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Contributors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2025

Anne L. Alstott
Affiliation:
Yale University, Connecticut
Abbe R. Gluck
Affiliation:
Yale University, Connecticut
Eugene Rusyn
Affiliation:
Yale University, Connecticut

Summary

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Type
Chapter
Information
Law and the 100-Year Life
Transforming Our Institutions for a Longer Lifespan
, pp. ix - xiv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contributors

  • Anne L. Alstott is Jacquin D. Bierman Professor at Yale Law School. Alstott is the author of a number of books, including The Public Option (with Ganesh Sitaraman, 2019) and A New Deal for Old Age (2016). Alstott received a JD from Yale Law School in 1987 and an AB in Economics, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa (junior year), and with departmental honors, from Georgetown University in 1984. She began her teaching career at Columbia University School of Law, where she taught from 1992 to 1996. She joined the Yale Law School faculty with tenure in 1997 and remained there until 2008, when she left to join the Harvard Law School faculty, again with tenure. In 2011, she returned to Yale. Alstott has won five teaching awards, one at Columbia and four at Yale.

  • Kate Andrias is Patricia D. and R. Paul Yetter Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. She teaches and writes about labor and constitutional law, with a focus on problems of economic and political inequality.

  • Eleanor Brown is a professor at Fordham University and an affiliated faculty member at the Rock Ethics Institute of Penn State. Her research interests are at the intersection of race, property, and immigration. She was previously a chair of the Jamaica Trade Board. Brown was appointed by Andrew Holness, the Jamaican prime minister, to the CARICOM Commission. She has served on the boards of several publicly traded Caribbean companies. Brown holds a bachelor’s degree in molecular biology from Brown University and was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford. She earned her JD from Yale and was a Reginald Lewis fellow at Harvard.

  • Naomi Cahn is Codirector of the Family Law Center at the University of Virginia School of Law, where she is Justice Anthony M. Kennedy Distinguished Professor of Law. She is the author or coauthor of numerous books and articles, including Fair Shake: Women and the Fight to Build a Just Economy (2024, coauthored with June Carbone and Nancy Levit).

  • I. Glenn Cohen is one of the world’s leading experts on the intersection of bioethics (sometimes also called “medical ethics”) and the law, as well as health law. His current projects relate to AI, big data, health information technologies, mobile health, reproduction/reproductive technology, research ethics, organ transplantation, rationing in law and medicine, health policy, FDA law, translational medicine, and medical tourism. He is the author of more than 200 articles and chapters and the author, coauthor, editor, or coeditor of more than twenty books.

  • Yaron Covo is a senior research fellow at the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy, Yale Law School. He holds JSD and LLM degrees from Columbia Law School, where he was a Fulbright fellow, and an LLB from Tel Aviv University.

  • Cynthia Estlund is Crystal Eastman Professor at the New York University School of Law. Her most recent book is Automation Anxiety: Why and How to Save Work (2021). She has published widely on the law and regulation of work, including three earlier books (A New Deal for China’s Workers? [2017], Regoverning the Workplace: From Self-Regulation to Co-regulation [2010], and Working Together: How Workplace Bonds Strengthen a Diverse Democracy [2003]), two coedited volumes, and more than eighty articles, book chapters, reviews, and essays.

  • Linda P. Fried is Dean of Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, serving since 2008. Since 2021 she has also served as Director of the university-wide Butler Columbia Aging Center. A geriatrician and epidemiologist, Fried has dedicated her career to the science and accomplishment of healthy longevity. Prior to 2008, Dr. Fried served as Director of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology and of the Center on Aging and Health at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. She is an elected member of the US National Academy of Medicine and was past president of the Association of American Physicians. Recent honors include being named, in 2023, a chevalier of the Legion of Honor of France.

  • Abbe R. Gluck is Alfred M. Rankin Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy at Yale Law School, and Professor of Medicine at Yale School of Medicine. She is one of America’s leading experts in health law, Congress, litigation, and federalism, and has served in numerous senior government positions, including recently as Special Counsel to the President and lead lawyer for the White House COVID-19 Response Team. She is founding Faculty Director of the Yale Medical Legal Partnership, including the Yale Geriatric MLP, and The Adrienne Drell ‘92 M.S.L. and Franklin Nitikman ‘66 LL.B. Elder Law Project at Yale Law School.

  • Jamal Greene is Dwight Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, where he teaches courses in constitutional law, comparative constitutional law, and the law of the political process. He is the author of How Rights Went Wrong: Why Our Obsession with Rights Is Tearing America Apart (2022), as well as numerous articles and book chapters on constitutional law and theory. He served as a law clerk to Hon. Guido Calabresi on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and to Hon. John Paul Stevens on the US Supreme Court. He earned his JD from Yale Law School in 2005 and his AB from Harvard College in 1999.

  • Sara Sternberg Greene is Katharine T. Bartlett Distinguished Professor of Law at Duke University School of Law. She is a sociologist and legal scholar who uses primarily qualitative empirical methods to study the relationship between law, poverty, and inequality. Her work focuses on how low-income families understand, experience, and interact with the law, how legal institutions may inadvertently perpetuate poverty and inequality, and how structural conditions create barriers to accessing law and justice for low-income families. Greene received her BA from Yale University, her JD from Yale Law School, and her PhD in sociology and social policy from Harvard University.

  • Daniel J. Hemel is a professor of law at New York University School of Law. His research explores topics in taxation, intellectual property, administrative and constitutional law, and nonprofit organizations. His recent articles include “Valuing Medical Innovation,” published in the Stanford Law Review in 2023 (with Lisa Ouellette), and “Regulation and Redistribution with Lives in the Balance,” published in the University of Chicago Law Review in 2022. He has held visiting professorships at Harvard, Stanford, and Yale Law Schools and previously served on the faculty of the University of Chicago School of Law.

