Lynn A. Baker
- Frederick M. Baron Chair in Law
- Professor
Lynn Baker is a legal expert on complex legal ethics, with scholarly interests that include mass tort litigation, "mega-settlements," professional responsibility, attorneys' fees, and state and local government law. Professor Baker has authored dozens of articles and book chapters, many of which have been cited by courts and in prominent legal treatises. She is also an elected member of the American Law Institute.
Featured Work
Invited Panelist
Professor Baker's wide-ranging scholarly interests include mass tort litigation, "Mega-settlements," Professional Responsibility (especially issues involving "aggregate" litigation and group settlements), attorneys' fees, and State and Local Government Law. She is often called upon by lawyers to serve as a consultant in mass tort settlements and as an expert on issues of complex legal ethics, settlement fund allocations, and attorneys' fees. Professor Baker has also been a court-appointed allocation Special Master in mass tort settlements. She is an elected member of the American Law Institute.
Professor Baker is the author or co-author of dozens of articles and book chapters, many of which have been cited by courts and in prominent legal treatises. Her recent publications include "The 'Inherent Powers' of Multidistrict Litigation Courts" (Pepperdine Law Review symposium, 2024), "MDL Myths," (Texas Law Review, 2023) (with Andrew D. Bradt); "Anecdotes Versus Data in the Search for Truth about Multidistrict Litigation," (Cornell Law Review Online, 2022) (with Andrew Bradt); "The Mysterious Market for Post-Settlement Litigant Finance," (N.Y.U. Law Review Online, 2021) (with Ronen Avraham & Anthony J. Sebok); and "The MDL Revolution and Consumer Legal Funding," (Review of Litigation, 2021) (with Ronen Avraham & Anthony J. Sebok). Professor Baker is also the co-author of a leading law school text, Local Government Law: Cases and Materials (Foundation Press, 6th ed. 2022) (with Clayton P. Gillette and David Schleicher).
A graduate of Yale Law School, Yale College, and Oxford University (Marshall Scholar), she was a Law Clerk to the Hon. Amalya L. Kearse, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1985-86 Term). A two-time world champion in tournament bridge (2018 & 2014), Professor Baker is also a sixteen-time North American champion.
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year-2003
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Article
Getting off the Dole: Why the Court Should Abandon Its Spending Doctrine, and How a Too-Clever Congress Could Provoke It to Do So
Lynn A. Baker, Getting off the Dole: Why the Court Should Abandon Its Spending Doctrine, and How a Too-Clever Congress Could Provoke It to Do So, 78 Indiana Law Journal 459 (2003) (with Mitchell N. Berman). View article
year-2002
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Article
Commentary: Facts About Fees: Lessons for Legal Ethics [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity]
Lynn A. Baker, Commentary: Facts About Fees: Lessons for Legal Ethics [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity], 80 Texas Law Review 1985 (2002). View article -
Article
Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity]
Lynn A. Baker, Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity], 80 Texas Law Review 1537 (2002) (with Charles Silver). View article -
Article
Should Liberals Fear Federalism? [2001 William Howard Taft Lecture on Constitutional Law]
Lynn A. Baker, Should Liberals Fear Federalism? [2001 William Howard Taft Lecture on Constitutional Law], 70 University of Cincinnati Law Review 433 (2002). View article
year-2001
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Article
Putting the Safeguards Back into the Political Safeguards of Federalism
Lynn A. Baker, Putting the Safeguards Back into the Political Safeguards of Federalism, 46 Villanova Law Review 951 (2001). View article -
Article
Federalism and the Double Standard of Judicial Review
Ernest A Young, Federalism and the Double Standard of Judicial Review, 51 Duke Law Journal 75 (2001) (with Lynn A. Baker). -
Article
The Spending Power and the Federalist Revival
Lynn A. Baker, The Spending Power and the Federalist Revival, 4 Chapman Law Review 195 (2001). View article -
Article
Conditional Federal Spending and States' Rights
Lynn A. Baker, Conditional Federal Spending and States' Rights, 574 Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 104 (2001). View article
year-1999
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Article
Getting from Here to There: The Rebirth of Constitutional Restraints on the Special Interest State
Lynn A. Baker, Getting from Here to There: The Rebirth of Constitutional Restraints on the Special Interest State, 40 William & Mary Law Review 515 (1999) (with Samuel H. Dinkin). View article -
Article
When Every Relationship is Above Average: Perceptions and Expectations of Divorce at the Time of Marriage
Lynn A. Baker, When Every Relationship is Above Average: Perceptions and Expectations of Divorce at the Time of Marriage, 17 Law & Human Behavior 439 (1993) (with Robert E. Emery). [Reprinted in Family Law in Action: A Reader 73 (M. Brinig et al. eds.; Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing, 1999).] View article -
Article
The Aggregate Settlement Rule and Ideals of Client Service
Charles M. Silver, The Aggregate Settlement Rule and Ideals of Client Service, 41 South Texas Law Review 227 (1999) (with Lynn A. Baker).
year-1998
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Article
I Cut, You Choose: The Role of Plaintiffs' Counsel in Allocating Settlement Proceeds
Charles M. Silver, I Cut, You Choose: The Role of Plaintiffs' Counsel in Allocating Settlement Proceeds, 84 Virginia Law Review 1465 (1998) (with Lynn A. Baker). -
Article
The Revival of States' Rights: A Progress Report and a Proposal
Lynn A. Baker, The Revival of States' Rights: A Progress Report and a Proposal, 22 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 95 (1998). View article
year-1997
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Article
The Missing Pages of the Majority Opinion in Romer v. Evans
Lynn A. Baker, The Missing Pages of the Majority Opinion in Romer v. Evans, 68 University of Colorado Law Review 387 (1997). View article -
Article
Federalism: The Argument From Article V
Lynn A. Baker. “Federalism: The Argument From Article V.” In 13 Georgia State University Law Review, Page 923 (1997). -
Article
Mass Lawsuits and the Aggregate Settlement Rule
Charles M. Silver, Mass Lawsuits and the Aggregate Settlement Rule, 32 Wake Forest Law Review 733 (1997) (with Lynn A. Baker). -
Article
The Senate: An Institution Whose Time Has Gone?
Lynn A. Baker, The Senate: An Institution Whose Time Has Gone?, 13 Journal of Law & Politics 21 (1997) (with Samuel H. Dinkin). View article
year-1996
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Article
Interdisciplinary Due Diligence: The Case for Common Sense in the Search for the Swing Justice
Lynn A. Baker, Interdisciplinary Due Diligence: The Case for Common Sense in the Search for the Swing Justice, 70 Southern California Law Review 187 (1996). View article -
Article
"They the People": A Comment on U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton
Lynn A. Baker, "They the People": A Comment on U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton, 38 Arizona Law Review 859 (1996). View article
year-1995
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Article
Constitutional Change and Direct Democracy
Lynn A. Baker, Constitutional Change and Direct Democracy, 66 University of Colorado Law Review 143 (1995). View article