 Omri Yadlin joined the TAU Law School in 1994 after completing his LL.M. and J.S.D. studies at Boalt Hall School of Law, U.C. Berkeley. He is a magna cum laude graduate of the TAU Law School (LL.B. 1988) and of the Industrial Engineering School (B.Sc. 1988). He passed the Bar Exams in 1990 after clerking for Dr. J. Weinroth. During his studies at U.C. Berkeley Dr. Yadlin won the Olin Fellowship and worked as a teaching and research assistant. In addition he was a consultant with the Law and Economics Consulting Group.
In TAU, Dr. Yadlin is a Senior Lecturer, teaching Corporate Law, Securities Regulation, Capital Market Regulation and Law and Economics. In 1999 he spent a year as a visiting Professor at U.C. Berkeley, teaching Corporate Finance and Law and Economics. In Fall 2001 he will spend the semester at Ann Arbor Law School teaching the basic course in corporations (entitled "Enterprise Organization") and an advanced course on "The Economics of Corporate and Securities Law."
Among his papers (in English): "Should the SEC Regulate the Cyber Securities market?" (Chicago-Kent L. Rev.); "Fraud on the Market: a Relational Investment Approach" (International Review of Law and Econ.); "A Public Choice Approach to Private Ordering" (Michigan L. Rev.); "Is Stock Manipulation Bad? Questioning the Conventional Wisdom with Evidence from the Israeli Experience" (Theoretical Inquiries in Law).
For his research Dr. Yadlin won the Tzeltner Prize (1999).
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