Elon Law Professor Steve Friedland, named one of the nation's 26 best law teachers in the Harvard University Press book What the Best Law Teachers Do, discusses his passion for ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ in ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ's 2014 President's Report.

Read about Friedland and watch his interview with Elon for the 2014 President’s Report here.
“At the center of ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ’s emergence as the preeminent university for engaged global learning are passionate faculty and staff members,” said Leo M. Lambert, president of ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ, in the 2014 President’s Report. “They are committed to transforming students’ lives by providing high-impact learning experiences in the classroom and beyond. Elon faculty know that active scholarship is critical to their work with students, and the profiles in the 2014 President’s Report provide a small sample of the impressive research that is being done at Elon.”
Steven Friedland was a founding faculty member at Elon Law School after ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ at several other schools, including the University of Georgia and Georgia State University, as well as Nova Southeastern University (NSU) in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., where he served as a professor of law for more than a decade. Friedland was elected to the American Law Institute in 2010, named to the board of trustees for the Law School Admissions Council in 2012 and to the Lexis Publishing Company Advisory Board the same year. He has received ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ awards at three different law schools, as well as a “teacher of the year” award for all of NSU. Friedland has co-authored several Constitutional Law, Evidence Law, and Criminal Procedure textbooks, as well as three books on law school ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ. He is a national leader and speaker on law school ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ, and has advised the Japan Legal Foundation about starting law schools in Japan and Afghanistan law professors as part of a U.S. A.I.D. project on law ¾Ã¾ÃÈÈ in that country. He was one of twenty-six law teachers included in the forthcoming Harvard University Press book by Michael Hunter Schwartz and Gerry Hess, What the Best Law Teachers Do.
While in practice, he served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. At Elon, he is director of the Center for Engaged Learning in the Law (CELL). He is on the Board of Advisors for the Institute for Law School Teaching and has taught in the North Carolina Leadership Academy and the Florida Judicial College. Friedland has a bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York at Binghamton, a juris doctor degree from Harvard Law School, and a master of laws and a doctor of jurisprudence degree from Columbia Law School, where he was a Dollard Fellow in Law, Medicine and Psychiatry.