#  Youngjae Lee 

 

 



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Youngjae Lee is Professor of Law at Fordham Law School. Lee’s scholarship focuses on questions of criminal culpability, criminal procedure, and state punishment, and he has written extensively under three broad headings: criminalization of disobedience, the principle of proportionality in criminal law, and criminal jury and reasonable doubt.

At Fordham and as a visiting professor of law at Harvard Law School, Columbia Law School, University of Chicago Law School, and UCLA School of Law, he has taught criminal law, criminal procedure, international white collar crime, international criminal law, criminal law theory, and torts. Lee joined the Fordham faculty in fall 2005 from NYU School of Law, where he was an Alexander Fellow. Before teaching, Lee worked as an attorney at Jenner &amp; Block in Washington, D.C. and in the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division, Federal Programs Branch (Honors Program). Lee is a 1995 graduate of Swarthmore College and a 1999 graduate of Harvard Law School, where he was Primary Editor of the Harvard Law Review.

Lee is currently working on a series of articles on mala prohibita and regulatory offenses (“The State’s Right to Evidence and Duties of Citizenship, 31 Philosophical Issues (A Supplement to Noûs) 210 (2021)”; “Mala Prohibita, the Wrongfulness Constraint, and the Problem of Overcriminalization,” 41 Law and Philosophy 375 (2022); “Mala Prohibita and Proportionality,” 15 Criminal Law and Philosophy 425 (2021); “Proxy Crimes and Overcriminalization,” 16 Criminal Law and Philosophy 469 (2022)) and a book project on punishing disobedience (Criminalizing Disobedience (forthcoming Oxford University Press)).

Lee’s other representative publications include: “Reasonable Doubt and Disagreement,” 23 Legal Theory 203 (2017); “Military Veterans, Culpability, and Blame,” 7 Criminal Law and Philosophy 285 (2013); “Punishing Disloyalty?: Treason, Espionage, and the Transgression of Political Boundaries,” 31 Law and Philosophy 299 (2012); “Recidivism as Omission: A Relational Account,” 87 Texas Law Review 571 (2009); and “The Constitutional Right Against Excessive Punishment,” 91 Virginia Law Review 677 (2005).