Claire Finkelstein

Claire Finkelstein is the Algernon Biddle Professor of Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and the Director of its Center for Ethics and the Rule of Law.

Professor

Claire Finkelstein
OccupationLaw professor
Title
AwardsAmerican Academy in Berlin, Berlin Prize (2008)
Academic background
Alma mater
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Pennsylvania Law School

Biography

Finkelstein attended Harvard College (B.A. 1986), the University of Paris, Sorbonne ("Maîtrise" (Masters) in philosophy 1987), Columbia Law School (first year of J.D., 1987–1988), Yale Law School (J.D. 1993, Articles Editor, Yale Law Journal), and the University of Pittsburgh (Department of Philosophy, Ph.D. 1996).[1]

She taught law initially at the University of California, Berkeley (Boalt Hall).[1]

She then taught at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where Finkelstein is the Algernon Biddle Professor of Law and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and the founder (in 2012) and Director of its Center for Ethics and the Rule of Law.[1][2][3][4] She is a Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.[5][6][7] She is co-editor of The Oxford Series in Ethics, National Security, and the Rule of Law, and a volume editor of its titles.[5][8]

In 2008 Finkelstein was an American Academy in Berlin, Siemens Fellow, Berlin Prize Winner.[1]

gollark: It actually has a more complex spec than XML!
gollark: Did you know YAML has nine ways to do multiline strings?
gollark: Go is kind of like YAML with the whole "simple" thing - it kind of *looks* simple and easy, but it's a minefield of special cases and weirdness and problems and all the special cases make it more complex than something actually designed to be simple would be.
gollark: In cleaner and more typesafe ways.
gollark: You can use codegen to generate code for repetitive tasks of some sort if they don't need to generalize much or go outside your project, but it's much better to just... not have to do those repetitive tasks, or have the compiler/macros handle them.

References

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