Lynne L. Dallas
Professor of Law
Professor Dallas practiced with Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City and taught law at the University of Miami and American University before joining the faculty in 1987. She teaches and writes in the areas of corporations, comparative corporation law, law and socioeconomics and securities regulation. Among her publications are Law and Public Policy: A Socioeconomic Approach (Carolina Academic Press); "Law and Socioeconomics in Legal Education," Rutgers Law Review; "The New Managerialism and Diversity on Corporate Boards of Directors," Tulane Law Review; "A Preliminary Inquiry into the Responsibility of Corporate Officers and Directors for Corporate Climate: The Psychology of Enron's Demise," Rutgers Law Journal; "The Control and Conflicts of Interest Shareholder Voting Systems," North Carolina Law Review; and "Two Models of Corporate Governance," University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform. She is a founding and current member of the Executive Committee of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Law and Socioeconomics. She has presented papers at international conferences in Amsterdam, Geneva, London, Melbourne and Vancouver, and has taught courses in Paris and Florence.






