Bio
Professor Clark Freshman was a professor of law at the University of Miami from 1995 until 2007 before joining the UC Law SF faculty in 2007. He received his B.A. from Harvard, where his senior thesis facilitated a pardon in the infamous Leo Frank case, an M.A. from University College, Oxford, where he was a Marshall Scholar, and a J.D. from Stanford Law School. He clerked for Judge William Norris of the Ninth Circuit and practiced appellate and entertainment dispute resolution with Manatt Phelps in Los Angeles for several years. He is also a mediator, negotiation trainer, and expert witness on arbitration. He has been an invited speaker on negotiation at many law schools, including Harvard, Yale, and UCLA. His work has appeared in law reviews at Harvard, Stanford, Cornell, and elsewhere.
Professor Freshman’s scholarship and teaching focuses primarily on dispute resolution, including law and psychology, the effect of emotion on dispute resolution, lie detection, and emotional skills. In collaboration with Paul Ekman, the scientific advisor to Fox’s Lie to Me, Professor Freshman trains lawyers and negotiators in lie detection and emotional skills worldwide. Professor Freshman also works with the Center for Contemplative Mind to promote meditation and other contemplative practices among lawyers and law students. His scholarship addresses the relationship between different forms of discrimination in law and social science, including both the role of discrimination in negotiation, proof of discrimination, and ways to prevent negotiation and promote acceptance.
In his spare time, Professor Freshman enjoys all kinds of yoga, weightlifting, meditation, in-line skating, travel, movies and any opportunity to visit the beach or other water with and without his Tibetan terrier, Tara.
Education
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Stanford Law School
J.D. (With Distinction), Law 1991 -
Oxford University
B.A., Philosophy, Politics and Economics 1988 -
Harvard University
A.B. (Magna Cum Laude), History and Government 1986
Selected Scholarship
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Mindful Judging 1.5: The Science of Attention, "Lie Detection," and Bias Reduction - With Kindness
Journal of Dispute Resolution 2016 -
Lie Detection and the Negotiation Within
Harvard Negotiation Law Review 2011 -
Yes, And: Core Concerns, Internal Mindfulness, and External Mindfulness for Emotional Balance, Lie Detection, and Successful Negotiation
Nevada Law Journal 2010 -
Lawyer-Negotiator as Mood Scientist: What We Know and Don't Know about How Mood Relates to Successful Negotiation, The
Journal of Dispute Resolution 2002 -
Adapting meditation to promote negotiation success: A guide to varieties and scientific support
Harvard Negotiation Law Journal 2002 -
Whatever Happened to Anti-Semitism-How Social Science Theories Identify Discrimination and Promote Coalitions between Different Minorities
Cornell Law Review 2000 -
Privatizing Same-Sex Marriage through Alternative Dispute Resolution: Community-Enhancing versus Community-Enabling Mediation
UCLA Law Review 1997