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Faculty Profile

Joseph L. Hoffmann

Harry Pratter Professor of Law and Director for Strategic Projects
Contact Information
hoffma [at] indiana [dot] edu  
(812) 855-6150  
Law Building 330
 
Education
B.A. at Harvard College, 1978
J.D. at University of Washington, 1984
Courses
Criminal Law (B511)
Criminal Procedure: Investigation (B601)
Criminal Procedure: Trial (B602)
Federal Criminal Law (B739)
Seminar in Criminal Law: Death Penalty (L776)
Seminar in Law and Psychology of Crime Culp & Punishment (L748)
Seminar in Law & Society of Japan (L724)
Seminar in Law & Society of Asia (L724)
In the News

Background
  • Co-Author, Habeas for the 21st Century: Uses, Abuses and the Future of the Great Writ (University of Chicago Press, 2011) (with Nancy J. King)
  • Co-Author of Comprehensive Criminal Procedure (Aspen Law and Business, New York, NY: 2nd Ed. 2005) (with Allen, Livingston, and Stuntz)
  • Co-Chair and Reporter, Massachusetts Governor's Council on Capital Punishment
  • Principal Investigator in Indiana for National Science Foundation-sponsored Capital Jury Project
  • Visiting Professor, at the Faculty of Law, University of Tokyo, Japan
  • Law Clerk to the Honorable William H. Rehnquist, U.S. Supreme Court (1985 Term)
  • Elected to the Order of the Coif and to the Order of the Barristers at the University of Washington
Biography

Professor Hoffmann is an award-winning scholar and law teacher. He holds the Harry Pratter Professorship, and is a past recipient of the Law School Gavel Award and the university-wide Outstanding Young Faculty Award. In addition to courses in criminal law and procedure and seminars on death penalty law and the psychology of criminal law, Hoffmann teaches seminars on the law and society of Japan and Asia.

Joseph Hoffmann

Before joining the Indiana Law faculty in 1986, Hoffmann clerked for the Hon. Phyllis A. Kravitch of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, and for the Hon. William H. Rehnquist of the U.S. Supreme Court.

A nationally recognized authority on the death penalty, he has also written extensively about criminal procedure and habeas corpus law. Hoffmann is co-author of a groundbreaking book on habeas corpus, Habeas for the 21st Century: Uses, Abuses and the Future of the Great Writ (University of Chicago Press, 2011) (with Nancy J. King). He is also a co-author of one of the leading casebooks in criminal procedure law, Comprehensive Criminal Procedure (Aspen 2nd ed. 2005) (with Allen, Livingston, and Stuntz). He served as Co-Chair and Reporter for the Massachusetts Governor's Council on Capital Punishment, and has spearheaded successful death penalty reform efforts in Illinois and Indiana. Professor Hoffmann is also on the faculty of the National Judicial College, where he teaches about death penalty law.

Hoffmann has been a Fulbright Professor in 1996 at the University of Tokyo, and in 1997-98 was a Visiting Professor at its International Center for Comparative Law and Politics. In 2003-04, he was a Fulbright Professor at the Universities of Erlangen and Jena in Germany.

Selected Works

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