"An Uncertain Future For U.S. Energy Policy"
The Regulatory Review quoted Emily Hammond on how Trump’s efforts to control independent agencies may shape U.S. energy and environmental policy.
GW Law faculty members are scholars and practitioners with strong reputations in the legal community.
Our faculty members are among the most cited law faculty in the nation, appearing in print, online, and on-air, in world-renowned media outlets. But first and foremost, each faculty member is devoted to teaching.
GW Law Webinar Explores the Impact of AI on Animals
March 20, 2025
Lawyers should make their voices heard by AI developers and policymakers, a panel of GW Law experts said.
GW Law Professor Lula Hagos Publishes Article in Michigan Law Review
March 18, 2025
Lula Hagos's article, Debunking Criminal Restitution, explores the merits of criminal restitution and its impact on low-income defendants.
GW Law Professor Daniel Solove Named Top 100 Legal Scholars of 2024
March 13, 2025
The Social Science Research Network, SSRN, named GW Law's Daniel Solove on the list of top 100 legal scholars of 2024.
"An Uncertain Future For U.S. Energy Policy"
The Regulatory Review quoted Emily Hammond on how Trump’s efforts to control independent agencies may shape U.S. energy and environmental policy.
"What the Critics of Trump’s Investigation Into Biden Are Missing."
Jonathan Turley wrote for U.S. News & World Report.
"Meta's AI tool Llama 'almost entirely' memorized Harry Potter book, study finds"
Mashable quoted Robert Brauneis saying the likelihood that LLMs are memorizing more than previously thought changes the copyright analysis.
Our faculty are leading scholars and practitioners—experts whose experience and passion for teaching shape the study and practice of law. Learn more about publications and other work written by our faculty.
Daniel J. Solove
Breached!: Why Data Security Law Fails and How to Improve It
Rosa Celorio
Women and International Human Rights in Modern Times: A Contemporary Casebook
Dayna Bowen Matthew
Just Health: Treating Structural Racism to Heal America
Catherine J. Ross
A Right to Lie? Presidents, Other Liars, and the First Amendment