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Stanley N. Ingber
Constitutional Law; Criminal Law; Police Practices;
Political and Civil Rights
Professor BA - Brooklyn College
JD - Yale Law School
Biography
Professor Stanley Ingber earned his
BA summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa at Brooklyn College
of the City University of New York. He then received his
JD from Yale Law School, where he served as an editor on
the Yale Law Journal. Upon graduating for
law school, he joined the faculty of the University of
Florida College of Law, where he became the youngest
faculty member in the Universitys history to reach
the rank of a tenured Full Professor. During his
career, he has taught at eight different law schools
including Boston University and the Universities of
Illinois, Frankfurt (Germany), and British Columbia
(Canada). In 1992, he was invited to serve as
Scholar-in-Residence at theYale Law School. For
seven years before joining the Department of Law and
Police Science at the John Jay School of Criminal Justice
in 1996, he had held two Congressionally endowed
positions at Drake University, that of the James Madison
Chair in Constitutional Law and the Director of the
Constitutional Law Resource Center.
Professor Ingber is a nationally
recognized scholar in a number of areas of legal
research, including constitutional law (especially the
freedoms of speech, press, religion, reproductive choice,
and the principle of anti-discrimination), constitutional
criminal procedure (including the 4th, 5th and 6th
Amendments), criminal law, and jurisprudence. He
has written over 30 articles, edited 5 books, and
contributed nearly 20 other essays and book chapters.
He is a frequently sought after public speaker, lecturing
across the country and on three continents.
In addition to his academic
accomplishments, Professor Ingber has served as a
consultant for the American Civil Liberties Union, the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund. and Planned Parenthood. He
has been a member of the Floridas Commission on
Parole and Pardon, the ABAs committees on Prisons
and Jails, Police Practices, Criminal Justice (which he
vice-chaired) and Sentencing Policy (which he chaired).
He is admitted to both the New York and Iowa Bars, and
was elected to the American Law Institute.
singber@jjay.cuny.edu
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