Yale Journal on Regulation’s “Notice & Comment” blog, Professor Elena Chachko argues that Learning Resources v. Trump is about far more than just whether the president has the authority to impose tariffs. Previewing a forthcoming paper, Chachko writes the case is part of what she calls the “new emergency law” — an emerging body of cases in which courts are more willing to scrutinize executive reliance on broad emergency statutes.
  • Katerina Linos photo

    International Influence

    A Harvard International Law Journal article written by Professor Katerina Linos and two co-authors has been named one of two winners of the best article award given by the International Law and Social Science Interest Group of the American Society of International Law. “The Limits and Promise of Global Antitrust Law,” written with Columbia Professor Anu Bradford and University of Chicago Dean Adam Chilton, reassesses long-held conventional wisdom about the relationship between countries’ antitrust laws and their economic growth. They find that, on average, such laws have little to no effect on economic development — but they have improved growth in countries that adopted them without external incentives.
  • Close up photo of Kenneth A. Bamberger smiling and wearing glasses and a light red collared shirt.

    ‘Governance by Design’ for AI

    “Recentering Public Values In AI Governance: Examples From The Biden Administration,” a new Berkeley Technology Law Journal article by Berkeley Law Professor Kenneth A. Bamberger and UC Berkeley School of Information Professor Deirdre Mulligan analyzes the Biden-Harris administration’s AI policies through a “governance by design” framework they developed. 
  • davidoff-solomon_steven

    Top Corporate Law Scholarship

    An article by Professor Steven Davidoff Solomon and Penn Law Professor Jill Fisch has been recognized as one of the top 10 corporate and securities articles of 2025 by Corporate Practice Commentator, the ninth time his solo or co-authored work has been selected for this honor. “Control and its Discontents,” published in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, analyzes a recent series of Delaware court decisions that are skeptical of corporate action in controlled companies.

Faculty in the News

  • It's Been A Minute

    What to expect when you’re expecting racism

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    Professor Khiara M. Bridges, author of Expecting Inequity: How the Maternal Health Crisis Affects Even the Wealthiest Black Americans joins host Brittany Luse to talk through why wealth and status can’t outrun racism at the doctor’s office.

  • law360

    Trump Era Worse Than McCarthy For Speech, Law Dean Says

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    “We’re experiencing now an unprecedented assault on the Constitution, on the First Amendment, and of freedom of speech,” said Dean Chemerinsky at the 2026 Berkeley Art, Law, and Finance Symposium. “The closest analog that I can think of would be in the early 1950s during the McCarthy era, but that was not led by the president of the United States.”

  • AP

    Trump officials went after dozens of colleges. Now they’re rewriting the rules for all of academia

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    Catherine Lhamon, who led the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights under President Joe Biden, a Democrat, said the barrage of investigations amounted to “performance art” that grabbed attention but had little impact. After pushback from schools, she said, the Trump administration is backing off. “It stopped putting itself in a position to lose,” said Lhamon, who now leads the Edley Center on Law and Democracy at the University of California, Berkeley.

  • Communications Daily

    Opposition Grows to California CPUC Amendment

    Berkeley Law professor Tejas Narechania said that while the details of energy and telecom regulation might be different, the industries have “economic features” in common. “How do we think about affordability across all of these utilities, and how do we think about universal access across all of these utilities?” he asked. “That’s a common set of problems, … a common set of economic thinking, and that’s why we have this single-purpose public utility commission in so many states.”