Daniel Rauch

Assistant Professor

Office

251

Phone

410-706-3920

Photo of Daniel Rauch

Daniel Rauch is an assistant professor at Maryland Carey Law. His research focuses on the laws governing political speech, and how they work (and ought to work) in our digital democracy. Professor Rauch’s scholarship has appeared or is forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the Harvard Journal of Law & Technology, the Ohio State Law Journal, and the Yale Journal on Regulation.

Prior to joining Maryland Carey Law, Professor Rauch served as a Climenko Fellow and Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School. Before this, he worked as a data privacy and cybersecurity practitioner. Professor Rauch also previously served as a law clerk to Judge Guido Calabresi of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and to then-Judge Neil Gorsuch of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.

Professor Rauch holds an AB from Princeton University and a JD from Yale Law School. Before law school, he taught middle school English in Newark, New Jersey through the Teach for America national service program.

Articles

Defamation as Democracy Tort, 172 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1453 (2024). Abstract

Customized Speech and the First Amendment, 35 Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 405 (2022). Abstract

Sherman's Missing "Supplement": Prosecutorial Capacity, Agency Incentives, and the False Dawn of Antitrust Federalism, 68 Cleveland State Law Review 172 (2020). Abstract

Like Uber, but for Local Government Law: The Future of Local Regulation of the Sharing Economy, 76 Ohio State Law Journal 901 (2015) (with David Schleicher). Abstract