CURRICULUM VITAE KEVIN R. JOHNSON UC Davis School of Law Dean and Mabie-Apallas Professor of Public Interest Law and Chicana/o Studies Work Home University of California, Davis 232 Tern Place School of Law Davis, CA 95616 Davis, California 95616 (530) 753-6224 (530) 752-0243, (530) 752-7279 (FAX) [email protected] EDUCATION Harvard Law School, J.D. 1983, magna cum laude Articles Editor, Harvard Law Review, Volumes 95-96 University of California at Berkeley, A.B. Economics, 1980 Phi Beta Kappa Great Distinction in General Scholarship Omicron Delta Epsilon, International Honors Society for Economics Students California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO Scholarship Class Secretary, Class of 1980 Cal Annual Fund Advisory Council, 1998-2000 PROFESSIONAL Dean, UC Davis School of Law, 2008- Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, UC Davis School of Law, 1998-2008 Distinguished Professor, UC Davis School of Law, 2010- Mabie-Apallas Professor of Public Interest Law, UC Davis School of Law, 2003-present Professor of Law (tenured), UC Davis School of Law, 1992-present Acting Professor of Law (untenured), UC Davis School of Law, 1989 -1992 Director, Chicana/o Studies Program, UC Davis, 2000-01 Professor of Chicana/o Studies, UC Davis, 2000- 1 HONORS AND AWARDS American Bar Foundation Fellow, 2016- Editorial Board, California Lawyer magazine, 2014-15 American Law Institute, 2003- Rick Gonzales, Sr. Award, Mexican American Concilio of Yolo County, Oct. 2017 Latino Law Professors Distinguished Service Award, 2017 Award for Outstanding Leadership in Presidential Initiatives, 2015 Insight Into Diversity Magazine Visionary Award, 2015 Outstanding Achievement in the Law Award, Centro Legal de la Raza, 2015 25 Most Influential People in Legal Education, National Jurist, 2012, 2013 Romero Vive Award, CARECEN (Central American Refugee Center), 2012 National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies Scholar of the Year, 2008 Professor of the Year, Hispanic National Bar Association, 2006 Community Recognition Award, UC Davis Chicano Latino Chapter of the Cal Aggie Association, May 2006 Adalante Award, Latin American Law Students Association, Pace Law School, 2005 Clyde Ferguson, Jr. Award for Outstanding Professor of the Year, Minority Groups Section of the Association of American Law Schools 2004 First Annual Chancellor’s Achievement Award for Diversity and Community, 2001 Faculty Speaker, Class of 2001 Public Interest Graduation Class of 2001, Chicano/Latino Graduates Award for Outstanding Service to the Chicano/Latino Community, 2001 Faculty Commencement Speaker 1999, 2002 UC Davis Affirmative Action and Diversity Achievement Special Citation, 2000 Visiting Scholar, Julian Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University, Spring 1996 2 Recipient, Distinguished Teaching Award, 1993 PUBLICATIONS Books Immigration Law and Social Justice (Aspen Casebook Series Wolters Kluwer, 2017) (with Bill Ong Hing and Jennifer M. Chacón) (and Teacher’s Manual) Understanding Immigration Law, NexisLexis (2009) (with Raquel Aldana, Bill Ong Hing, Leticia Saucedo, Enid F. Trucios-Haynes) (second edition, 2015) (third edition, forthcoming 2019) Immigration Law and the US-Mexico Border (University of Arizona Press, 2011) (with Bernard Trujillo) (Latino Literacy Now’s International Latino Book Awards – Best Reference Book) Complex Litigation: Cases and Materials on Litigating for Social Change, Carolina Academic Press, 2009 (with Catherine A. Rogers & John Valery White) Opening the Floodgates: Why America Needs to Rethink Its Borders and Immigration Laws, NYU Press, 2007 (Critical America Series) The “Huddled Masses” Myth: Immigration and Civil Rights, Temple University Press, 2004 Mixed Race America and the Law: A Reader, New York University Press, 2002 (Critical America Series) A Reader on Race, Civil Rights, and American Law: A Multiracial Approach, Carolina Academic Press, 2001 (with Timothy Davis & George A. Martínez) How Did You Get to Be Mexican?: A White/Brown Man’s Search For Identity, Temple University Press, 1999 (nominated for 2000 Robert F. Kennedy Book Award) Articles and Book Chapters Lessons About the Future of Immigration Law from the Rise and Fall of DACA, 52 U.C. Davis Law Review 342 (2018) (symposium) How Political Ideology Undermines Racial and Gender Diversity in Federal Judicial Selection: The Prospects for Judicial Diversity in the Trump Years , 2017 Wisconsin Law Review 345 3 Introduction: Michael A. Olivas and the Study of Latina/os and the Law, in Law Professor and Accidental Historian: The Scholarship of Michael A. Olivas xvii (Ediberto Román, editor, Carolina Academic Press, 2017) Some Thoughts on the Future of Legal Education: Why Diversity and Student Wellness Should Matter in a Time of Economic “Crisis”, 65 Buffalo Law Review 255 (2017) (Mitchell Lecture Series) Immigration