Rebecca Hollander-Blumhoff.

Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff

Harlan Albert Rogers Professor in Law
432 Mondale Hall

Degrees

Harvard Law School, J.D.
New York University, Ph.D.
Harvard College, A.B.
New York University, M.A.

Expertise

  • Civil Procedure
  • Federal Courts
  • Law & Psychology
  • Negotiation

Professor Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff is the Harlan Albert Rogers Professor at the University of Minnesota Law School. Her scholarly work focuses on law and psychology in the context of dispute resolution, civil procedure, and federal courts. Her interdisciplinary perspective uses psychological research and insights to better understand legal actors, systems, and norms, focusing in particular on the role of procedural justice. She was the editor of the Research Handbook on Law and Psychology (Elgar 2024) and her work has appeared or is forthcoming in a variety of journals including the Annual Review of Law and Social Science, Notre Dame Law Review, Emory Law Journal, Hastings Law Journal, William & Mary Law Review, Iowa Law Review, Arizona Law Review, Harvard Negotiation Law Review, and Law & Social Inquiry. Her articles have been cited by the United States Supreme Court and Delaware Court of Chancery, among other courts, and has been selected for presentation at the Stanford–Yale Junior Faculty Forum, the Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, the American Psychology–Law Society Annual Meeting, the Junior Faculty Federal Courts Workshop, the Civil Procedure Workshop, and the Junior Faculty Criminal Law Workshop. Professor Hollander-Blumoff previously served as the Chair of the Executive Committee of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Civil Procedure. She is also a member of the American Law Institute. 

Before joining the University of Minnesota Law School, she was professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis for twenty years, where she served as Vice Dean for Research and Faculty Development from 2017-2019 and as the Chair of the Faculty Senate Council, the university’s faculty governing body, from 2015-2017. She was twice selected by graduating students to deliver a commencement address. Prior to becoming a law professor, she clerked for the Hon. Kimba M. Wood, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York and also practiced law at Lankler Siffert & Wohl LLP, a litigation firm in New York City specializing in white collar criminal defense. 

In addition to her AB magna cum laude and JD cum laude from Harvard University, Professor Hollander-Blumoff holds a Ph.D. in social psychology from New York University, where she formerly served as an acting assistant professor in the Lawyering Program as well as a research fellow at the Institute of Judicial Administration. 

Professor Hollander-Blumoff conducts negotiation and conflict resolution training worldwide to professional audiences including lawyers, doctors, executives, government officials, and non-profit leaders. Professor Hollander-Blumoff has been a Visiting Professor of Law at Notre Dame Law School and Harvard Law School.

Journal Articles

The Procedural Justice of Personal Jurisdiction, 65 Arizona Law Review 643 (2023)
The Market as Negotiation, 96 Notre Dame Law Review 1257 (2021)
It’s Complicated:  Reflections on Teaching Negotiation for Women 62 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy (2020)
Fairness Beyond the Adversary System: Procedural Justice Norms for Legal Negotiation, 85 Fordham Law Review 2081 (2017)
Novel Negotiation, 2017 Journal of Dispute Resolution 61 (2017)
Social Value Orientation and the Law, 59 William & Mary Law Review 475 (2017)
Crime, Punishment, and the Psychology of Self-Control, 61 Emory Law Journal 501 (2012)
The Psychology of Procedural Justice in the Federal Courts, 63 Hastings Law Journal 127 (2011)
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Compliance Motivations in Law: Comment on Feldman, 35 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 53 (2011)
Procedural Justice and the Rule of Law: Fostering Legitimacy in Alternative Dispute Resolution, 2011 Journal of Dispute Resolution 1 (2011)
(with
Tom Tyler
)
Just Negotiation, 88 Washington University Law Review 381 (2010)
Law and the Stable Self, 54 St. Louis University Law Journal 1173 (2010)
Procedural Justice in Negotiation: Procedural Fairness, Outcome Acceptance, and Integrative Potential, 33 Law & Social Inquiry 473 (2008)
(with
Tom Tyler
)
Social Psychology, Information Processing, and Plea Bargaining, 91 Marquette Law Review 163 (2007)
Legal Research on Negotiation, 10 International Negotiation 149 (2005)
The Effects of Jury Ignorance about Damage Caps: The Case of the 1991 Civil Rights Act, 90 Iowa Law Review 1361 (2005) (with Matthew T. Bodie)
Note, Getting to “Guilty”:  Plea Bargaining as Negotiation, 2 Harvard Negotiation Law Review 115 (1997)

Book Reviews

Breaking Down Barriers, 1 Harvard Negotiation Law Review 257 (1996) (reviewing Kenneth Arrow et al., Barriers to Conflict Resolution (1996))