Jeffrey Rosen 3462 Macomb St NW The George Washington University Law School Washington, D.C. 20016 2000 H. St NW Washington, DC 20052
[email protected] (202) 994-9399 SHORT BIOGRAPHY Jeffrey Rosen is a professor of law at George Washington University, the legal affairs editor of The New Republic, and a nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, where he heads the Brookings Project on Technology and the Constitution. His most recent book, as co-editor, is Constitution 3.0: Freedom and Technological Change. He is also the author of The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries that Defined America, The Most Democratic Branch, The Naked Crowd, and The Unwanted Gaze, which The New York Times called “the definitive text in privacy perils in the digital age.” Rosen is a graduate of Harvard College, summa cum laude; Oxford University, where he was a Marshall Scholar; and Yale Law School. After law school, he clerked for Chief Judge Abner Mikva on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. His essays and commentaries have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, on National Public Radio, and in The New Yorker, where he has been a staff writer. A reviewer for the L.A. Times called him “the nation’s most widely read and influential legal commentator.” He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife Christine Rosen and two sons. EDUCATION Yale Law School. J.D., 1991 Miller Prize for best paper on the Bill of Rights Senior Editor, Yale Law Journal Balliol College, Oxford.