Faculty

  • Paige wilson
    In August, Paige Wilson will join Colorado Law as Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic. Prior to joining CU, Professor Wilson directed the Entrepreneurial Business Law Clinic at The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law, where her students represented a mix of startups, small businesses, nonprofits, and student-athletes with NIL contracts. She also practiced corporate law at Gunderson Dettmer in New York City, where she represented high-growth technology companies and venture capital funds. Her research on venture capital and clinical pedagogy has been published in the Berkeley Business Law Journal and the Tennessee Journal of Business Law, respectively.
  • Bryan choi
    In August, Bryan H. Choi will join the Colorado Law faculty Associate Professor of Law. Choi's scholarship brings an interdisciplinary focus to software and AI safety. He is especially well-known for his work on software liability, which has been influential in policymaking discussions on national cybersecurity strategy. 
  • headshots of faculty in this edition of ICYMI
    Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at Colorado Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up.
  • Tony Perron
    An Associate Professor of Law, Tony Derron is an environmental law scholar who examines how administration, government structure, and property rules affect environmental outcomes. Professor Derron’s scholarship explores the many pathways of environmental law, from federal regulation to state constitutions, and draws on historical and current environmental practices to inform solutions to problems both inside and outside the field. He teaches Advanced Administrative Law, Civil Procedure, and Energy Law. 
  • faculty headshots
    Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at Colorado Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up.
  • delaram
    Delaram Takyar is joining the Colorado Law faculty as an associate professor of law. Her research focuses on social inequality and the law, considering how the law contributes to the marginalization of disadvantaged groups. Her most recent article, The Hidden Price of Government Immunity, forthcoming in the U.C. Irvine Law Review, argues in favor of reforming government immunity laws, which, the article argues, disproportionately affect poor communities and communities of color.
  • Adam
    In August, Professor Adam Sopko will join the Colorado Law Faculty as Associate Professor. In this interview, Adam shares more about his work, the inspiration behind it, and some of her career accomplishments so far.
  • ann Lipton
    In August, Professor Ann M. Lipton will join the Colorado Law Faculty as Professor of Law  and Laurence W. DeMuth Chair of Business Law. In this interview, Professor Lipton shares more about her work, the inspiration behind it, and some of her career accomplishments so far. 
  • faculty. headshots
    Widely recognized for its intellectual diversity and originality, the faculty at Colorado Law encompasses an array of prominent legal scholars who are widely cited, both in academia and throughout the national media landscape. We invite you to catch up on the latest faculty publications and media mentions with this weekly round up.
  • In the United States, law enforcement's use of geofence warrants—court orders compelling tech companies to provide location data for all devices within a specified area and timeframe—is among the most contentious digital civil liberties issues of our time. Federal courts have struggled to apply existing Fourth Amendment doctrine to such searches, and in the meanwhile, a three-step procedure developed by Google—currently the main purveyor of location data to law enforcement—has been doing most of the work that the law should be doing in channeling how law enforcement agencies conduct searches of geolocation databases.
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