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    You are at:Home»Law School News»Professor Eleanor Brown Joins the Fordham Law Faculty

    Professor Eleanor Brown Joins the Fordham Law Faculty

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    By Newsroom on September 21, 2022 Law School News

    Eleanor Brown, a leading scholar of property, migration, globalization, development, and race and the law, will join the Fordham Law faculty in the spring. She will teach Property Law.

    “I am thrilled to be joining the Fordham Law Faculty. I very much look forward to continuing to engage with issues of property, immigration and asset acquisition in the classroom, and the wider Fordham community. This promises to be an exciting period of intellectual engagement,” said Brown.

    “Fordham Law is thrilled to welcome Professor Brown to our faculty,” said Fordham Law Dean Matthew Diller. “Her scholarship on property rights, wealth accumulation, and marginalized communities sheds new light on the determinants of economic success in the U.S. Professor Brown’s experience in economic development brings expertise to our community in this critically important field. I look forward to continuing to learn from her scholarship and to having the benefit of her contributions as a member of our community.”

    Brown is currently a Professor of Law and International Affairs at the Pennsylvania State University (University Park campus), as well as a fellow at the Rock Ethics Institute. She is a member of the Board of Advisors of the Africana Research Center and an advisor in the Schreyer Honors College. She was also the founding faculty advisor for the Black Students Association in the School of International Affairs. In recognition of her activism and allyship for marginalized identities, both within and outside academia, Brown was named one of the first recipients of the Ona Judge Award for Human Rights by the Human Rights Society, a joint student organization at Penn State Law and the School of International Affairs.

    Brown, a Jamaican national, has previously been a Schwartz Fellow at the New America Foundation, a GWIPP Fellow at the George Washington Institute of Public Policy, and a Reginald Lewis Fellow at Harvard Law School. She has been a member of the board of directors of the Association for Law, Property and Society, the Conference Planning Committee for the Immigration Law Professors Association, and the Fellowship Committee for the Association of University Women. She has also served on the Scholarly Prize Committee for the Law and Society Association.

    Brown’s scholarship has been published in the Yale Law Journal, the California Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, the Michigan Law Review, and the New York University Law Review, among many others. She has also published with The New Republic, The New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times and has been a commentator on NPR. Among Brown’s academic accolades, her paper “The Blacks Who ‘Got’ Their 40 Acres” was one of two papers selected in the property category for the Yale/Harvard/Stanford Junior Faculty Forum.  

    Brown holds a bachelor’s degree in molecular biology from Brown University and a master’s degree in politics from Oxford University, where she was a Rhodes Scholar. She earned her juris doctor in 1999 from the Yale Law School and served as a clerk for the Honorable Patricia Wald of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and the Honorable Keith Ellison of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

    Brown was appointed by The Most Honorable Andrew Holness, the Prime Minister of Jamaica, to the Jamaican Education Transformation Commission. She was also appointed to and served on the CARICOM Commission. She has served on the boards of several publicly traded Caribbean companies, and was the youngest director of two subsidiaries of the Bank of Nova Scotia (Jamaica), one of the largest subsidiaries of the largest Canadian bank (by market capitalization). Brown chaired the Conduct Review Committee of the Board for Scotia Jamaica Investment Management. She was a member of the Sugar Enterprise Team, the entity appointed by the Jamaican Cabinet to oversee private sector participation in the Jamaican sugar sector.

    Brown was previously the youngest director of JPSCo, the electric utility owned by Korea East West Power, Marubeni Corp. of Japan, and the government of Jamaica. She chaired the Pension Fund Subcommittee of the board. She was also a member of the board appointed by the chancellor charged with septennial review of the operations of the University of Technology in Jamaica. Brown was also an external board member of Caribiz, an association of Caribbean alumnae and students of Harvard Business School and the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, formed to promote capital market development in the Caribbean. Brown is also active in the Anglican (Episcopalian) faith community.

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