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About Alexander A. Reinert

Professor Reinert joined the faculty of Cardozo in 2007, after working as an associate at Koob & Magoolaghan for six years, where he focused on the rights of people confined in prisons and jails, employment discrimination, and disability rights. Reinert teaches and conducts research in the areas of Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Federal Courts, and Law of Prisons and Jails. His articles have appeared in the California Law ReviewJournal of Empirical Legal StudiesNotre Dame Law ReviewNorthwestern University Law ReviewStanford Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and the University of Virginia Law Review, among other journals. His academic work has been profiled multiple times in The New York Times and cited by state and federal courts throughout the country.
 
In addition to his teaching and research, Reinert also has litigated numerous significant civil rights cases, including arguing on behalf of post-September 11th detainees before the U.S. Supreme Court in Ashcroft v. Iqbal, representing thousands of incarcerated people in New York State and New York City in multiple class actions challenging solitary confinement conditions, and working with the American Civil Liberties Union to seek compensation for immigrant families wrongfully separated at the U.S.-Mexico border.  Reinert has testified in Congress on qualified immunity doctrine and other barriers to justice and he frequently trains lawyers, judges, and law clerks on civil rights doctrine and procedure. In 2016 he became the director of the Center for Rights and Justice, which brings together the scholarship, programs and clinics at Cardozo engaged in public service, client advocacy and academic scholarship dealing with issues of fairness, equality, access to justice and transparency. In 2019 he became the Max Freund Professor of Litigation and Advocacy at Cardozo. In 2023, he was elected to the American Law Institute, for which he also serves as an Adviser to the Restatement of Law, Constitutional Torts Project.
 
Reinert graduated magna cum laude from New York University School of Law. Upon graduating from law school, he held two clerkships, first with the Hon. Harry T. Edwards, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, and then with United States Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer. 

Positions

2019 - Present Max Freund Professor of Litigation & Advocacy, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
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2015 - Present Faculty Director, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law Center for Rights and Justice
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2013 - Present Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
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January 2022 - June 2022 Visiting Professor of Law, Cornell Law School
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2010 - 2013 Associate Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
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2007 - 2010 Assistant Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law
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Curriculum Vitae




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Professional Service and Affiliations

2023 - Present Member, American Law Institute
2023 - Present Adviser, Restatement of Law, Constitutional Torts Project, American Law Institute
2023 - Present Chair, Section 1983 Program, Practising Law Institute
2019 - Present Academic Fellow, National Civil Justice Institute
2019 - 2022 Panel Member, Second Circuit Pro Bono Panel
2009 - 2019 Chair, Iqbal Project, Public Justice
2009 - 2014 Chair, Amicus Committee, American Judicature Society
2014 Co-Chair, Prison Law Program, Practising Law Institute
2012 - 2013 Executive Committee Member, Civil Rights Section, Association of American Law Schools
2011 - 2012 Chair, Civil Rights Section, Association of American Law Schools
2012 Co-Chair, Prison Law Program, Practising Law Institute
2002 - 2011 Member, Board of Directors, American Judicature Society
2011 Chair, Prison Law Program, Practising Law Institute
2010 Chair, Prison Law Program, Practising Law Institute
2009 Chair, Prison Law Program, Practising Law Institute
2006 Finalist, Trial Lawyer of the Year, Trial Lawyers for Public Justice
2001 Participating Scholar, Temple Bar Scholar
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Honors and Awards

  • Best First Year Professor (Awarded by Graduating Classes of 2012, 2015, 2017, and 2018)
  • INSPIRE Public Service Award (2012)
  • Best Overall Professor (Awarded by Graduating Class of 2020)

Courses

  • Race and the Law
  • Rights of Incarcerated People
  • Elements of Law
  • Civil Procedure
  • Constitutional Law
  • Criminal Law
  • Federal Courts

Education

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May 1999 JD, New York University School of Law
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May 1994 AB, Brown University
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