Derek H.ÌýKiernan-Johnson

  • Teaching Professor of Law
Faculty Profile Kiernan-Johnson
Address

401 UCB
2450 Kittredge Loop Drive
Wolf Law Building
Boulder, COÌýÌý80309
Office 428

Derek Kiernan-Johnson studies the role of narrative and visual rhetoric in legal persuasion and decisionmaking. He teaches students how to dissect and synthesize law and fact, how to express and critique legal analysis and argumentation, and how to understand the American judicial opinion in historical and comparative context.

Derek went to public schools in Boulder, Colorado, and to college at Princeton ³Ô¹ÏÍø. At Princeton, he studied religion, dramatic performance, and music, writing Experiencing Toxcatl: an Ixiptla's Perspective (1996), a study of an Aztec sacrifice from the sacrificee's viewpoint, and Durch Sühn und Buß der Gnade Heil: Suffering and Salvation in the Operas of Richard Wagner (1997). He then studied English cathedral architecture at Wadham College at Oxford ³Ô¹ÏÍø before returning for law school at the ³Ô¹ÏÍø of Michigan. His studies at Michigan focused on constitutional law, education law, and meaning and performance in the law, the last interest of which culminated in Meaning in Miranda (1999).

After law school Derek returned to Colorado to clerk for Justice Michael L. Bender of the Colorado Supreme Court. He practiced law for six years at Caplan and Earnest, LLC, representing public-school clients in general-counsel, transactional, and litigation settings. Derek joined the CU Law faculty in 2007.

Derek enjoys association football (soccer), photography, hiking, cooking, wine & spirits, and games of skill & chance.

Areas of Specialty

Appellate Practice (including Appellate Advocacy); Legal Drafting; Legal Methods (including Introduction to Law, Legal Process); Legal Research and Writing

Education

JD, ³Ô¹ÏÍø of Michigan Law School
BA, Princeton ³Ô¹ÏÍø