Andrea Cann Chandrasekher achandrasekher@ucdavis.edu BUSINESS ADDRESS: UC Davis School of Law King Hall 400 Mrak Hall Drive Davis, CA 95616-5201 ACADEMIC POSITIONS: September 2013- Present September 2012- August 2013 September 2009- August 2012 OTHER AFFILIATIONS: August 2011- August 2012 Acting Professor of Law and Martin Luther King Jr. Hall Research Scholar, UC Davis School of Law Fellow, Visiting Assistant Professor, Northwestern School of Law Visitor, Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research RESEARCH INTERESTS: Criminal Law, Law and Economics, Quantitative Methods, Criminal Justice Public Policy Analysis, Policing EDUCATION: 2012 J.D., 2009 Ph.D., Economics, University of California, Berkeley Dissertation: Essays in Crime and Labor Economics Advisor: David Card Committee Members: Steven Raphael and Alex Mas 2004 J.D. Candidate, Harvard Law School; Completed 1 st year curriculum 2003 M.A., Statistics, University of California, Berkeley 2003 M.A., Economics, University of California, Berkeley 1998 A.B., Economics and Public Policy, Stanford University FORTHCOMING PAPERS After the Revolution: An Empirical Study of Consumer Arbitration, 104 GEO. L.J. -- (forthcoming 2015) (with David O. Horton). Employment Arbitration After the Revolution, 65 DePaul L. Rev. -- (forthcoming 2015) (with David O. Horton) (symposium contribution).
SUBMITTED PAPERS: The Effect of Police Slowdowns on Crime and Traffic Safety (Revise and resubmit, American Law and Economics Review) WORKING PAPERS: Police Labor Unrest and Lengthy Contract Negotiations: Does Police Misconduct Increase with Time Spent Out of Contract? WORK IN PROGRESS: The Financial Impact of Police Slowdowns: Evidence from the NYPD The Market for Humane Punishment: An Economic Analysis of Pay to Stay Jails The Effect of Home Foreclosures on Crime (with John Hagan) The Effect of Light on Crime: Lessons in Situational Crime Prevention Evidence from Daylight Savings Time Race and Space: An Experimental Examination of How Exposure to Other Races Affects Perceptions of Personal Space (with Richard Brooks) The Effect of Sentencing Guidelines on Crime: Evidence from Washington State (with Jens Ludwig) TEACHING: Criminal Law, Spring 2015, UC Davis School of Law Law and Statistics, Spring 2014 and Fall 2014, UC Davis School of Law Law and Economics, Fall 2013 and Fall 2014 UC Davis School of Law Statistical Inference in the Law (Graduate Teaching Assistant), Spring 2011, Stanford Law School Criminal Law (Co-taught with Leonard Rubinowitz), Fall 2009, Northwestern Law School Law and Economics Seminar (Co-taught with Ezra Friedman), Spring 2010, Northwestern Law School Advanced Undergraduate Econometrics (Graduate Teaching Assistant), Spring 2005, UC Berkeley M.B.A Statistics (Graduate Teaching Assistant), Fall 2004, UC Berkeley Undergraduate Microeconomic Theory (Graduate Teaching Assistant), Summer 2004, UC Berkeley
INDUSTRY EXPERIENCE: 2000 Research Analyst, Berkeley Policy Associates, Oakland, CA 1999 Research Analyst, Law and Economics Consulting Group, Emeryville, CA 1997 Criminal Investigator, Public Defender Service, Washington, DC 1997 Research Assistant, The National Economic Council, Executive Office of the President, Washington, DC GRANTS: 2011 The Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Grant, Home Foreclosures and Criminal Violence, Co-principal investigator with John Hagan. AWARDS AND HONORS: 2012 NSF/NBER Crime Research Fellow 2008 Graduate Opportunity Program Dissertation Year Award, U.C. Berkeley 2005 IBER Dissertation Research Award, U.C. Berkeley 2003 Olin Fellowship for Law and Economics, Harvard Law School 2000 Graduate Opportunity Program Fellowship, U.C. Berkeley 1997 Helen and Peter Bing Fellowship, Stanford in Washington Program, Stanford University 1995 Boothe Prize for Excellence in Writing, Stanford University PRESENTATIONS: 2015 American Law and Economics Associations Annual Meeting; Culp Colloquium (Duke University School of Law) 2014 Stanford-Harvard-Yale Junior Faculty Forum; Culp Colloquium (Duke University School of Law); UC Berkeley Law and Economics Seminar 2013 NBER Summer Institute 2012 Conference on Empirical Legal Studies; ; UC Davis School of Law; UC Irvine School of Law 2011 Conference on Empirical Legal Studies (Reviewer and Scheduled Discussant, Nov 2011); Race, Democracy, and Criminal Justice Network Summer Conference 2010 American Law and Economics Association Annual Meeting; Bonn & Paris Workshop on Law and Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research Summer Institute (Discussant) 2009 Conference on Empirical Legal Studies; University of Maryland-Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice; Bryn Mawr College; John Jay College of Criminal Justice; University of Pennsylvania Law School; Vassar College 2008 Arizona State University Law School; Northwestern Law School; U.C. Berkeley, IGERT Seminar; U.C. Berkeley, Labor Seminar; U.C. Berkeley, Labor Lunch 2007 U.C. Berkeley, Labor Seminar
REFERENCES: LAW: Richard Brooks Columbia Law School Charles Keller Beekman Professor of Law (212) 854-3264 rbrooks@law.columbia.edu Daniel E. Ho Professor of Law (650) 723-9560 dho@law.stanford.edu Jenny S. Martinez Professor of Law (650) 725-2749 jmartinez@law.stanford.edu A. Mitchell Polinsky Crocker Professor of Law and Economics (650) 723-0886 polinsky@stanford.edu Robert Weisberg Edwin E. Huddleson, Jr. Professor of Law (650) 723-0612 weisberg@stanford.edu Barbara H. Fried Saunders Professor of Law (650) 723-2499 bfried@stanford.edu Joan Petersilia Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law (650) 723-4740 petersilia@law.stanford.edu
REFERENCES: ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY: David Card UC Berkeley Department of Economics Class of 1950 Professor of Economics (510) 642-5222 card@econ.berkeley.edu Steven Raphael UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy Professor of Public Policy (510) 643-0536 stevenraphael@berkeley.edu John Hagan Northwestern University John D. MacArthur Professor of Sociology and Law (847) 491-5688 j-hagan@northwestern.edu Last Updated: June 2015