David Benjamin Oppenheimer
David B. Oppenheimer is a clinical professor of law at Berkeley Law. He is the director of the Berkeley Center on Comparative Equality and Anti-Discrimination Law and the faculty co-director of the pro bono program. He is the author of ten books on civil rights and discrimination law, including the first law school casebook in comparative equality law.
Personal life
Oppenheimer attended the New Lincoln School in New York City. He attended a number of universities and graduated from the University Without Walls in 1972 with a degree in political science, and from Harvard Law School in 1978. He is married to Marcy Diane Kates and has two step-children. His sister Amy J. Oppenheimer is the senior partner of a law firm in Berkeley California and a playwright/actress; he also has a brother.Oppenheimer believes “the cause of racial justice is responsible for his existence.” His grandparents Harry Centennial Oppenheimer and Amy Vorhaus Oppenheimer were troubled by the 1915 release of "The Birth of a Nation" so they independently reached out to Booker T. Washington, who then introduced them to each other.
Career
Oppenheimer graduated from Harvard Law School where he was a research assistant to Laurence Tribe. Following graduation in 1978, Oppenheimer clerked for the Chief Justice of California, Rose Elizabeth Bird. He then went to work as a civil rights prosecutor for the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing handling discrimination cases. In 1982, he founded the Boalt Hall employment discrimination clinic, serving as its Director. He moved to the University of San Francisco and then Golden Gate University, where he served as the Associate Dean. He returned to Berkeley Law in 2009 as Clinical Professor of Law and Director of Professional Skills. He has served as a visiting professor at Sciences Po Paris, University of Paris I, University of Paris X, Queen Mary University of London, University College London, University of Bologna, and LUMSA Rome.Oppenheimer is a member of the American Law Institute and the advisory committee of the European Union Rewiring project on gender equality. He is a former board member of the ACLU of Northern California, Bay Area Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, and Equal Rights Advocates. He is a member of the US Supreme Court Bar and California State Bar.
Expertise
Oppenheimer is best known for his expertise and publications on comparative discrimination law and U.S. civil rights history, including the origins of diversity policies. In The New Yorker magazine, he was described as the “diversity detective” for his historical accounts of the origins of the diversity justification for affirmative action. He has written for numerous news sources including the Los Angeles Times, The National Law Journal, San Francisco Chronicle, and San Francisco Examiner.Oppenheimer has litigated sexual harassment, pay equity and other forms of sex discrimination cases, as well as race, ethnicity, disability, religious, and age discrimination. He has filed amicus curiae briefs in the California, United States and Japanese Supreme Courts and in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. In the U.S. Supreme Court he served as counsel for amicus curiae National Employment Lawyers Association in Burlington Industries v. Ellerth and for a group of U.S. law school deans in support of the Students for Fair Admissions case v Harvard University and the University of North Carolina.