Erwin Chemerinsky (born May 14, 1953) is an American legal scholar and author known for his studies of U.S. constitutional law and federal civil procedure. Since 2017, Chemerinsky has been the 13th dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law, replacing interim dean Melissa Murray.

Chemerinsky was named a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2016. The National Jurist magazine named him the most influential person in legal education in the United States in 2017. In 2021 Chemerinsky was named President-elect of the Association of American Law Schools.

Early life and education

Chemerinsky was born in 1953 in Chicago, Illinois. He grew up in a working-class Jewish family in the South Side of Chicago and attended the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools for high school. He studied communications at Northwestern University, where he competed on the debate team. He graduated in 1975 with a Bachelor of Science, summa cum laude. Chemerinsky then attended Harvard Law School, where he was a member of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau. He graduated in 1978 with a Juris Doctor, cum laude.

Professional career

thumb|Courtroom sketch of Chemerinsky at a 2019 Supreme Court oral argument

After law school, Chemerinsky worked as an honors attorney in the Civil Division of the U.S. Department of Justice from 1978 to 1979, then entered private practice at the Washington, D.C., law firm Dobrovir, Oakes & Gebhardt. In 1980, Chemerinsky was hired as an assistant professor of law at DePaul University College of Law. He moved to the Gould School of Law at the University of Southern California (USC) in 1983. Chemerinsky taught at USC from 1983 to 2004, then joined the faculty of Duke University School of Law.

In 1995, Chemerinsky provided commentary on the O.J. Simpson trial for KCBS-TV, KNX, and CBS News. He assisted in drafting the Constitution of Belarus and was a founding member of the Progressive Jewish Alliance. He served on a panel within the Los Angeles Police Department, tasked with investigating the Rampart Scandal, and participated in a commission examining irregularities in city contracting processes. He played a role in drafting the Los Angeles city charter.

In 2008, Chemerinsky was named the inaugural dean of the newly established University of California, Irvine School of Law. In 2017, he became dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law, where he is also the Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law.

Chemerinsky has authored sixteen books, including a constitutional law textbook, and over two hundred law review articles. He also writes a regular column for the Sacramento Bee and a monthly column for the ABA Journal and Los Angeles Daily Journal, and frequently pens op-eds for prominent newspapers across the country. Chemerinsky has also argued several cases at the United States Supreme Court, including United States v. Apel, Scheidler v. National Organization for Women. Lockyer v. Andrade and Van Orden v. Perry, and has written numerous amicus briefs.

In 2011, National Jurist magazine described Chemerinsky one of the "23 Law Profs to Take Before You Die".

He is the National Advisory Board Co-chair of the UC Free Speech Center. He was appointed to Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón's transition team in 2020. He was the President of the Association of American Law Schools for the term spanning 2021–2022.

Chemerinsky supports gun control and disagreed with the decision in District of Columbia v. Heller. He thinks that even if an individual's right to bear arms exists, the District of Columbia was justified in restricting that right because it believed that the law would lessen violence. George Will specifically mentioned and responded to Chemerinsky's argument in a column that ran four days later.

Chemerinsky believes that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. He says, "Judicial activism is the label for the decision that people don't like."

In an opinion piece following the 2020 presidential election, Chemerinsky wrote that "the Electoral College makes no sense as a way for a democracy to choose a president." He writes that it was intentionally designed to be anti-democratic and came about as part of "compromises concerning slavery that were at the core of the Constitution's drafting and ratification."

In a New York Times op-ed in August 2021, Chemerinsky argued that California's recall process is unconstitutional. This process called for a two-part ballot, with a yes-no question on whether to remove the governor from office, and then second question to select the candidate to replace the governor, with the governors name absent from that ballot. Chemerinsky argued that a governor receiving just below 50% support in the first question could be removed and replaced by a candidate receiving a much smaller plurality in the second question. This would replace a sitting governor with a candidate that received fewer votes than they did in the same election. Chemerinsky wrote, "[The court] could simply add Mr. Newsom’s name on the ballot to the list of those running to replace him. That simple change would treat his supporters equally to others and ensure that if he gets more votes than any other candidate, he will stay in office".

