Affiliated Law Faculty
Prof. Stephen F. Befort, JD
Gray, Plant, Mooty, Mooty & Bennett Professor of Law
Professor
Stephen Befort is a national authority on labor and employment law. He
teaches courses in labor law, employment law, employment
discrimination, public employment, comparative labor and employment,
and disability in the workplace. Professor Befort served as Director of
the Law School's Clinic program from 1982 to 2003 and as Associate Dean
for Academic Affairs from 2000 to 2004. He was the Julius E. Davis
Chair Professor of Law for 1993-94 and was appointed to the Gray,
Plant, Mooty, Mooty, & Bennett Professorship in Law in 2003.
Professor Befort has authored six books and more than 60 articles, book
chapters, and published papers on labor and employment subjects.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/beforts.html
Prof. Brian Bix, JD, DPhil
Frederick W. Thomas Professor for the Interdisciplinary Study of Law and Language
Professor
Brian Bix joined the faculty in 2001. He teaches in the areas of jurisprudence, family law, and contract law. He holds a joint appointment with the Department of Philosophy. Professor Bix received his BA, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, from Washington University in St. Louis in 1983; his JD, magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1986; and his DPhil in Law from Balliol College, Oxford University, in 1991. Professor Bix taught at Quinnipiac University School of Law, as Associate Professor (1995-1997) and Professor (1998-2001). He was a Visiting Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center during the spring semester of 2000 and at George Washington University Law School in the fall of 1999. Professor Bix was the Lecturer in Jurisprudence and Legal Reasoning at King's College, University of London, from 1991 to 1993; he taught at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford University, from 1989 to 1990. He was a law clerk for Justice Benjamin Kaplan at the Massachusetts Appeals Court (1993-95, while on leave from the King's College), and he also clerked for Judge Stephen Reinhardt, Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals (1987-1988), and Justice Alan Handler, New Jersey Supreme Court (1986-1987). He is a member of the American Law Institute.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/bixb.html
Prof. Dale Carpenter, JD
Earl R. Larson Professor of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Law
Professor
Dale Carpenter teaches and writes in the areas of constitutional law,
the First Amendment, sexual orientation and the law, and commercial
law. In 2007, he was appointed to the Earl R. Larson Chair in Civil
Rights and Civil Liberties Law. He was the Julius E. Davis Professor of
Law for 2006-07 and the Vance K. Opperman Research Scholar for 2003-04.
Professor Carpenter was chosen the Stanley V. Kinyon Teacher of the
Year for 2003-04 and 2005-06 and was the Tenured Teacher of the Year
for 2006-07. Since 2004, he has served as an editor of Constitutional Commentary.
Professor Carpenter received his BA degree in history, magna cum laude,
from Yale College in 1989. He received his JD, with honors, from the
University of Chicago Law School in 1992. At the University of Chicago
he was Editor-in-Chief of the University of Chicago Law Review.
He received both the D. Francis Bustin Prize for excellence in legal
scholarship and the John M. Olin Foundation Scholarship for Law &
Economics.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/carpenterd.html
Prof. Michele B. Goodwin, JD, LLM
Everett Fraser Professor of Law
Professor
Michele Bratcher Goodwin is the Everett Fraser Professor of Law.
Professor Goodwin holds joint appointments in the Medical School and
the School of Public Health. During 2007-08, she was a visiting
professor at the University of Chicago Law School, where she edited her
forthcoming book, Baby Markets. She also served as one of the
distinguished Meador Lecturers at the University of Alabama during the
2007-08 academic year. Professor Goodwin began her teaching career in
2001 at DePaul University College of Law where she was the Wicklander
Chair in Ethics and a professor of law. She directed the Health Law
Institute and founded the Center for the Study of Race & Bioethics.
At DePaul, Goodwin earned the Faculty Achievement Award, Outstanding
Scholarship Award, the Humanities Fellowship, and was honored by the
University President who selected her book as one of the two top
publications of 2006. Professor Goodwin earned a BA from the University
of Wisconsin, a JD from Boston College Law School, and an LLM from the
University of Wisconsin.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit http://www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/goodwinm.html
Prof. Ralph F. Hall, JD
Distinguished Visiting Associate Professor
Ralph
Hall is currently serving as Distinguished Visiting Associate Professor
at the University of Minnesota Law School. He teaches courses in
negotiations, alternative dispute resolution, and food and drug law.
