Saul Levmore has been the Dean of the University of Chicago Law School since 2001.
Prior to joining the Chicago faculty in 1998, he was the Brokaw Professor at the
University of Virginia School of Law, and a visiting professor at Yale, Harvard,
Michigan, Northwestern, and Chicago. He has taught torts, corporations, non-profit
organizations, comparative law, public choice, corporate tax, commercial law, insurance,
and contracts. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the
current president of the American Law Deans Association. Away from law, he has been an
advisor on corporate governance issues and on development strategies and is the author of
a book on games and puzzles. His writing has cut across many fields, and most recently
has concentrated on topics in public choice, obesity regulation, deception, and disaster
relief and avoidance. 

Articles

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Ruling Majorities and Reasoning Pluralities, Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2006)
This article takes on the puzzle of why many appellate courts insist on an outright...
 

Unpublished Papers

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Interest Groups and the Problem with Incrementalism, ExpressO (2009)
Interest Groups and the Problem with Incrementalism Saul Levmore* Abstract Incrementalism, as opposed to dramatic...
 

Other

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Insuring Against Terrorism and Crime (with Kyle D. Logue), University of Michigan Legal Working Paper Series (2003)
The attacks of September 11th produced staggering losses of life and property. They also brought...