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Joseph Margulies

Professor of Practice

Overview

Professional Biography

For those who care about titles, I am a Professor of the Practice of Government at Cornell University. Like most people, however, I have diverse interests that are not well captured by the content of my business card. If I were to sum up the professional side of my life, I would say that I am a writer, litigator and teacher. But all my work shares common themes, the most important of which is that I am opposed to demonization in all its forms. I long ago distilled my personal philosophy to eight words: There is no them, there is only us.

This philosophy links me, at a level of shared humanity, to people who have caused unimaginable pain, but also to those who have endured it. It links me to people whose beliefs and behavior I admire a great deal, but also to those whose values I abhor. In every way that matters, I know that I am no different from them and they are no different from me. If history and science teach us anything, it is that any of us can do monstrous things, and if all of us can be monstrous, then none of us are monsters, which is why I do not believe in the Other, that mythical creature we are so quick to find and eager to cast out.

In my work鈥攐n the page, in the courtroom and in the classroom鈥擨 try to bring this philosophy to life. I have written a slew of articles and three books: (Yale 2021); (Yale 2013); and (Simon & Schuster 2006). Guant谩namo won a bunch of awards, which was very nice. I am finishing a book on our determination to cast people out, which asks who and what is forgiven in American life.

As a civil rights lawyer, I was Counsel of Record in (2004), which gave Guant谩namo detainees the right to challenge their detention in federal court, and in  2008), which gave American citizens the right to challenge their detention by the U.S. government, regardless of where they are held in the world. 

Presently I represent Abu Zubaydah, who was imprisoned and tortured in CIA black sites and whose interrogation in 2002 and 2003 prompted the Bush Administration to draft the infamous "torture memos.鈥 I am also the director of The Compassionate Release Project, which represents federal prisoners in motions for compassionate release.

You can read some of my short essays on these and related topics .

Education

B.A., Cornell University, 1982
J.D., Northwestern University Law School, 1988

Curriculum Vitae

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