David Lopez
University Professor of Law, Professor Alfred Slocum Scholar, and Co-Dean Emeritus
David Lopez joined Rutgers Law School as Co-Dean in August 2018 and was the longest-serving General Counsel of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Dean Lopez was twice nominated to the position by President Barack Obama and confirmed by the United States Senate. He most recently worked as a partner at Outten & Golden in Washington D.C. and is a nationally-recognized expert in Civil Rights and Employment Law. He earned his undergraduate degree magna cum laude from Arizona State University and his J.D. from Harvard Law School, where he has lectured.
Co-Dean Lopez Statement about Rutgers Law School's Participation in State Pilot Program
Biography
David Lopez is co-Dean Emeritus, University Professor, Professor of Law and Professor Alfred Slocum Scholar at Rutgers Law School. From 2018-21, David Lopez, served as Dean of Rutgers Law School-Newark campus. As co-Dean, directed operational matters for the Newark campus, including a steady increase in applications and admissions;strengthening campus's financial posittion; transitioning from in-person to remote learning during Global Pandemic; addressing pay equity matters, recruiting and selecting key management postions, including Assistant Dean for the Minority Student Program (MSP); and fundraising, including several MSP public interest fellowships and cultivating one of the largestt gifts in recent Rutgers- Newark history.
During this period, as co-dean, Professor Lopez also testified in front of Congressional Committees on issues including AI and Discrimination, Latino/s in the Entertainment Industry, and Equal Employment Opportunity Commission conciliation rule, and was frequently quoted in the media for areas in his expertise.
Prior to serving as Dean, he was the partner-in-charge of Outten and Golden, a plaintiff-side civil rights/class action firm, leading the firm's Washington D.C. Office, where he opened and managed the office, and handled complex class cases involving social media and human trafficking in private prisons.
Until December 2016, he served for six years as the General Counsel of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and thus acted as the lead lawyer for the nation's primary administrative agency charged with enforcing federal employment anti-discrimination laws.
Dean Lopez was twice nominated to the General Counsel position by President Barack Obama and confirmed by the United States Senate. As General Counsel, he led the litigation program for the nation’s primary administrative agency charged with enforcing federal employment anti-discrimination laws and oversaw 15 regional attorneys and a staff of more than 325 people. This included leading high-impact litigation in federal courts nationwide, including the United States Supreme Court, addressing LGBTQ coverage under the anti-discrimination law, vulnerable immigrant communities, criminal background screens, racial harassment, disability rights, and religious freedom. As a General Counsel and in the private sector, Lopez argued several cases in U.S. appellate courts across the country and, previous with the EEOC, was lead attorney in several successful jury trials.
Prior to joining the EEOC, Dean Lopez was a senior trial attorney with the Civil Rights Division Employment Litigation Section of the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington D.C. Previously, he was an associate with Spiegel & McDiarmid LLP in Washington D.C.
Professor Lopez is a widely sought-after speaker who has made more than 75 speeches and presentations before the American Bar Association, state and local bar associations, and various advocacy, non-governmental organizations and universities on issues related to labor and employment law and civil rights.
He also serves on the board of directors for the National Women’s Law Center; the National Women's Law Center, LLC (including the Times Up Legal Defense Fund); the Impact Fund (an Oakland-based non-profit offering support to public interest lawyers and communities through training, co-counsel and grants to advance civil rights and social justice); Towards Justice, (a Denver-based non-profit dedicated to advancing economic justice and advocacy); Milk with Dignity (a Vermont-based worker advocacy organization); and formerly with the ACLU-DC. In 2020, he served on the Stanford Medical School Commission on Justice and Equity.
Dean Lopez is a Fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Attorneys. In 2014, The National Law Journal named him one of “America’s 50 Outstanding General Counsels.” Among the organizations that have recognized him for his work on social justice issues are: the International Religious Liberty Association, which gave him its National Religious Freedom Award, Liberty Magazine, the North American Religious Liberty Association, which cited his work on civil, religious, and employment rights; the Washington D.C. Hispanic Bar Association; the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, which gave him its Friend in Government Award in 2012.
He has been called a “Latino Luminary” by the magazine Diversity and the Bar and in 2011 Hispanic Business named him to its list of 100 “Influentials” in the Hispanic community. He earned his J.D. from Harvard Law School and graduated magna cum laude from Arizona State University with a bachelor’s degree in Political Science.
Professor Lopez has served as a Visiting Professor at Harvard Law School, a Visting Professor at Yale Law School, a Visiting Professor at Arizona State University, an Adjunct Professor at New York University Law School, a Lecturer at Georgetown Law Center, and an Adjunct Professor at George Washington University Law School.
Publications
- David Lopez, "Foreword: The Great Pandemic and the Great Reckoning: Law and Society in an Emerging World," 72 Rutgers L. Rev. 1265 (2020).
- Jerome D. Williams, David Lopez, Patrick Shafto & Kyungwon Lee, Technological Workforce And Its Impact on Algorithmic Justice in Politics, 6 Customer Needs & Solutions 84 (2019).
- David Lopez and Andrea Amaya "The Civil Rights Act of 1964: A Magna Carta of Human Rights" in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act After 50 Years: Proceedings of the New York University 67th Annual Conference on Labor (LexisNexis 2015)
- David Lopez, "Employment Discrimination Law. Model for Enforcing the Civil Rights of Trafficking Victims," a chapter in Human Trafficking Reconsidered: Rethinking the Problems and Re-Envisioning New Solutions, by Kimberly Kay Hoang and Rhacel Salazar Parrecas (Mar 15, 2014).
- Co-authored second edition of "Unfair Immigration-Related Employment Practices: A Practical Manual" with Washington Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights and Hogan and Hartson (1990).