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Williams Institute Staff
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R. Bradley
Sears, Executive Director
Brad Sears
is the Executive Director of the Williams
Institute and a lecturer in courses on disability law
and sexual orientation law at UCLA School of Law. Sears
graduated summa cum laude from Yale University and magna
cum laude from Harvard Law School. During college and
law school, he completed internships with the Center for
Constitutional Rights, Lambda Legal Defense and
Education Fund, the Jamaica Plain Legal Services
Center's AIDS Unit, the ACLU's National Gay and Lesbian
and AIDS Project, and the Neighborhood Defender Service
of Harlem. He also served as Editor-in-Chief of the
Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review. After
law school, Sears moved to Los Angeles and clerked for
the Hon J. Spencer Letts of the Central District of
California. In 1996, he created the HIV Legal Checkup
Project, a legal services program dedicated to
empowering people living with HIV to address and prevent
legal problems. The HIV Legal Checkup Project provided
preventive legal services to over 800 clients per year
and over 100 UCLA School of Law students received
training through volunteering with the Project. In 1997,
Sears also became the Discrimination & Confidentiality
Attorney for the HIV/AIDS Legal Services Alliance of Los
Angeles (HALSA). In this capacity, he litigated and
settled HIV-discrimination cases, ending the
discriminatory practices of a number of medical
practices, schools, and residential care facilities. His
work also included settlements that resulted in mandated
HIV-training for 22,000 Los Angeles County employees,
the overturning of the City of Los Angeles'
discriminatory denial of licenses to HIV-positive
massage therapists, and the end of a major credit
reporting company's policy of disclosing consumers'
HIV-status on credit reports. He has also served on the
board of directors or advisory boards for Being Alive
Los Angeles, HALSA, USC's AIDS Education Training
Center, and CorrectHelp, an organization dedicated to
the needs of incarcerated persons living with HIV/AIDS.
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Christine Littleton,
Faculty Chair
Christine Littleton regularly teaches courses on women and
the law, sexual harassment and feminist legal theory in the
Law School and the Women’s Studies Programs. She has also
taught Contracts, Remedies, Employment Discrimination,
Disability Rights and Sexual Orientation and Law. From 1993
to 1996, she served as Director of the undergraduate Women's
Studies Program and since 1999 has chaired the expanded
Women's Studies Programs, overseeing the undergraduate and
graduate programs at UCLA. Littleton was a founding member
of the Board of Directors of the California Women's Law
Center, and still participates as a volunteer attorney and
consultant there. An active member of the California Bar
since 1982, she has assisted numerous public interest
organizations and attorneys in cases involving
discrimination on the basis of sex, race, pregnancy, sexual
orientation, and HIV status, and has received awards for
public interest legal work and feminist education. Since
moving to Orange County in 1997 she has replaced some of her
pro bono legal work with volunteer work in other areas,
including establishing a monitoring site for Monarch larva,
and with memorizing freeway exits. Before law school,
Littleton enjoyed a series of brief and ill-paid careers as
a high school teacher, legal secretary, and part-time actor.
While in law school, she was a member of the Harvard Law
Review and managing editor of the Harvard Women's Law
Journal. She clerked for the Honorable Warren J. Ferguson,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Current
research interests include equality theory in feminism, law
and public discourse.
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Lee Badgett, Research Director
M. V. Lee Badgett is the
research director at the Williams Institute. She is also the
director of the Center for Public Policy and Administration
and associate professor of economics at the University of
Massachusetts Amherst. She has a BA in economics from the
University of Chicago (1982) and a PhD in economics from UC
Berkeley (1990). Her book, Money, Myths, and
Change: The Economic Lives of Lesbians and Gay Men
(University of Chicago Press) presents her ground-breaking
work on sexual orientation discrimination and family policy.
She’s currently working on a new book asking whether
same-sex marriage will change marriage or change GLB people,
drawing on the U.S. and European experiences with same-sex
marriage.
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Nan D. Hunter, Legal Scholarship
Director
Nan Hunter is a professor of law at Brooklyn Law
School. She will be begin teaching at the Georgetown
University Law Center in Fall 2008. She teaches and writes
in three areas: health law; state regulation of sexuality
and gender; and procedure. Three of her recent articles
focused on health law have ranged in topic from a critical
analysis of new arbitration-style systems that allow
patients to challenge denials of treatment, to an
application of new governance theory to current trends in
the public health field, to a re-interpretation of the role
of deference to medical authority in the Supreme Court’s
opinion in Roe v. Wade. In addition to scholarship,
Professor Hunter’s experience in health law includes service
as Deputy General Counsel for the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services from 1993 to 1996, and appointment to the
President's Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and
Quality in the Health Care Industry. Professor Hunter’s work
in the area of sexuality and gender law has been published
in the Michigan Law Review, the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil
Liberties Law Review, the Virginia Law Review, the
Georgetown Law Journal, the Minnesota Law Review, the Ohio
State Law Journal, and several anthologies. With William
Eskridge, she wrote first casebook to conceptualize the
field as embodying a dynamic relationship between state
regulation, sexual practices, and gender norms. In the field
of procedure, Professor Hunter is the author of The Power of
Procedure, which has been widely adopted for law school use
throughout the United States.
