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Rebecca Horwitz-Willis

Drinan Visiting Assistant Professor

Profile

Rebecca Horwitz-Willis is the 2024-2026 Drinan Visiting Assistant Professor at Boston College Law School. Horwitz-Willis studies the law听and history of urban education in the United States. Her work uses education as a lens to analyze how constitutional听rights are contested and shaped through local contexts. Horwitz-Willis's research has explored the expansion of punitive state power through compulsory school laws during the late 19th听and early 20th听century, and she has interrogated the historical relationship between schooling and the carceral state. She is currently working on a project that uses the history of Black education in the听pre-Brown听North to develop a new understanding of power and education localism.听

Horwitz-Willis teaches courses on education rights, family law, and law and inequality. She is passionate about engaging students with digital humanities and believes study of the historical relationship between race, power, and law can provide fresh insights for contemporary movements for racial and economic justice.

Prior to joining 李彬偷情视频 Law, Horwitz-Willis worked as a postdoctoral fellow with the Black Teacher Archive project, an open access digital collection of the journals of the Colored Teachers Associations (CTAs). In this capacity, she researched the legal and social history of the CTAs of the North. She also helped pilot the BTA鈥檚 Teaching Partners program, which brings together university professors in education studies and Black studies to develop curriculum drawing on the archival holdings of the BTA. She has also worked as an educator in the Bay Area and an attorney in Austin, Texas.

Horwitz-Willis鈥檚 work has appeared or is forthcoming in the听Lewis and Clark Law Review, the听Georgetown Journal of Poverty Law and Policy,听and the听Harvard Educational Review.听Her research hasbeen supported by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Harvard Mellon Urban Initiative, and the Charles Warren Center for American History. She was a 2023 recipient of the Kathryn T. Preyer Award from the American Society of Legal History for her paper, 鈥淓ducating a Class of Unfortunates: Crime Control, Child Protection, and the Development of Compulsory Schooling, 1888 鈥 1903.鈥

Horwitz-Willis received a B.A. from Rutgers College, a J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law, and a Ph.D. in education from Harvard University.

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