Saul Levmore was born on 1953 and is the William B Graham Distinguished Service Professor of Law, and former Dean of the University of Chicago Law School.
10 Facts About Saul Levmore
Saul Levmore is an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a former president of the American Law Deans Association.
Saul Levmore joined the faculty of the University of Chicago Law School in 1998 and became Dean in 2001.
In March 2009, Saul Levmore stated that he would step down as Dean and return to the faculty and full-time teaching.
Saul Levmore had turned down the Deanship in 1994, citing the time it would take away from his family.
Saul Levmore is married to Professor Julie Roin, who teaches at the Law School.
Saul Levmore has written in the areas of game theory, reparations for slavery, insurance and terrorism, product liability, tax law, the development of real and intellectual property rights, and the regulation of obesity.
Saul Levmore is widely published on these and other topics, and is the author of Super Strategies for Games and Puzzles and Foundations of Tort Law.
Saul Levmore is the co-editor of the book The Offensive Internet: Speech, Privacy, and Reputation, published in 2010 by Harvard University Press; he contributed an article on internet anonymity.
In 2005 Saul Levmore launched, and is a regular contributor to, a unique experiment in legal scholarship, The Faculty Blog at the University of Chicago Law School.