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Gary Gates,
Williams Distinguished Scholar
A Distinguished Research Fellow at
the Williams Institute, Gary Gates co-authored The
Gay and Lesbian Atlas. His doctoral dissertation
included the first significant research study of the
demography of the gay and lesbian population using US Census
data. His work on that subject has been featured in many
national and international media outlets. He is also
co-author of a study examining the interplay of diversity
and the location and growth of the technology sector. He
holds a PhD in Public Policy from the Heinz School of Public
Policy and Management at Carnegie Mellon University along
with a Master of Divinity degree from St. Vincent College
and a BS in Computer Science from the University of
Pittsburgh at Johnstown.
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Brondi Borer, Judicial Education
Director
After graduating from Cardozo Law School in Manhattan, Brondi opened a family law and mediation practice. The focus of the practice was on gay
family law issues such as donor insemination agreements, child support and
co-parenting agreements, domestic partnership and dissolution agreements, and
second parent adoptions. She represented many gay clients in litigated and
mediated divorce actions. During this period in her professional life, Brondi
came to understand some of the enormous challenges individuals and families face
when a family member comes out and others are not financially and emotionally
supportive. In 2001, Brondi shifted direction in her professional life and
served as Vice President of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB), the
self-regulatory body for the interactive software industry, until 2006. Since 1997, Brondi has
also taught Family Law and Public Speaking in the Critical Thinking Department
of Marymount Manhattan College in New York City. Brondi joined the
Williams Institute as Director of Judicial Education in
2007.
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Matt Strieker, Development
Director
Matt Strieker joins the Williams Institute from
Thurlow/Associates, where he served as lead fund
development consultant on five capital and general
operating campaigns for regional and national nonprofit
organizations, including think tanks, healthcare
providers and youth development agencies. Formerly, he
served as development director for the Mexican American
Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF). In addition
to raising funds for the agency’s national litigation
and policy work, Matt also supported development of new
programs and infrastructure improvement projects related
to communications, new technologies and human resources.
While at MALDEF, Matt also served as a staff attorney,
representing immigrant and Latino clients in voting
rights and school reform litigation, as well as before
various local and state legislative bodies. Earlier,
Matt was a research associate at the Institute on Race &
Poverty at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Focusing primarily on state and federal housing reform,
he drafted various policy reports and briefs, which
informed active litigation and proposed legislation in
Minnesota and other parts of the country. A graduate of
the Georgia State University College of Law, Matt begun
his legal career as a judicial clerk and is admitted to
practice in California, Georgia and Minnesota. In
addition to his work at the Williams Institute, Matt
also supports the efforts of various LGBT organizations.
He is a board member for the Lesbian and Gay Lawyers
Association of Los Angeles, as well as a member of the
Young Professional's Council, which promotes the work of
the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center.
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Randy M. Bunnao,
Education Coordinator
Randy Bunnao completed a Master of Science
in Public Policy & Management at Carnegie Mellon
University in 2003. Prior to graduate school, he was a
Coro Fellow in Public Affairs in New York City. During
the program he interned for the NYC Department of
Cultural Affairs, Bloomberg Radio, and the Working
Families Party. He received his B.A. in Sociology from
the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1998. During
college, he did a summer internship with Los Angeles
City Councilwoman Jackie Goldberg. He is also a
recipient of the Public Policy & International Affairs
Fellowship Program where he completed a summer institute at the University of
Maryland, College Park, School of Public Policy.
Before the Williams Institute, Randy served as
a program coordinator at The Institute for Pure and
Applied Mathematics at UCLA.
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Deseree
Fontenot, Administrative Assistant
Deseree graduated with Honors from the University
of Southern California with a degree in English and
minor in Cinematic Arts. While at USC, Deseree was the
Executive Director of the Gay Lesbian Bisexual
Transgender Assembly, a division of student government
that focused on advocating for the rights of queer
students on campus through academic, political, and
cultural programming. Deseree also served as the
Communications Director for USC’s LGBT Resource Center.
Deseree plans to pursue a graduate degree in Gender
Studies.
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Michael D. Steinberger, Public
Policy Fellow
Michael Steinberger is an Assistant Professor of
Economics at Pomona College. He graduated from the
University of California at Berkeley with degrees in
Economics, Political Science and Statistics in 1999. He
earned a Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 2005. Michael’s research is
in the area of empirical labor economics, with an
emphasis on wage inequality. His current projects
explore causes for gay and lesbian differences in wages,
labor force participation, unemployment, occupational
choice and work hours. Michael is the recipient of
Pomona’s Wig Distinguished Professor Award for
Excellence in Teaching, an MIT Economics Fellowship and
a Sloan Dissertation Fellowship.
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Naomi Goldberg, 2008-2009 Peter J.
