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Tristin K. Green

Tristin K. Green

Professor of Law

  • Degrees:

  • J.D., University of California, Berkeley School of Law
  • M.S., Northwestern University
  • B.A., University of California
  • Contact:

  • tristin.green@shu.edu
  • Tel:  973-642-8800
  • SSRN Site link
  • Curriculum Vitae
  • Courses:

  • Civil Procedure
  • Disability Law
  • Employment Discrimination
  • Gender & The Law
  • Torts

Professor 's
Faculty News

Professor Jonathan Hafetz's book, Habeas Corpus After 9/11: Confronting America's New Global Detention System tied for best book in the 2012 ABA Silver Gavel Awards for Media and the Arts.

Professor Charles A. Sullivan, The Curious Incident of Gross and the Significance of Congress's Failure to Bark, 90, Texas L. Rev. See also 157 (2012).

Professor Tracy A. Kaye, PWC Visiting Professor at Vienna University, May15-July 15; inaugural address, May 18th.

Professor Linda Fisher, Bellow Scholar Presentation on Stalled Foreclosures, AALS Clinical Section Annual Meeting.

Professor Angela C. Carmella, Women and Religious Liberty at Seton Hall University's Distinguished Speakers Program.

Professor Rachel D. Godsil, moderating a panel on Diverse Charter Schools at An Emerging Model for Advancing the Legacy of Mendez and Brown, Georgetown.

Professor Paula A. Franzese, The Ethical Imperative as the Rule of Reason, Annual Conference of Local and Municipal Officers, Atlantic City.

Professor Marina Lao, panelist on Search, Duties to Deal, and Essential Facilities, Henry G Manne Program in Law & Economics Second Annual Conference on Competition, Search, and Social Media, George Mason Law School.

Doctor Brian Sheppard successfully defended his S.J.D. dissertation, Rules vs. Standards, Naturalized, at Harvard Law School.

Professor Gaia Bernstein, Incentivizing the Ordinary User, Plenary Presentation, PATCON2, Boston College Law School.

News Archives

Faculty Profile

Tristin K. Green

Professor of Law

Professor Tristin Green specializes in the area of employment discrimination law and civil procedure. Frequently drawing on the social sciences to explore how discrimination operates in the modern workplace, Professor Green’s scholarship focuses on the intersection between organizational structures and individual biases and stereotypes and on the legal implications of understanding discrimination as a relational problem. Professor Green’s scholarship on a structural approach to employment discrimination law has appeared in the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, the Fordham Law Review, and the Vanderbilt Law Review. Her scholarship on work culture and workplace assimilation demands has appeared in the California Law Review and the North Carolina Law Review. In her most recent work, published in summer 2008 in the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, she critiques the Supreme Court’s decision in the controversial pay discrimination case, Ledbetter v. Goodyear, as evincing a conceptual shift toward insular individualism and maps some of the potential consequences of that shift for employment discrimination law. Her current projects include a co-authored article with sociologist Alexandra Kalev, University of Arizona, on developing discrimination-reducing measures at the relational level and an article analyzing the limits and possibilities under Title VII of employers’ consideration of race and sex in organizing work. Prior to joining Seton Hall Law School in 2000, Professor Green served as a law clerk to Judge Dolores K. Sloviter of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and as a law clerk to Judge Garland E. Burrell, Jr., of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California. In AY 2008-2009, Professor Green will be a visiting professor at UC Berkeley Law (Boalt Hall).