I am delighted to welcome seven professors to the Cardozo faculty this fall. These professors will enrich our community with their innovative teaching and scholarship in areas including Tax Law, Alternative Dispute Resolution, Intellectual Property, Criminal Law, Business Law and Race and the Law.
Michael Pollack Associate Dean for Faculty Development
Arnaud previously was a Visiting Assistant Professor at Cornell Law School, a fellowship attorney at Justice 360, a law clerk for the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York and as Appellate Counsel at the Center for Appellate Litigation. He was a litigation associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and was a law clerk for Judge Juan R. Torruella at the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Luís Carlos Calderón Gómez Assistant Professor of Law Expertise: Tax Law
Calderón Gómez was previously a Visiting Assistant Professor of Tax Law at the NYU School of Law. His work has been featured or is forthcoming in the Yale Journal of International Law and the Tax Law Review. He is pursuing projects on tax exemptions and their policy justifications and on the compatibility of virtue ethics with free-market orthodoxy. Calderón Gómez previously worked as an associate in the tax department of Cravath, Swaine & Moore.
Young Ran (Christine) Kim Professor of Law Expertise: Federal Income Tax, International Tax, Taxation of Business
Kim’s research centers on international tax, business tax and taxation in the digital economy. Her work has been published in the UCLA Law Review, UC Irvine Law Review,Alabama Law Review,UC Davis Law Review, Harvard International Law Journal and Virginia Tax Review, among others. She has been a guest blogger for TaxProf Blog’s Weekly SSRN Tax Article Review And Roundup and has been quoted numerous times in Law360 and Bloomberg Law.
Rachel Landy Director, Heyman Center on Corporate Governance, Visiting Assistant Professor Expertise: Business Law
Landy is the author of Beyond the Work Product: A Guide to Relationship-Driven Transactional Lawyering (American Bar Association, 2021). She previously worked in the public policy team at Google, where she managed YouTube’s response to legislative proposals globally relating to the platform’s business model. Prior to Google, she spent several years as a technology transactions attorney at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and Cooley.
Andrea Schneider Director, Kukin Program for Conflict Resolution, Professor of Law Expertise: Alternative Dispute Resolution
Schneider was previously the director of the nationally ranked ADR program at Marquette University Law School in Wisconsin, where she taught ADR, Negotiation, Ethics and International Conflict Resolution for more than two decades. Schneider’s recently published works include: Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Foundational Articles, (Oxford University Press 2021); Negotiating Crime: Plea Bargaining, Problem Solving, and Dispute Resolution in the Criminal Context (Carolina Academic Press 2019); Negotiation Essentials for Lawyers (ABA Book Publishing, 2019) and The Negotiator’s Desk Reference (DRI Press 2017).
Jacob Noti-Victor Associate Professor of Law Expertise: Intellectual Property, Property
Noti-Victor was previously an Assistant Professor of Law at Rutgers Law School and previously taught at NYU Law School and Albany Law School. He was an Associate at Kirkland & Ellis LLP in the intellectual property group where he litigated copyright, trademark and trade secret cases and advised clients in entertainment, art, music, technology and advertising. His research focuses on how the law impacts innovation, culture and the deployment of new technologies. His most recent articles have appeared in the Minnesota Law Review and the Stanford Law Review.
Saurabh Vishnubhakat Director, Intellectual Property and Innovation Law Program, Professor Of Law
Expertise: Intellectual Property, Patent Law, Administrative Law ,Civil Procedure, Remedies
Vishnubhakat’s legal writings have been cited in federal judicial opinions, agency regulations and over two dozen Supreme Court briefs. His latest work is published or forthcoming in the Indiana Law Journal, the Washington and Lee Law Review and the Iowa Law Review as well as the peer-reviewed Journal of the Copyright Society of the USA and the Journal of Economic Perspectives. His research explores the interaction of the U.S. intellectual property system with federal courts and agencies, among other topics.