Cooper Public Policy Fellow
Naomi Goldberg received a Master of Public Policy
from the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the
University of Michigan. While at the Ford School, Naomi
focused on quantitative policy analysis and domestic
social welfare policy. Her article “Welfare-to-Work
Undermines National Breastfeeding Goals” was published
in PolicyMatters, the UC Berkeley Goldman School of
Public Policy journal. Naomi received the Rosalie
Ginsberg Award for Outstanding Campus Impact in
recognition of her efforts to start a GLBT policy
organization and to advocate for GLBT students and staff
on campus. Naomi received her A.B. from Mount Holyoke
College, where she graduated magna cum laude and majored
in Critical Social Thought. Her honors thesis, entitled
“The Israel Question: The Emergence and Impact of
Revisionist History in Israel,” was awarded the Mary
Lyons Scholar award for high honors. As a Peter J.
Cooper Public Policy Fellow, Naomi’s research will focus
on the unique challenges facing older gay and lesbian
Americans. |
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Kim Pearson, 2008-2010 Law
Teaching Fellow
Kim Pearson's research and writing interests are
post-colonialism and sexuality, lesbians in patriarchal
systems, the imputation of sexuality on minors, and
sexualized violence in custody disputes. Kim completed
her B.A. in English at the University of Utah. She also
earned her M.A. in British and American Literature from
the University of Utah. During her M.A. program, Kim
studied critical theory with Professor Kathryn Bond
Stockton, worked as a Teaching Assistant in the
Asian-American Studies Department, and ran a
collaborative workshop for book artists and creative
writers. Kim graduated from the J. Reuben Clark Law
School at Brigham Young University where she was a
senior editor of the BYU Law Review and worked as a
research assistant for Professor Fred Gedicks. Kim
practiced law in Las Vegas from 2005 to 2008 in a family
law firm. In 2006, Kim published an article called
"Patriotic Homosocial Discourse" which appeared in the
William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law.
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Doug NeJaime, 2007-2009 Law
Teaching Fellow
Douglas
NeJaime researches and writes on antidiscrimination law
and social movement lawyering, with a focus on gay
rights and women’s rights. He also teaches Law &
Sexuality at the UCLA School of Law. Before joining the
Williams Institute, Doug was an associate at the Los
Angeles law firm of Irell & Manella, where he focused on
intellectual property litigation. At Irell, Doug also
represented women’s rights organizations in same-sex
marriage litigation around the country. Doug received
his A.B. with Honors in American Civilization from Brown
University, graduating Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum
laude. He received his J.D. from Harvard Law
School, where he graduated cum laude and served
as a Senior Editor on the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil
Liberties Review. Doug also served as a Teaching
Fellow to Professor Lani Guinier. He is the author of
“Marriage, Cruising, and Life in Between: Clarifying
Organizational Positionalities in Pursuit of Polyvocal
Gay-Based Advocacy,” which appeared in the Harvard
Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, and
co-author of “Sex Stereotypes in Same-Sex Marriage
Jurisprudence,” which appeared in the Harvard Journal
of Law & Gender. |
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Christopher Ramos, Research Associate
Christopher Ramos received his B.A. from
Pomona College in 2008 with a degree in Sociology -
Public Policy Analysis. His undergraduate research
focused on communities of color and racial inequalities;
culminating in his honors thesis, The Latino/a Home
Owning Class: Navigating Wealth, Securing Property, &
Utilizing Social capital. Professionally,
Christopher has interned with such organizations as
Equality California, El Colegio Público San Cristóbal,
in Madrid, Spain, and the Housing Rights Center of Los
Angeles. As a 2007 Public Policy & International Affairs
Fellow, Christopher plans to obtain an advanced degree
in public policy.
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Stephanie Plotin, Williams
Institute Librarian
Stephanie Plotin is a reference librarian at the UCLA
Law Library and manages the Williams Institute Reading
Room and Collection on Sexual Orientation Law and Public
Policy. Stephanie received both her law degree and her
library & information science degree from UCLA, and
received her B.A. from Smith College. She is an
instructor for the Advanced Legal Research course
offered at the Law School. Prior to joining the Law
Library, Stephanie practiced law at the Legal Aid
Foundation of Los Angeles, focusing on workers’ rights
issues. She has also worked as an immigration attorney
in a private immigration firm.
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Todd Brower, Judicial Training
Consultant
A
professor of Constitutional Law at Western State
University College of Law in Fullerton, California, Todd
Brower
has an LL.M from Yale Law School, a J.D. from Stanford
Law School, his A.B. from Princeton University, and was
a Fulbright scholar in France. Professor Brower serves
on the California Judicial Council - Access and Fairness
Advisory Committee and is the author of various
publications on the treatment of lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender persons in the courts of the United
Kingdom and California.
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Click
here to view bios of our Former Fellows |
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Faculty Advisory Committee
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Stuart Biegel |
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Cheryl Harris |
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Seana Shiffrin |
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Devon Carbado |
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Gia Lee
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Jonathan Varat |
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Kimberlé Crenshaw |
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Gary
Rowe |
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David Cruz
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Russell Robinson
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Sharon Dolovich |
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William B. Rubenstein |
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