Doron Teichman is a visiting professor of law and a research fellow at The Brodie Center for Jewish and Israeli Law at Yale Law School. He also serves as Judge Basil Wunsch Chair in Criminal Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Teichman’s research interests include economic and behavioral analysis of law, empirical legal studies, and criminal law. He has authored numerous articles in these areas, published in leading journals including Michigan Law Review, NYU Law Review, Georgetown Law Journal, Northwestern University Law Review, Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, and Law and Society Review. His latest book, “Behavioral Law and Economics” (with Eyal Zamir, 2018), was published by Oxford University Press.
Teichman has been awarded numerous fellowships and prizes, including the Fulbright Fellowship, the Olin Fellowship at the University of Michigan, the Inaugural Postgraduate Fellowship at The Center for Law Business and Economics at The University of Texas Law School, and the Heshin Award for Excellence in Legal Research. Teichman is the former president of the Israeli Law and Economics Association. He has also won numerous competitive research grants, including two personal grants from the Israel Science Foundation, and was a founding member of the Center for Empirical Studies of Decision-Making and the Law, funded by the I-Core program.
Teichman has served as a visiting professor at Columbia University, University of Zürich, University of Virginia, University of Pennsylvania, and Georgetown Law Center. He has also presented his work at numerous conferences and workshops, including the annual meetings of the American Law and Economics Association, the Society for Empirical Legal Studies, and the European Association of Law and Economics.