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Carliss Chatman
Visiting Professor
Expertise
Contracts • Corporate and Securities Law • Legal Ethics • Race and Law •
About
Carliss Chatman teaches an array of business law, commercial law, and ethics classes including: Contracts and Sales and Leases; Agency and Unincorporated Entities, Corporations, Business Associations, and Securities Regulation; Professional Responsibility; and a Transactional Skills Simulation course with a Mergers and Acquisitions focus that incorporates corporate law and UCC Article 9. Her scholarship interests are in the fields of corporate law, ethics, and civil procedure. Her scholarship is largely influenced by 11 years of legal practice in complex commercial litigation, mass tort litigation and the representation of small and start-up businesses in the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. As a result, her scholarship is intersectional with a focus on issues at the heart of commercial litigation: the interplay of business entities, government, and natural persons.
Professor Chatman’s work is also influenced by over two decades of service on non-profit boards and involvement with community organizations. Through leadership positions, she has developed expertise in corporate governance and non-profit regulation. She has also been instrumental in strategic planning and fundraising efforts. Professor Chatman has actively advocated on behalf of non-profit organizations at state and federal legislatures.
Prior to teaching law, Professor Chatman was a commercial litigation attorney in Houston, Texas. In practice, she focused on trial law, appeals and arbitration in pharmaceutical, healthcare, mass torts, product liability, as well as oil, gas and mineral law. In addition to negotiating settlements and obtaining successful verdicts, Professor Chatman has also analyzed and drafted position statements regarding the constitutionality of statutes and the impact of statutory revisions for presentation to the Texas Legislature.
Professor Chatman is a 2004 graduate of the University of Texas School of Law, where she was a member of the Texas Journal of Women and the Law, and served on the Student Recruitment and Orientation Committee. She received her bachelor’s degree in 2001 from Duke University with honors in English.
Education
B.A., Duke University
J.D., University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Teaching and Scholarship
- Corporate and Securities Law
- Contracts Law
- Legal Ethics
- Race and the Law
Publications
- Corporate Human Trafficking, 102 U. Tex. L. Rev. 1135 (2024).
- Co-Author (with Carla Reyes) Uncovering Elon’s Data Empire, 53 Stetson L. Rev. 405 (2024).
- Teaching Slavery in Commercial Law, 28 Mich. J. Race & Law 1 (2023).
- Co-Author (with Tammi Etheridge), Federalizing Caremark, 70 UCLA L. Rev. 908 (2023).
- Citizens United Chapter in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Corporate Law (January 2023).
- Co-Author (with Carla Reyes), Business Enterprises: An Experiential Approach, Carolina Academic Press (2022).
- We Shouldn’t Need Roe, 28 UCLA Journal of Gender 81 (2022).
- Honoring Lutie A. Lytle and John Mercer Langston with our Words, 78 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1719 (2022).
- We Shouldn’t Need Roe Chapter in A War on My Body (January 2022).
- Corporate Family Matters, 12 UC Irvine L. Rev. 1 (2021).
- Co-Author (with Najarian Peters), The Soft-Shoe and Shuffle of Law School Hiring Committee Practices, 69 UCLA L. Rev. Disc. 2 (2021).
- Companies are People Too, Illustrated by Winsome Reed (A children’s book on corporate personhood) (December 31, 2020, Amazon Best Seller).
- Co-Author (with Marissa Jackson Sow), The Disregarded Canary: On the Plight of Black Women Voters, Northwestern L. Rev. of Note, October 29, 2020.
- If a Fetus is a Person, It Should get Child Support, Due Process and Citizenship, 76 Wash. & Lee. L. Rev. No. 1, 2020.
- The Trump Administration Should Have Attorney Whistleblowers, 73 SMU L. Rev. F. 196 (2020).
- The Myth of the Attorney Whistleblower, 72 SMU L. REV. 669 (2019).
- The Corporate Personhood Two-Step, 18 Nev. L. J. 811 (2018).
- Judgment Without Notice: The Unconstitutionality of Constructive Notice Following Citizens United, 105 KY. L. J. 49 (2016).
- HOLA Preemption and the Original Intent of Congress: Are Federal Thrifts Necessary to Stabilize the Housing Market?, 18 Fordham J. Corp & Fin. L. 565 (2013).