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Professor Adil Haque photo
Education:

J.D., Yale
A.B., Georgetown

Courses:

Criminal Law, Criminal Adjudication, International Criminal Law, Law of Armed Conflict 

Contact:
Links:

Professor Haque’s published articles and working papers

Faculty Profile (Back to Menu)

Adil Ahmad Haque

Associate Professor of Law

Professor Haque joined the Rutgers faculty in the Fall of 2008 as an Assistant Professor of Law. His scholarship focuses on criminal law, international criminal law, and the law of armed conflict.

Professor Haque received his J.D. in 2005 from Yale Law School, where he was executive editor of the Yale Journal of International Law and senior editor of the Yale Law Journal. From 2005 to 2006, he served as a law clerk to the Honorable Jon O. Newman of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. For two years prior to joining the Rutgers faculty, Professor Haque was an associate in the New York office of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, where he focused on white-collar criminal investigations and prisoners’ rights litigation.

Professor Haque is a member of the Associate Graduate Faculty of the Rutgers University Department of Philosophy. 


RECENT PUBLICATIONS

“Killing in the Fog of War,” 86 Southern California Law Review (2012). 

“Law and Morality at War,” 6 Criminal Law & Philosophy (2012). Response by Jeremy Waldron.

“The Revolution and the Criminal Law,” 6 Criminal Law & Philosophy (2012)

“Retributivism: Doing Right By Doing Wrong,” 31 Law & Philosophy (2012). Response by Victor Tadros. 

“Protecting and Respecting Civilians: Correcting the Substantive and Structural Defects of the Rome Statute,” 14 New Criminal Law Review 519 (2011)

“Criminal Law and Morality at War” in Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law  481 (R.A. Duff and Stuart P. Green, eds.) (Oxford University Press, 2011)

“International Crime: in Context and in Contrast” in Structures of Criminal Law  106 (R.A. Duff, Lindsay Farmer, Sandra Marshall and Victor Tadros, eds.) (Oxford University Press, 2011)

“Proportionality (in War)” in The International Encyclopedia of Ethics (Hugh LaFollette et al., eds.) (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012)