Professor Hall is also Counsel to the Indianapolis, Indiana law firm of
Baker & Daniels where he counsels clients in the area of drug and
medical device regulation. Prior to his association with the University
of Minnesota Law School, Professor Hall served in various capacities
with Guidant Corporation including Senior Vice President and Deputy
General Counsel–Litigation and Compliance, and General Counsel of the
Cardiac Rhythm Management group. During this time, Professor Hall also
served as Special Counsel to the Guidant Board of Directors Compliance
Committee and as Counsel to the Guidant Chief Compliance Officer. Prior
to joining Guidant, he was with Eli Lilly, including serving as the
head of Lilly's worldwide environmental law group. Professor Hall
received his BA from Indiana University in 1974 and his JD from the
University of Michigan where he was a Weymouth Kirkland Scholar.
Professor Hall's interests include FDA regulation, negotiations and
ADR, intellectual asset management, and the interface between corporate
practice and the academic world.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/hallr.html
Prof. Jill Hasday, JD
Professor of Law
Professor
Jill Hasday teaches and writes in the fields of anti-discrimination
law, constitutional law, family law, legal history, and national
security law. Her work has appeared in the Harvard Law Review, Stanford Law Review, Michigan Law Review, Georgetown Law Journal, California Law Review, and UCLA Law Review.
Professor Hasday received her BA from Yale University in 1994,
graduating summa cum laude with distinction in history and winning
election to Phi Beta Kappa. In 1997, Professor Hasday graduated from
Yale Law School, where she was an articles editor of the Yale Law Journal
and received honors in all graded courses. After law school, Professor
Hasday clerked for Judge Patricia M. Wald of the United States Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Professor Hasday joined the University of
Minnesota Law School as a tenured faculty member in 2005, after
teaching at the University of Chicago Law School.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/hasdayj.html
Prof. Amy B. Monahan, JD
2008-09 University of Minnesota Law School Visiting Professor
Professor
Amy Monahan is a 2008-09 Visiting Professor at the University of
Minnesota Law School. Professor Monahan joined the faculty at the
University of Missouri School of Law in 2004, after having taught at
Notre Dame Law School and serving as a visiting scholar at the Notre
Dame Center for Ethics and Culture. Prior to beginning her teaching
career, Professor Monahan practiced law with Sidley Austin LLP in
Chicago. While in law school, she was the Managing Editor of the Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law. Professor Monahan's scholarly work has appeared in such journals as the Illinois Law Review, Tulane Law Review, and Virginia Tax Review.
She currently serves as the Chair-Elect of the Association of American
Law Schools' Section on Employee Benefits. She teaches Basic Federal
Income Taxation, Employee Benefits Law, Partnership Taxation, and
Taxation of Property Transactions. Prof. Monahan earned her BA from
Johns Hopkins University and JD from Duke University School of Law.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.missouri.edu/faculty/directory/monahana.html
Prof. Ruth Okediji, LLB, LLM, SJD
William L. Prosser Professor of Law
Professor
Ruth Okediji is a leading authority on international intellectual
property law. After visiting at the University of Minnesota in 2001,
Professor Okediji joined the Minnesota faculty in the 2002-03 academic
year. She served on the faculty at the University of Oklahoma College
of Law from 1994 to 2002, where she held the Edith Kinney Gaylord
Presidential Professorship.
