Deborah Tuerkheimer is a Professor of Law at Northwestern University's Pritzker School of Law. She joined the Northwestern Law faculty in 2014 after serving as a professor at DePaul University College of Law since 2009 and the University of Maine School of Law since 2002. Professor Tuerkheimer received her undergraduate degree from Harvard College and her JD from Yale. She teaches and writes in the areas of criminal law, evidence, and feminist legal theory. She is author of Credible: Why We Doubt Accusers and Protect Abusers and Flawed Convictions: “Shaken Baby Syndrome” and the Inertia of Injustice. She is also a co-author of the casebook Feminist Jurisprudence: Cases and Materials and the author of numerous articles on sexual violence and domestic violence. After clerking for Alaska Supreme Court Justice Jay Rabinowitz, she served for five years as an Assistant District Attorney in the New York County District Attorney's Office, where she specialized in domestic violence prosecution. In 2015, Tuerkheimer was elected to the American Law Institute, an esteemed group of judges, lawyers, and legal scholars dedicated to the development of the law.
Additional expertise:
Evidence
Feminist Legal Theory
Criminal Law
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Criminal Justice and the Mattering of Lives
116 Michigan Law Review 1145 (2018) and SSRN (2017) [2018] -
Incredible Women: Sexual Violence and the Credibility Discount
166 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1 (2017) [21 February, 2017] -
Rape On and Off Campus
65 Emory Law Journal 1 (2015) [30 October, 2014] -
SlutWalking in the Shadow of the Law
98 Minnesota Law Review 1453 (2014) [22 February, 2014] -
Feminist Jurisprudence: Cases And Materials
5th ed. (2018) (with Kimberly Yuracko, Cynthia Bowman & Laura Rosenbury) [2018] -
More publications
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The challenges in the highly anticipated Harvey Weinstein trial, which starts today
The Washington Post [January 6, 2020] -
Why so few rapists are convicted
The Economist [January 2, 2020] -
Epstein case spotlights why it's so hard to prosecute sex crimes
CNN International [July 15, 2019] -
Harvey Weinstein peut-il vraiment être jugé avec impartialité?
Le Figaro [January 5, 2020]















