Cynthia Estlund

Cynthia Estlund
Born 1957
Nationality United States
Fields Labor law, employment law, property law
Institutions New York University School of Law
Alma mater Lawrence University
Yale Law School

Cynthia Estlund is the Catherine A. Rein Professor of Law at the New York University School of Law.

She teaches Labor Law, Employment Law, and Property Law and has published numerous articles on the subject of Labor and Employment. In her book Working Together: How Workplace Bonds Strengthen a Diverse Democracy (Oxford University Press 2003), she argued that the workplace is a site of both comparatively successful integration and intense cooperation and sociability, and explored the implications for democratic theory and for labor and employment law. She has over twenty publications in peer-reviewed journals, including the leading law reviews.

Cynthia Estlund graduated from Lawrence University with a B.A. in Government, summa cum laude, 1978. She then studied government programs for working parents in Sweden as a Thomas J. Watson Fellow. She earned her J.D. at the Yale Law School in 1983, and was a Notes Editor for the Yale Law Journal. After a judicial clerkship with Judge Patricia M. Wald on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, Estlund reported on the prosecution of human rights abuses in Argentina as a J. Roderick MacArthur Fellow. She practiced law for several years, primarily with the labor law firm of Bredhoff & Kaiser.

Estlund joined the University of Texas School of Law faculty in 1989, and was Regents Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. She subsequently joined the Columbia Law School faculty in 1999, where she was the Isidore and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law and additionally the Vice Dean for Research, Columbia Law School, until her move to NYU in 2006.

Her husband Samuel Issacharoff is also a professor at New York University School of Law.

General Publications

Academic Publications

("Harmonizing Work and Citizenship: A Due Process Solution to a First Amendment Problem," 2005 Supreme Court Review -- (forthcoming)

External links