Outside of Mondale Hall on a Fall day

Faculty News

Professor Daniel Schwarcz was quoted in Wired about the response of K–12 school officials following cyberattacks in which student and parent data were stolen. An analysis chronicling more than…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz was interviewed by the Star Tribune about increasing insurance rates, especially in light of the devastating Los Angeles wildfires. With the wildfires poised to become…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz was quoted in an opinion piece in the Washington Post about how, in light of the disastrous fires around Los Angeles, the model for insurance cannot keep pace with the…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz, Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and Distinguished University Teaching Professor, shared in an op-ed for The Hill his thoughts of…

On Friday, Professor Daniel Schwarcz, Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and Distinguished University Teaching Professor, proposed a federally administrated marketplace for homeowners insurance:…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz, Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and Distinguished University Teaching Professor, provided some crucial steps on CNBC for homeowners who are filing claims after natural…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz, Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and Distinguished University Teaching Professor, was interviewed for NBC News about the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) which must…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz, Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law and Distinguished University Teaching Professor, was quoted in The Markup

Prof. Daniel Schwarcz was interviewed in a USA Today article fact checking whether health insurance companies recently changed their exclusions for war and insurrection because they’…

Prof. Daniel Schwarcz was interviewed regarding a Minnesota Law study published in the Social Science Research Network. The study findings said that law students who use generative artificial intelligence…

Professor Daniel Schwarcz was quoted in the New York Times about Erie Insurance who defends its practice of telling agents to use subjective factors when judging a potential customer.