| Associate Professor of Law |
Zachary Gubler joined the ASU law faculty in 2011 after having spent two years at Harvard Law School as a Climenko Fellow. Prior to transitioning to the academy, Professor Gubler served as a law clerk for Judge Richard C. Wesley of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and worked as a corporate associate at Cravath, Swaine & Moore in New York City. He graduated in 2005 from Harvard Law School, where he served as an articles editor of the Harvard Law Review.
Professor Gubler’s research interests lie in the areas of contracts, corporate law and financial and securities regulation. His recent work in these areas has focused on the boundary that separates the public, regulated markets from their private, unregulated counterparts. He has been published in the Alabama Law Review, the Delaware Journal of Corporate Law and the Harvard Law Review. His recent article on financial innovation was selected to be reprinted in the Corporate Practice Commentator and his forthcoming article inThe North Carolina Law Review on public choice theory and the private securities markets was awarded the 2012 C-LEAF Junior Faculty Scholarship Prize by the Center for Law, Economics and Finance at George Washington University Law School.
Selected Works
Public Choice Theory and the Private Securities Market, 91 N.C. L. Rev. (awarded the “Junior Faculty Scholarship Prize” at the C-Leaf Junior Faculty Workshop at George Washington University Law School, February 2012). (forthcoming 2013)
Regulating in the Shadows: Systemic Moral Hazard and the Problem of the Twenty-First Century Bank Run, 63 Ala. L. Rev. 221 (2012).
Regulating the Financial Innovation Process: Theory and Application, 36 Del. J. Corp. L. 55 (2011) (reprinted at 53 Corp. Prac. Commentator 117, No. 3, 2011).
Recent Case, Tennessee V. Lane, 124 S. Ct. 1979 , 118 Harv. L. Rev 258 (2004). |
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Zachary.Gubler@asu.edu
480/965-2498
Assistant: Gina Wilson
Curriculum Vitae
Education
B.A., Brigham Young University
J.D., Harvard Law School
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