Sean Hill, A.B., J.D.
Education
- JD, Harvard Law School, 2012
- AB in English, Minor in Italian Studies, Duke University, 2009
Biography
Professor Hill’s teaching and research lie at the intersection of critical theory and criminal law & procedure. His articles have been published or are forthcoming in the UCLA Law Review, Utah Law Review, and the Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law. Prior to joining OSU Moritz College of Law, Professor Hill was a Law Research Fellow at Georgetown University Law Center, where he led a seminar on race, law, and technology.
Hill previously served as a Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Fellow with the Katal Center, driving a policy campaign to reform New York’s bail practices. He also practiced as a Senior Staff Attorney with the legal non-profit, Youth Represent, where he represented formerly-incarcerated youth in the criminal and civil matters interfering with their successful re-entry. Through a 2013 Equal Justice Works Fellowship, he started Youth Represent’s Family Stability Project, which expanded the law office’s legal practice to various Family Court matters.
Professor Hill served as a member of the Law4BlackLives Steering Committee from July 2015 to March 2017, and as the co-chair of the National Conference of Black Lawyers – New York Chapter from January 2016 to March 2018. He earned his undergraduate degree from Duke University, and his J.D. from Harvard Law School, where he was an active member of the Black Law Students Association and student government.
The Right to Violence, 2024 Utah L. Rev. 609 (2024)
Drug Crimes: The Case for Abolition, Ohio St. J. Crim. L. (forthcoming 2024)
Bail Reform & The (False) Racial Promise of Algorithmic Risk Assessment, 68 UCLA L. Rev. 910 (2021)
Links: SSRN
Precarity in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter, 45 Women's Stud. Q. 94 (2017)