Professor Minda joined the faculty in 1978. He is a prolific scholar in the fields
of labor law, antitrust law and jurisprudence. In addition to his numerous law review
articles, he is the author of the books Work Law in American Society (2005)Boycott in
America: How Imagination and Ideology Shape the Legal Mind (1999) and Postmodern Legal
Movements: Law and Jurisprudence at Century's End (1995). His current scholarship,
supported by the Irish American Cultural Institute, is on the life and times of Michael
Davitt, a nineteenth century Irish Revolutionary leader and thinker. He was recently a
Reader in Residence at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland where he was doing research for
his biography on Davitt. He has been a Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law at West
Virginia University College of Law, and a Visiting Professor at Stetson University
College of Law, Cardozo School of Law, St. John’s University School of Law, and the
University of Miami School of Law. Professor Minda is Chair of the AALS Section on Law
& Interpretation. 

Articles

Link

Narratives of International Law and Literature After 9/11, 11 ILSA J. Int’l & Comp. L. 435 (2005)
 

Link

Reflections [Law & Literature Conference], 26 Cardozo L. Rev. 2397 (2005)
 

Books

Work Law in American Society (with Kenneth M. Casebeer) (2005)
 

Contributions to Books

Comparative Legal Studies in the Age of Images, Pseudo-Events and Commodity Signs, American and German Legal Cultures: Contrast, Conflict, Convergence? (2003)
 
Marxist and Post-Marxist Theories of Law, The Oxford Companion to American Law (K.L. Hall ed. 2002) (2002)