Christina Mulligan
Christina Mulligan’s research addresses theories of constitutional interpretation, how to adapt intellectual property law to the digital age, and the relationship between law and technology. Recently, she has written about how to make originalism more inclusive, property rights in data, and nontraditional families.
A professor at Brooklyn Law School, Professor Mulligan has also taught as a visiting professor at Yale Law School and researched as a visiting scholar at the Georgetown Center for the Constitution. Her scholarship has been published in a variety of journals and law reviews, including the Boston University Law Review, Notre Dame Law Review, and Constitutional Commentary.
Professor Mulligan earned her bachelor’s degree cum laude and her law degree cum laude from Harvard University, where she worked as a production and article editor for the Harvard Journal of Law & Technology. Before entering academia, she served as a law clerk for Judge Charles F. Lettow of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.