Professor Okediji's scholarship focuses primarily on international
intellectual property issues with an emphasis on the relationship
between multilateral trade law and intellectual property policy. Her
work addresses the relationship between developing and developed
countries in the international intellectual property system, including
economic analysis of the bargaining strategies that facilitate
harmonization of intellectual property rights.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/okedijir.html
Prof. Daniel Schwarcz, JD
Associate Professor of Law
Professor
Daniel Schwarcz writes and teaches in the fields of insurance law,
contract law, tort law, and commercial law. Prior to joining the
faculty in 2007, he spent two years as a Climenko Fellow and Lecturer
on Law at Harvard Law School. During that time, his research primarily
focused on how legal doctrines and regulatory bodies can most
effectively protect purchasers of insurance policies. Prof. Schwarcz
received an AB from Amherst College, and JD from Harvard Law School.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, please visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/schwarczd.html
Prof. Kathryn J. Sedo, JD
Professor of Clinical Instruction
Clinical
Professor Kathryn J. Sedo is an authority on cooperative law. She
teaches clinics in the areas of tax law, general practice, workers'
compensation, and disability law. Professor Sedo received her AB degree
and JD degree, cum laude, from the University of Michigan. After
graduating from law school, she practiced law with the firm of Sedo and
Darnton in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She joined the clinical faculty of the
University of Minnesota Law School in 1979. She has been an adjunct
professor at Madonna College. In addition, she has taught at the
Université Jean Moulin in Lyon, France, and the University of Uppsala
in Sweden. Since 1984, Professor Sedo has represented worker and
consumer cooperatives in the Upper Midwest. She is a member of the
Minnesota State Bar Association and the American Bar Association
Taxation Section.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, please visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/sedok.html
Prof. David S. Weissbrodt, JD
Fredrikson and Byron Professor of Law
Professor
David S. Weissbrodt is a distinguished and widely published scholar of
international human rights law. He teaches international human rights
law, administrative law, immigration law, and torts. In 2005, he was
appointed as the first Regents Professor at the Law School. He has been
the Fredrikson and Byron Professor of Law since 1998. He was the Briggs
and Morgan Professor of Law for 1989-97 and the Julius E. Davis
Professor of Law for 1985-86. Professor Weissbrodt attended Columbia
University and the London School of Economics. He received his JD
degree from the University of California at Berkeley (Boalt Hall),
where he was Note and Comment Editor of the California Law Review
and a member of the Order of the Coif. After graduation, he clerked for
Justice Mathew O. Tobriner of the California Supreme Court and
practiced law with Covington & Burling. He joined the University of
Minnesota Law School faculty in 1975 and has been a Visiting Professor
at the Université Jean Moulin in Lyon, France, and the Graduate
Institute of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. He
established the University of Minnesota Human Rights Center and helped
establish the University of Minnesota Human Rights Library online. He
has represented and served as an officer or board member of Amnesty
International, the Center for Victims of Torture, the Minnesota
Advocates for Human Rights, Readers International, and the
International League for Human Rights.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/weissbrodtd.html
Prof. Susan M. Wolf, JD
McKnight Presidential Professor of Law, Medicine & Public Policy
Faegre & Benson Professor of Law
Professor of Medicine
Professor
Susan M. Wolf is the McKnight Presidential Professor of Law, Medicine
& Public Policy; the Faegre & Benson Professor of Law at the
University of Minnesota Law School; Professor of Medicine at the
University of Minnesota Medical School; and a Faculty Member in the
University's Center for Bioethics. She is also founding Director of the
University's Joint Degree Program in Law, Health & the Life
Sciences and founding Chair of the University's Consortium on Law and
Values in Health, Environment & the Life Sciences. She received her
AB summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1975 and her JD from
Yale Law School in 1980, with graduate work at Harvard University.
After clerking for a federal judge and practicing law for several years
at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York, in 1984
she became a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Fellow and
then Associate for Law at The Hastings Center, a not-for-profit
research institute specializing in biomedical ethics. She also taught
law and medicine at New York University Law School for six years as an
Adjunct Associate Professor. She was a Fellow in the Program in Ethics
and the Professions at Harvard University in 1992-93, before joining
the University of Minnesota faculty in the Fall of 1993.
Prof. Wolf teaches in the areas of law and science, law and medicine, and bioethics. Her research has been supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Science Foundation (NSF), among others. She has published over 100 articles, chapters, and books, and lectures widely.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.lifesci.consortium.umn.edu/bio.susan.wolf
Prof. Judith T. Younger, JD, LLD
Joseph E. Wargo Anoka County Bar Association Professor of Family Law
Professor
Judith T. Younger is recognized for her professional work in the areas
of wills and trusts and family law. She teaches courses in wills and
trusts, property, and family law. In 1991, Professor Younger became the
Joseph E. Wargo Anoka County Bar Association Professor of Family Law.
Professor Younger received a BS degree from Cornell University, where
she also received the Borden Award for highest class standing, and the
Daniel Alpern Award for leadership and scholarship. She earned a JD
degree from New York University School of Law, where she was Survey
Editor of the New York University Law Review
and a member of the Order of the Coif. After law school, she clerked
for the Honorable Edward Weinfeld of the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York. She then practiced in the
litigation department of Chadbourne, Parke, Whiteside & Wolff; was
a partner in her own law firm; and became an Assistant Attorney General
of the State of New York.
For a list of publications and a complete bio, visit www.law.umn.edu/facultyprofiles/youngerj.html


