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

  • 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. 
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    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.
  • cover of “Measuring the Impact of Prosecutor-Initiated Resentencing in Alameda County” report

    Reviewing Resentencing

    A new report from Berkeley Law's Criminal Law & Justice Center (CLJC) analyzes the impact of prosecutor-initiated resentencing in Alameda County, finding that “thoughtful resentencing policies” can achieve multiple goals simultaneously: reducing state costs, addressing excessive sentences, and maintaining public safety through careful case-by-case evaluation. “Measuring the Impact of Prosecutor-Initiated Resentencing in Alameda County” examines 165 successful resentencings between October 2020 and January 2025 — spanning the administrations of District Attorney Nancy O’Malley and Pamela Price.
  • Top 100 Legal Scholars (2025) 4 berkeley law faculty among most cited legal scholars for recent scholarship tied for #4 nationwide

    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 Knapp. The rankings use citations for articles published between 2019 and 2021. Professor Sonia Katyal came in at No. 24, Professor David Singh Grewal at No. 34, Professor Steven Davidoff Solomon at No. 35, and Professor Stavros Gadinis at No. 91. 

Faculty in the News

  • New York Times icon

    After Deaths, Lawsuits Against A.I. Companies Test a New Strategy

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    “A.I. has nothing to do with tobacco and an algorithm has nothing to do with the way a cigarette is designed, but the law is built by analogy,” said Ted Mermin, the executive director of the Center for Consumer Law and Economic Justice at the University of California, Berkeley. “What the plaintiffs’ firms are doing is utilizing well-established legal principles in a new product area.”

  • Sacramento Bee icon

    Opinion: How the Supreme Court’s ruling will devastate Black representation

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    “Constitutional amendments that were adopted to protect the civil rights of Black individuals were used by the Supreme Court to deal a devastating blow to voting rights for people of color last month.” writes Dean Erwin Chemerinsky.

  • Letter: Musk vs Altman — beyond the billionaire feud

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    “One of the most important questions raised by the Musk vs Altman trial, where Elon Musk is claiming he was deceived into donating roughly $38mn to OpenAI, the company headed by Sam Altman, has little to do with courtroom strategy and a great deal to do with institutional design,” writes Professor Stavros Gadinis, faculty director of the Berkeley Center for Law and Business.

  • The “Civility” Problem for Judges

    Judge Jeremey Fogel, executive director of the Berkeley Judicial Institute joins Amicus with Dahlia Lithwick to discuss threats against American judges.