Norman I. Silber
Professor of Law
Hofstra University School of Law
Professor Silber teaches and writes
in areas that relate to consumer law, commercial law, legal history and nonprofit
corporations. He joined the Hofstra law faculty in 1989, after practicing
with the New York City law firm of Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler,
and serving as a law clerk to Judge Leonard I. Garth of the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit. Prior to entering law school, Professor Silber
taught history at Sarah Lawrence College and Yale University. He is an interviewer
for the Columbia University Oral History Research Office.
Professor Silber’s most recent books, With All Deliberate Speed: The Life
of Philip Elman, An Oral History Memoir (2004), and A Corporate Form
of Freedom (Westview Press, 2001), concern the legal history of Post-World
War Two America, and the development of the law of nonprofit corporations,
respectively. He has also written a widely acclaimed book about consumer
protection, Test and Protest. His articles have appeared in the
Harvard Law Review, the Columbia Law Review, the Pittsburgh
Law Review, the Stanford Law & Policy Review, and other academic
journals. He also scripted a PBS television documentary about risk and consumer
regulation. Professor Silber is a past chair of the Association of the Bar
of the City of New York Consumer Affairs Committee, and a past director of
the American Council on Consumer Interests. Currently he serves as a director
of Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports magazine, and
is the past editor of Advancing The Consumer Interest: A Journal of Consumer
Law, Policy and Research. He is a fellow of the American Bar Foundation,
and a member of The American Law Institute.
Contact Professor Silber
by phone at (516) 463-5866, or via email at
Norman.I.Silber@hofstra.edu
.
Scholarly Interests, Education, Professional Training, and Legal Practice
Books
Publications
Media and Press
Professional Affiliations and Activities
Memberships, Professional Societies and Community Work