Saru Matambanadzo Professor of Law at Tulane University

Saru Matambanadzo

Associate Professor of Law
smatamba@tulane.edu
Weinmann Hall, Suite 259-E
504-865-5811

Education

MA, Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles
JD, Harvard University
BA, summa cum laude, University of Pittsburgh

Biography

Saru Matambanadzo is the Moise S. Steeg Associate Professor of Law at Tulane University School of Law. She is a nationally known authority on gender equality and workplace equity whose scholarship examines modern challenges in the workplace through the lenses of critical race theory, feminist legal theory, and LatCrit theory.

Professor Matambanadzo has a J.D. from Harvard Law School. She joined the Tulane Law faculty in 2010 after receiving a PhD in women’s studies from UCLA. In 2014-15, she was Tulane Law’s inaugural Gordon Gamm Faculty Scholar, an award to support the work of early-career professors. In 2016, Professor Matambanadzo served as the chair of the American Association of Law Schools Section on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Issues. And from 2016 - 2020, Professor Matambanadzo was the Ratner Family Professor in Social Entrepreneurship at Tulane's Taylor Center, an interdisciplinary program focused on applying design thinking to public policy challenges. In addition, she served as a founding board member for ClassCrits.org and she currently serves on the board of LatCrit.org. Before her time at Tulane, Professor Matambanadzo taught seminars and courses in gender and legal studies at a variety of institutions including UCLA, California State University-Long Beach, and the University of Oregon.

With an interdisciplinary grounding in philosophy, gender studies, and law, she takes an interdisciplinary approach to innovative legal problems. She has published articles on a variety of topics including LatCrit theory, sex discrimination, pregnancy discrimination, legal sex for transgender persons, philosophy of legal education, legal personhood, and feminist legal theory. Her most recent publication with the Harvard Latinx Law Review, co-authored with Professor Marc-Tizoc González of University of New Mexico School of Law and Professor Sheila I Vélez Martínez of University of Pittsburgh School of Law examines the fragility of democratic norms, institutions, and legal frameworks through the lens of LatCrit theory and praxis.

Selected Publications

Reconstructing Pregnancy, 69 SMU L. Rev. ____ (2015).

The Fourth Trimester, 48 MICH. J. OF L. REFORM 101 (2014).

Incorporating the Body, Tulane Law Review 87 TUL. L. REV. 457 (2013).

Embodying Vulnerability: A Feminist Theory of the Person, 20 DUKE J. OF GENDER L. & POL’Y 45 (2012).

Engendering Sex: Birth Certificates, Biology and the Body in Anglo American Law, 12 CARDOZO J. OF L. & GENDER 213 (2005).

Other Legal Writing

SEX DISCRIMINATION IN A NUTSHELL (West Publishing (forthcoming 2016)).

Funding Your New Normal, AALS Section Women in Legal Education Newsletter (December 2015).

2013 Report on Women and Corporate Boards in Louisiana (October 24, 2013) (with Anthony Johnson and Mariya Volzskhaya)(white paper).

Toward a Critical Legal Pedagogy: Using Herbert Marcuse to Examine and Reform Legal Education, in Doug Kellner, MARCUSE’S CHALLENGE TO EDUCATION (Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group (2008)).

Fumbling Toward a Critical Legal Pedagogy and Practice, 4 POL’Y FUTURES IN EDUC. 90 (2006).

Courses

  • Gender Law & Public Policy
  • Business Enterprises
  • Feminist Legal Theory Seminar
  • Employment Law