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

  • Group of people posing on patio

    Stellar ESG Scholarship

    As part of its annual Berkeley Forum for Corporate Governance, the Berkeley Center for Law and Business hosted an academic symposium focused on ESG — which stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance — topics in business law. In partnership with the  European Corporate Governance Institute, the symposium included a Best Paper Award, which includes a $10,000 prize. Three winners were selected from more than 70 articles submitted by scholars from all over the world.
  • jonah gelbach

    Scrutinizing Stipulated Protective Orders

    Stipulated protective orders, or SPOs, seal discovery information in a civil lawsuit from the public and have become increasingly common in recent decades. In a new paper in the Duke Law Journal using state-of-the-art machine learning techniques, Professor Jonah B. Gelbach and a team of co-authors show that not only are these orders frequently granted, they’re rarely subjected to the type of judicial scrutiny Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c)trequires — hiding potentially deadly defects and abuse from the public. 
  • Diana Reddy

    Highlighting Labor Law Advances

    In a new policy brief for the Roosevelt Institute think tank, Professor Diana S. Reddy looks at recent innovations by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which has created policies responsive to economic and institutional realities without the statutory reform many scholars and experts thought would be required to do so. 
  • Malcolm Feeley

    Reforming Rikers

    In a new mini-issue of the public affairs magazine Vital City about the ongoing crisis at New York City’s Rikers Island jail, Professor Emeritus Malcolm Feeley and Van Swearingen ’01 analyze the history of efforts to reform prisons and its lessons for today. “From Plantation Prisons to the Modern Era” draws insights from the efforts by judges and special masters to dismantle Southern prisons originally modeled on plantations and mandate changes in California, Feeley and Swearingen propose the jurist handling the Rikers case appoint a receiver to take over. 
  • Hanoch Dagan

    Another Triumph for Dagan

    What makes private law private? What is its domain, and the values it promotes? In a new book, Professor Hanoch Dagan and co-author Avihay Dorfman build on years of their scholarship to lay out a new approach to understanding some of society’s most important touchstones.  Relational Justice: A Theory of Private Law argues that private law should, and to a significant degree already does, abide by two fundamental commitments: reciprocal respect for self-determination and substantive equality.

Faculty in the News