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Jerry Kang is Professor of Law at UCLA School of Law.
Professor Jerry Kang’s teaching and scholarly pursuits include civil procedure, race, and communications. On race,
he has focused on the nexus between implicit bias and the law, with the goal of importing recent scientific findings from the mind sciences into legal discourse and policymaking. He is also an
expert on Asian American communities, and has written about hate crimes, affirmative action, the Japanese American internment, and its lessons for the “War on Terror.” He is a co-author
of Race, Rights, and Reparation: The Law and the Japanese American Internment (Aspen 2001).
On communications, Professor Kang has published on the topics of cyberspace privacy, pervasive computing, social cognitive analyses of mass media policy, and cyber-race
(the techno-social construction of race in cyberspace). He is also the author of Communications Law & Policy: Cases and Materials
(2d edition Foundation 2005), a leading casebook in the field. His work regularly appears in leading journals, such as the UCLA, Stanford, and Harvard Law Reviews.
During law school, Professor Kang was a supervising editor of the Harvard Law Review and Special Assistant to Harvard University's Advisory Committee on Free
Speech. After graduation, he clerked for Judge William A. Norris of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, then worked at the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration on cyberspace policy.
He joined UCLA in Fall 1995 and was elected Professor of the Year in 1998 and received the Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2007. At UCLA, he helped found
the Concentration for Critical Race Studies, the first program of its kind in American legal education and acted as its founding co-director for two years. During 2003-05, Prof. Kang visited at both Georgetown Law Center and Harvard Law School.
Prof. Kang is a member of the American Law Institute, has chaired the American Association of Law School’s Section on Defamation and Privacy, serves on the Board of
Directors of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, and has received numerous awards including the World Technology Award for Law and the Vice President’s “Hammer Award” for
Reinventing Government.
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