Emily Strauss
Associate Professor of Law
- Office: 200-364
- Email: straussemily@uclawsf.edu
- Phone: 415-581-8833
Bio
Emily Strauss is an expert in securities regulation, banking, and business law. Her work primarily explores the evolving role of shareholder and securities litigation in policing public companies and shaping corporate behavior. Her articles have appeared or is forthcoming in the Southern California Law Review, U.C. Irvine Law Review, Alabama Law Review, Arizona Law Review, N.Y.U. Journal of Law and Business, Law & Contemporary Problems, Boston University Law Review, and the Business Lawyer, and has been cited in outlets such as Bloomberg and Reuters.
Prior to teaching law, Strauss was an attorney with Sullivan & Cromwell LLP in New York. She was a member of the litigation department, and her practice focused on securities litigation and criminal and regulatory investigations, including fraud, antitrust, executive misconduct, and bribery-related matters. Previously, Strauss was Special Counsel at a nonprofit promoting the rule of law in developing countries.
Before law school, Strauss was a Peace Corps volunteer in West Africa and a high school teacher in China. She is a member of the bars in New York and Massachusetts.
Education
-
Boston University School of Law
J.D., magna cum laude 2013 -
Boston University
M.A. in International Relations 2013 -
College of William and Mary
B.A. with high honors in English Literature and Economics 2006
Selected Scholarship
-
Corporate Law and the End of Injunctions
77 Ala. L. Rev. Forthcoming -
IPO Gatekeeper Liability
UC Law San Francisco Research Paper Forthcoming -
Standing and Snitches (Essay)
79 Bus. Law. 665 2024 -
Mutiny for a Bounty
Arizona Law Review -
Suing SPACs
96 S. Cal. L. Rev. 553 2023 -
Climate Change and Shareholder Lawsuits
Duke Law School Public Law & Legal Theory Series No. 2022-41 2022 -
Is Everything Securities Fraud?
12 UC Irvine Law Review 1331 2022 -
Crisis Construction in Contract Boilerplate
82 Law and Contemporary Problems 163 2019 -
"Easing Out" the FCPA Facilitation Payment Exception
93 Boston University Law Review 235 2013