Freedom of speech

In 2010 at UC Irvine, Muslim Student Union associated students protested against the college's invitation of Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren, interrupting his speech multiple times, leading to the Irving 11 Controversy. Chemerinsky, then UCI School of Law Dean, asserted that their protest was not protected by the First Amendment, referencing heckler's veto, but he also strongly criticized the prosecutors' decision to file criminal charges against the students.

In October 2023, one week into the Israel-Hamas war, more than 200 Berkeley Law alumni signed an open letter asking Chemerinsky, as dean, to "take immediate action to stand up for free discourse on social justice and equality at Berkeley Law, and to protect the students" who they felt had been targeted by a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed by Berkeley Law colleague Steven Davidoff Solomon titled "Don’t Hire My Anti-Semitic Law Students." The article mentioned antisemitic issues, primarily the law school clubs creating a bylaw to bar Zionist speakers. Chemerinsky originally defended the right of law school clubs to bar Zionist speakers, even though he said he found the bylaw "troubling". Dean Chemerinsky responded to the letter that Solomon's op-ed was free speech, while also noting that Solomon expressed a personal opinion and did not speak for the law school. He also wrote a call to "mourn the loss of life in Israel and in Gaza", saying "I strongly oppose the policies of the Netanyahu government, favor full rights for Palestinians, and believe that there must be a two-state solution."

In April 2024, a Berkeley law student and co-president of Berkeley's chapter of the national student group Students for Justice in Palestine, interrupted an invitation-only dinner for 60 graduating law students held at the dean's home by using a microphone to give a speech about Ramadan and Palestine. The student group (founded in 2001 by UC Berkeley Professor Hatem Bazian and funded by American Muslims for Palestine, both of which have come under scrutiny for perpetuating antisemitic tropes) had called for a boycott of the dinner. They circulated a cartoon showing the dean holding a fork and knife covered in blood with blood around his mouth and saying, "No dinner with Zionist Chem while Gaza starves." Upon seeing the posters, Chemerinsky said that, "though deeply offensive, they were speech protected by the First Amendment." The students claimed that they had a First Amendment right to protest at the professors' home, which was described as a wrongful interpretation of the First Amendment by the professors and multiple legal experts since the First Amendment does not include the right to protest inside of others' private homes. After the student accused Fisk of discrimination and harassment, UC Berkeley opened a civil rights investigation into the incident.

Controversies

Chemerinsky's hiring as dean of the UCI School of Law was controversial. After signing a contract on September 4, 2007, the hire was rescinded by UCI Chancellor Michael V. Drake, who felt the law professor's commentaries were "polarizing." Drake claimed the decision was his own and not the subject of any outside influence.

The action was criticized by both liberal and conservative scholars, who felt it hindered the academic mission of the law school and violated principles of academic freedom, and few believed Drake's claims that it was not the result of outside influence. The issue was the subject of an editorial in The New York Times on Friday, September 14. Details emerged revealing that the university had received criticism on the hire from the California Supreme Court's Chief Justice Ronald M. George, who criticized Chemerinsky's grasp of death penalty appeals and a group of prominent local Republicans, including Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who wanted to stop the appointment. Drake traveled over a weekend to meet with Chemerinsky in Durham, North Carolina, where he was a professor at the Duke University School of Law at the time, and the two reached an agreement late Sunday evening.

On September 17, Chemerinsky issued a joint press release with Drake indicating that Chemerinsky would head the law school. The release stated that the chancellor was "commit[ted] to academic freedom." On September 20, 2007, Chemerinsky's hire was formally approved by the Regents of the University of California.

Personal life

Chemerinsky was first married to Marcy Strauss, a professor at Loyola Law School. They had two sons, Jeffrey and Adam, before divorcing in 1992.

Chemerinsky later married Catherine Fisk, the Barbara Nachtrieb Armstrong Professor of Law at UC Berkeley School of Law. They have a son, Alex, and a daughter, Mara.