Minnesota Law Welcomes Emmanuel Mauleón to Our Faculty

The University of Minnesota Law School is thrilled to announce that Emmanuel Mauleón will join our faculty as an associate professor of law in the fall of 2024. He writes about the role that police and other state security actors play in producing social, political, and legal regimes of domination and subordination. He will be teaching Criminal Procedure Investigations, Property, and Critical Race Theory.

Mauleón is currently the Bernard A. and Lenore S. Greenberg Scholar Fellow at the UCLA School of Law, where he has taught Race, Sexuality, and the Law and Latines and the Law. He was previously the inaugural Policing & Technology Fellow at NYU's Policing Project, where his work focused on regulating police access to surveillance and other emergent technologies,  and a Liberty and National Security Fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice, where his work centered on addressing White Nationalist domestic terrorism, hate crime policy, and national security surveillance—particularly surveillance and policing of Black Muslim communities. He clerked for the Honorable Sarah Netburn in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.

He studied Creative Expression and Social Movements at the University of Minnesota —Twin Cities and New York University, Gallatin, before graduating with a B.F.A. in Painting with Highest Honors from the Rhode Island School of Design. He received his J.D. from the UCLA School of Law with specializations in Critical Race Theory and Comparative and International Law.