Meredith Render writes and teaches in the areas of Property, Constitutional Law, Civil Rights, and Gender and the Law. Professor Render’s scholarship is focused on three areas: property theory, constitutional law theory, and feminist legal theory. Her work in property is focused on theoretical questions about the concept of property itself, as well as how the concept of property might apply to the human body. Her work in constitutional law and civil rights addresses questions of the State’s obligation to be faithful to its constitutional promises, particularly in the context of anticorruption and due process. Her work in feminist theory and gender law is focused on the concept of gender as a mediator of power.
Professor’s Render’s recent article, Fiduciary Injury and Citizen Enforcement of the Emoluments Clause, 95 Notre Dame L. Rev. 953 (2020) examines the State’s fiduciary obligations in the constitutional context. Another recent piece, Blake v. Stradford, in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Property Opinions (Cambridge University Press, Eloisa Rodriguez-Dod and Elena Maria Marty-Nelson ed., 2021) engages in a reimagining of a classic property case through a feminist lens, as part of Cambridge University Press’s celebrated series, Feminist Judgments. Her piece Gender Rules, which considers the mechanism of gender and gender expression as a vehicle for the exercise of private power dynamics was selected through a blind-selection process for presentation at Yale Law School as part of the Yale /Stanford Junior Faculty Forum.
Prior to joining the Alabama faculty, Professor Render was a Grey Fellow at Stanford Law School and a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland. Professor Render also clerked for the Honorable Fortunato Benavides of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and for the Honorable George W. Lindberg of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
You can find more of Professor Render’s work on SSRN and Google Scholar.