Previously the Julius Kreeger Professor of Law and Director for Studies in Criminal Justice at the University of Chicago Law School, Stephen Schulhofer is one of the nation's most distinguished scholars of criminal justice. He has written more than fifty scholarly articles and six books, including the leading casebook in the field and highly regarded, widely cited work on a wide range of criminal justice topics. Schulhofer's most recent book, The Enemy Within: Intelligence Gathering, Law Enforcement and Civil Liberties in the Wake of September 11, written for The Century Foundation's Project on Homeland Security, has attracted wide attention as a careful and balanced critique of domestic measures being implemented as part of the 'war on terrorism.'
Schulhofer began his scholarly career researching and writing about punishment and sentencing and produced articles for the Pennsylvania Law Review that illustrated his ability to integrate a thorough understanding of legal issues with both empirical and philosophical literatures. In the 1980s, Schulhofer focused on his own empirical study of bench trials in Philadelphia to prove that criminal justice could be efficiently and fairly administered without resorting to plea bargaining, and published his analyses in the Harvard Law Review. He then turned his attention to the proposals for sentencing guideline reform and to the controversy surrounding the Miranda rules for police interrogation.
In the mid-90s, Schulhofer returned to police interrogation, conducting several empirical studies of the impact of Miranda on confession rates, and at the same time began his groundbreaking work on sexual abuse and other feminist concerns in the administration of criminal justice. Formerly, Schulhofer was the Ferdinand Wakefield Hubbell Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania. He completed his B.A. at Princeton and his J.D. at Harvard, both summa cum laude, and was the Developments and Supreme Court editor of the Harvard Law Review. He then clerked for two years for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black. Before teaching, he also practiced law for three years with the firm Coudert Freres, in France.