  • Shon Hopwood is an associate professor of law at Georgetown University Law Center. Shon’s unusual legal journey began not at law school but at federal prison, where he learned to write briefs for other prisoners, including two petitions for certiorari that were later granted review by the US Supreme Court. Shon is an advocate for criminal justice reform and writes about federal courts and criminal procedure. Shon received a JD from the University of Washington School of Law as a Gates public service law scholar. He clerked for Judge Janice Rogers Brown at the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. He cowrote a memoir entitled Law Man: Memoir of a Jailhouse Lawyer (2017).

  • Clare Huntington is Barbara Aronstein Black Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. Huntington is a nationally recognized expert in family law and poverty law. Her wide-ranging scholarship explores the institutions and empirical foundations of the legal system’s approach to relationships. Her research focuses on early childhood development, aging, and the challenges facing nonmarital families because of the law’s myopic focus on marriage.

  • Noah M. Kazis is an assistant professor of law at the University of Michigan Law School. His research focuses on land use, housing, and local government law. He studies legal and policy mechanisms to make cities and suburbs more affordable, equitable, and integrated, as well as the internal institutional structures of local governments.

  • Nina A. Kohn is David M. Levy Professor of Law and a distinguished scholar in elder law at Syracuse University. An expert in elder law, she is the author of Elder Law: Practice, Policy, and Problems (2020).

  • Douglas A. Kysar is Joseph M. Field ‘55 Professor of Law at Yale Law School. His teaching and research areas include torts, environmental law, climate change, products liability, and risk regulation. He received his BA summa cum laude from Indiana University in 1995 and his JD magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1998.

  • Joanna L. Martin is a palliative care physician at Jesse Brown VA Medical Center in Chicago and a clinical assistant professor at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Dr. Martin is board-certified in internal medicine, geriatric medicine, and hospice and palliative medicine. She is a clinician educator with expertise in quality improvement.

  • John Morley is Augustus E. Lines Professor of Law at Yale Law School. He teaches and writes about the structure of organizations, including donative and business trusts. He was the reporter for the Uniform Directed Trust Act and an author of many articles on trusts and estate planning.

  • Katherine Pratt writes on tax and public policy topics and teaches tax and business law courses. She has received Loyola’s Excellence in Teaching Award twice. She is an American College of Tax Counsel fellow, an American Tax Policy Institute trustee, a former member of the Board of Directors and Strategic Planning Committee of the National Tax Association, and a former chair of the Teaching Taxation Committee of the ABA Tax Section. She earned her BA from the University of Florida, her JD from UCLA, and her tax LLM and corporate LLM from New York University.

  • Kimberly Jenkins Robinson is Martha Lubin Karsh and Bruce A. Karsh Bicentennial Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law, where she is the inaugural Director of the Education Rights Institute. She is the editor of A Federal Right to Education: Fundamental Questions for Our Democracy (2019) and coeditor, with Charles Ogletree, Jr., of The Enduring Legacy of Rodriguez: Creating New Pathways to Equal Educational Opportunities (2015). She was a former attorney for the General Counsel’s Office of the US Department of Education and represented school districts with Hogan Lovells (then Hogan & Hartson).

  • Eugene Rusyn is a senior fellow at the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy at Yale Law School. He holds a BA from New York University and a JD from Yale Law School.

  • Elizabeth Scott is Harold R. Medina Professor of Law Emerita at Columbia University School of Law. Her areas of scholarly interest are family and juvenile law. Much of her research is interdisciplinary, applying social science and neuroscience research and developmental theory to legal policy issues involving children and families. She is the coauthor (with Laurence Steinberg) of Rethinking Juvenile Justice (2008), which received the 2010 award for the best social policy book from the Society for Research in Adolescence. Scott is the Chief Reporter of a new “Restatement of Children and the Law” and the coauthor of a widely used casebook, Children in the Legal System (6th ed. 2020).

  • Gregory H. Shill is a professor of law and Michael and Brenda Sandler Faculty Fellow in Corporate Law at the University of Iowa College of Law. He is an expert in transportation law and policy as well as business law, and he cohosts an urban economics podcast, Densely Speaking: Conversations about Cities, Economics & Law.

  • Ganesh Sitaraman holds the New York Alumni Chancellor’s Chair at Vanderbilt Law School and is Director of the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator for Political Economy and Regulation. He is the author of numerous books, including The Crisis of the Middle-Class Constitution (2017).

  • Lior Jacob Strahilevitz is Sidley Austin Professor of Law at the University of Chicago. He writes about property and land use law, privacy law, and law and technology. He is a coauthor of the most widely adopted property law textbook in the US, as well as several other books and dozens of law review articles. His most recent long-form article examining aging and the law of property is “Property Law for the Ages,” 63 William & Mary Law Review 561 (2021, with Michael Pollack).

  • Kenji Yoshino is Chief Justice Earl Warren Professor of Constitutional Law and Faculty Director of the Meltzer Center for Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging at New York University School of Law. He is the author of four books, most recently Say the Right Thing: How to Talk about Identity, Diversity, and Justice (coauthored with David Glasgow, 2023).

  • Taisu Zhang is a professor of law at Yale Law School and works on comparative legal and economic history, private law theory, and contemporary Chinese law and politics. He is the author of two books, The Ideological Foundations of Qing Taxation: Belief Systems, Politics, and Institutions (2023) and The Laws and Economics of Confucianism: Kinship and Property in Pre-industrial China and England (2017).

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