Malcolm Feeley is Claire Sanders Clements Professor in the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program at Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley, where he has taught since 1984. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota (1969), and has also taught at NYU, Brooklyn College, Yale, and the University of Wisconsin. He was the Hubert Humphrey Fellow at Minnesota, and a Russell Sage Fellow and Guggenheim Criminal Justice Fellow at the Yale Law School. He has received awards from the National Science Foundation, the National Institute of Justice, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Japan Science Foundation, the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation, and the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, has been a visiting professor at Hebrew University, and held visiting positions at the universities of Milan and Cologne, and elsewhere in Europe and Japan. In 2000 he was a Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Study in Bologna, and during 2001-02, he was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. At Berkeley, he has served as Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Society (1987-92), the Center=s Guggenheim Criminal Justice Program (1987-96), and chair of the JSP Program (1995-96). A life member of the Law and Society Association, he was a student editor of Vol. 2, No. 1 of the Review (later published as a book, Affirmative School Integration), and has served on the Review=s editorial advisory board. He has served two terms on the Board of Trustees (Classes of 1979 and 1992), and is currently serving the Association=s Secretary. Over the years, he has also served on many different committees of the Association, including Nominations (1999); Kalven Prize (1989); Student Awards (2000); Graduate Student Workshop (1987-88, and 1997); Education (1980); Local Arrangements (1980 and 1989); Publications (1978-81); and Program (1980, 1984, and 1986). His books include (with Ted Becker) The Impact of Supreme Court Decisions (1971); The Process is the Punishment (1980)( recipient of the ABA=s Silver Gavel Award, and Honorable Mention Am. Soc. Asso. Law Section Award); Court Reform on Trial (1983); (with Austin Sarat) The Policy Dilemma; (with Samuel Krislov) American Constitutional Law (1985, 1990); (with John Kaplan and Jerome Skolnick) American Criminal Justice (1991); (with Edward Rubin) Judicial Policy Making and the Modern State (1998); and (with Setsuo Miyazawa) The Japanese Adversary System in Context (2002). He is currently completing a book on federalism with Edward Rubin, and a new edition (with Jerome Skolnick and Candace McCoy) of American Criminal Justice. He has published widely in law reviews, and political science, history and criminology journals in both the United States and abroad. Many of his articles have been reprinted frequently. Among them are: The Concept of Law in the Social Sciences; (with Deborah Little) The Vanishing Female; (with Jonathan Simon) The New Penology, and Actuarial Justice; and Entrepreneurs of Justice: The Legacy of Private Punishment. His current projects include (with Hadar Aviram) a comparative study of women and crime in the eighteenth century, (with Edward Rubin) the theory and practice of federalism; and (with Terry Halliday and Lucien Karpik) the role of the bench and the bar in fostering the liberal state. He is co-editor, along with Jonathan Simon, of the journal Punishment & Society.