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(Criminal law, Criminal Procedure,
Jurisprudence, Torts, Human Rights and Animal Rights, Seminar on Animal Rights.)
Professor Francione received his B.A.
in philosophy from the University of Rochester, where he was awarded the Phi Beta Kappa
O'Hearn Scholarship that allowed him to pursue graduate study in philosophy in Great
Britain. He received his M.A. in philosophy and his J.D. from the University of Virginia.
He was Articles Editor of the Virginia Law Review.
After graduation, Professor Francione
clerked for Judge Albert Tate, Jr., U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
and for Justice Sandra Day O'Connor of the U.S. Supreme Court. He was an
associate at Cravath, Swaine & Moore in New York City before joining the faculty at
the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1984, where he was tenured in 1987.
He joined the Rutgers faculty in 1989.
Professor Francione has been teaching
animal rights and the law for more than 20 years, and he was the first academic to teach
animal rights theory in an American law school. He has lectured on the topic throughout
the United States, Canada, and Europe, including serving as a member of the Guest Faculty
of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, and has been a guest on numerous radio and
television shows. He is well known throughout the animal protection movement for his
criticism of animal welfare law and the property status of nonhuman animals, and for his
abolitionist theory of animal rights.
Professor Francione is the author of
numerous books and articles on animal rights theory and animals and the law, including
Introduction to Animal Rights: Your Child or the Dog?
(2000) (foreword by Alan Watson);
Animals, Property, and the Law (1995) (foreword by William M. Kunstler);
Rain Without
Thunder: The Ideology of the Animal Rights Movement (1996); and
Vivisection and Dissection
in the Classroom: A Guide to Conscientious Objection (with Anna E. Charlton) (1992). His
forthcoming book, Animals as Persons: Essays on the Abolition of Animal
Exploitation, will be published by Columbia
University Press in 2007. Professor Francione has also written in the areas of copyright,
patent law, and law and science. His law review articles on intellectual property have
been selected for inclusion in The Intellectual Property Review.
Professors Francione and his colleague
Anna Charlton started and operated the Rutgers Animal Rights Law Clinic from 1990-2000,
making Rutgers the first university in the United States to have animal rights law as part
of the regular academic curriculum, and to award students academic credit not only for
classroom work, but also for work on actual cases involving animal issues. Professors
Francione and Charlton represented without charge individual animal advocates, grassroots
animal groups, and national and international animal organizations. Professor Francione
currently teaches (with Adjunct Professor Charlton) a course on human rights and animal
rights, and a seminar on animal rights theory and the law. He also teaches courses on
criminal law, criminal procedure, jurisprudence, torts, and legal philosophy.
Professor Francione has also had extensive experience in litigation
practice. He served as Counsel to various partners at Cravath, Swaine &
Moore, and was Of Counsel to Boies, Schiller & Flexner in
New York City and Lowenstein Sandler in Roseland, New Jersey and New
York City.
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