Frank Pasquale
Frank Pasquale | |
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Occupation | Legal scholar |
Academic background | |
Education | |
Academic work | |
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Frank Pasquale is an American legal scholar with particular expertise on how artificial intelligence and machine learning processes relate to the law. He serves as Professor of Law at both Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School. An elected member of the American Law Institute, his most influential work is his 2015 book The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information.
Education and career
[edit]Pasquale was raised in Phoenix, Arizona and attended Paradise Valley High School. In 1991, Pasquale won the Citizen Bee. Pasquale was educated at Harvard University, Oxford University, and Yale Law School, after which he served as a law clerk to Judge Kermit V. Lipez on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. Before joining the faculty at Cornell in 2023, he served as a chaired professor at the University of Maryland School of Law, Seton Hall University, and Brooklyn Law School.[1][2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Frank Pasquale". Cornell Law School. Retrieved 2024-07-24.
- ^ "Cornell Tech Welcomes Six New Faculty Members in 2023-24 Academic Year". Cornell Tech. 2023-09-06. Retrieved 2024-07-24.
External links
[edit]- Faculty page
- Frank Pasquale publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Living people
- Cornell Law School faculty
- Cornell Tech faculty
- American legal scholars
- American philosophers of technology
- University of Maryland, Baltimore faculty
- Seton Hall University faculty
- Brooklyn Law School faculty
- 21st-century American lawyers
- Harvard College alumni
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- Yale Law School alumni
- American law biography stubs