and Civil Rights in the Trump Administration: Law and Policy making by Executive Order, 57 Santa Clara Law Review 611 (2017) Back to the Future? Returning Discretion to Crime-Based Removal Decisions, 91 N.Y.U. Law Review Online 115 (2016), available at www.migrationpolicy.org/programs/data-hub/deferred-action-childhood-arrivals-daca- profiles Federalism and the Disappearing Equal Protection Rights of Immigrants, 73 Washington & Lee Law Review Online Edition 269 (July 27, 2016), available at http://lawreview.journals.wlu.io/federalism-and-the-disappearing-equal-protection-rights- of-immigrants/ Doubling Down on Racial Discrimination: The Racially Disparate Impacts of Crimmigration Law, 66 Case Western Law Review 993 (2016) (symposium issue) (as adapted Casetext.com, https://casetext.com/posts/doubling-down-on-racial- discrimination-the-racially-disparate-impacts-of-crimmigration-law) Immigration in the Supreme Court, 2009-13: A New Era of Immigration Law Unexceptionalism, 68 Oklahoma Law Review 57 (2015) (symposium) Racial Profiling in the “War on Drugs” Meets the Immigration Removal Process: The Case of Moncrieffe v. Holder, 48 Michigan Journal of Law Reform 967 (2015) (symposium) The Beginning of the End: The Immigration Act of 1965 and the Emergence of the Modern U.S.-Mexico Border State, in The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965: Legislating a New America 116 (Gabriel J. Chin & Rose Cuison Villazor editors, Cambridge University Press, 2015) Possible Reforms of the U.S. Immigration Laws, 18 Chapman Law Review 315 (2015) (symposium) Presumed Incompetent: Important Lessons for University Leaders on the Professional Lives of Women Faculty of Color, 29 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 388 (2014) (co-authored with María Pabón López). An Immigration Gideon for Lawful Permanent Residents, 122 Yale Law Journal 2394 (2013) 4 Anatomy of a Modern Day Lynching: The Relationship Between Hate Crimes Against Latina/os and the Debate Over Immigration Reform (co-authored), 91 North Carolina Law Review 1613 (2013) (symposium) (co-authored) An Essay on the Keyes to the Nation’s Educational Future: The Latina/o Struggle for Educational Equity, 90 Denver University Law Review 1231 (2013) (symposium) Bias in the Legal System? An Essay on the Eligibility of Undocumented Immigrants to Practice Law, 46 UC Davis Law Review 1655 (2013) Judicial Remands of Immigration Cases: Lessons in Administrative Discretion from INS v. Cardoza-Fonseca, 44 Arizona State Law Journal 1041 (2013) (symposium) (co- authored) Immigration and Civil Rights: Is the “New” Birmingham the Same as the “Old” Birmingham?, 21 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 367 (2012) (symposium) Immigration and Civil Rights: State and Local Efforts to Regulate Immigration, 46 Georgia Law Review 609 (2012) (symposium) A Case Study of Color-Blindness: The Racially Disparate Impacts of Arizona’s S.B. 1070 and the Failure of Comprehensive Immigration Reform, 2 UC Irvine Law Review 313 (2012) (symposium), also published in adapted version in Law Journal for Social Justice at Arizona State University, Vol. 1, 2011 Sweet Home Alabama? Immigration and Civil Rights in the “New” South, 64 Stanford Law Review Online 22 (Dec. 5, 2011), available at http://www.stanfordlawreview.org/online/sweet-home-alabama (published as adapted, Huffington Post (Dec. 6, 2011), available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-r-johnson/alabama-immigration- law_b_1132079.html) The Importance of Student and Faculty Diversity at Law Schools: One Dean’s Perspective, 96 Iowa Law Review 1549 (2011) (symposium) An Essay on the Nomination and Confirmation of the First Latina Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court: Sonia Sotomayor: The Assimilation Demand at Work, 30 Chicano-Latino Law Review 97 (2011) The Forgotten Constituency?: Law School Deans and Students, 42 University of Toledo Law Review 637 (2011) (Leadership in Legal Education Symposium) How Racial Profiling in America Became the Law of the Land: United States v. Brignoni Ponce and Whren v. United States and the Need for Truly Rebellious Lawyering, 98 Georgetown Law Journal 1005 (2010) 5 It’s the Economy, Stupid: The Hijacking of the Debate Over Immigration Reform By Monsters, Ghosts, and Goblins (or the War on Drugs, War on Terror, Narcoterrorists, Etc.), 13 Chapman Law Review 583 (2010) (symposium) The Intersection of Race and Class in U.S. Immigration Law and Enforcement, 72 Law & Contemporary Problems 1 (2009) (excerpted in The Latino/a Condition 96-100 (Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic editors, 2d ed. 2011)) Ten Guiding Principles For Truly Comprehensive Immigration Reform: A Blueprint, 55 Wayne Law Review 1599 (2009) (symposium) Latinos and the Law: Cases and Materials: The Need for Critical
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