加州大学伯克利分校法学院导师教师师资介绍简介-Adam Badawi

本站小编 Free考研考试/2022-08-27

Adam Badawi


Professor of Law
abadawi@law.berkeley.edu
Tel: 510-643-6116
889 Simon Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 MC:7200
Faculty Support Contact: Monique Sanchez
Areas of Expertise: | | |


Publications

CV

Adam Badawi is a Professor of Law at UC Berkeley. He writes widely on issues of law and finance with an emphasis on corporate governance, corporate transactions, and shareholder litigation. Much of his recent work uses text analysis and machine learning to analyze debt agreements, merger documents, and shareholder class action complaints. At Berkeley Law, he teaches Contracts, Corporations, Mergers and Acquisitions, and seminars related to these topics.
His research includes “How Informative is the Text of Securities Complaints?” (under review), “Contractual Complexity in Debt Agreements: The Case of EBITDA” (in progress) (with Elisabeth de Fontenay, Scott Dyreng, and Robert Hills), “Social Good and Litigation Risk” (forthcoming, Harvard Business Law Review) (with Frank Partnoy); and “Is There a First-Drafter Advantage in M&A?”, California Law Review (2019) (with Elisabeth de Fontenay) (selected as one of the top 10 corporate and securities articles of 2019 by Corporate Practice Commentator).
Prior to joining the faculty of Berkeley Law in 2017, Badawi was a Professor of Law at Washington University in St. Louis. He has been a Visiting Professor at Northwestern Pritzker School of Law and he served as a Bigelow Fellow at the University of Chicago Law School. Before joining the academy he was a litigator in the San Francisco office of Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP and was a law clerk to the Hon. Michael McConnell of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals..

Education

B.A., University of California, Berkeley
J.D., University of California, Berkeley School of Law
Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley

Profiles

-->

Adam B. Badawi is teaching the following course in Fall 2022:

248.5 sec. 001 - Mergers & Acquisitions

-->

Courses During Other Semesters

SemesterCourse NumCourse Title Teaching Evaluations
Spring 2022 217 sec. 001 Law, Economics, and Accounting Workshop View Teaching Evaluation
248.5 sec. 001 Mergers & Acquisitions View Teaching Evaluation
Summer 2021 250S sec. 001 Business Associations
Spring 2021 250 sec. 002 Business Associations View Teaching Evaluation
250 sec. 003 Business Associations View Teaching Evaluation
-->

Musk-Twitter Feud Fast-Track Timeline Mirrors Other Busted Deals

The best efforts standard is vague and can be difficult to gauge, Professor Adam Badawi says, and establishing that someone has breached a best efforts obligation requires pretty extreme conduct. “You can’t hook someone up to a machine and figure out how much they’re trying,” he says.?


Twitter Has Legal Edge in Deal Dispute With Elon Musk

“The argument for settling at something lower is that litigation is expensive,” Professor Adam Badawi says of Musk’s effort to back out of his $44 billion deal to buy the social media network. “And this thing is so messy that it might not be worth it.”


Musk’s Questions About Twitter Bot Problem Spur Race for Answer

Professor Adam Badawi says Elon Musk would need to prove the true number of bots and the amount Twitter disclosed in its SEC filings rises to the level of a ‘material adverse effect’ in order for him to renege on his offer


Berkeley Law Launches New Era under Dean Erwin Chemerinsky

Highlights include new faculty, flourishing programs, high-impact research, and expanding student opportunities.


Incoming Faculty Cite New Berkeley Law Colleagues as Powerful Draw

Abbye Atkinson, Adam Badawi ’03, and Joy Milligan begin their new positions this week, with Frank Partnoy to join the school in 2018.


Magnet School

FACULTY PROWESS HELPS ATTRACT THREE NEW PROFESSORS TO BERKELEY For Abbye Atkinson, Adam Badawi ’03, and Joy Milligan, joining Berkeley Law’s faculty is as humbling as it is thrilling. Atkinson calls her new cohort “unmatched in its intellectual depth and range.” Badawi notes that “the faculty was a huge part of what drew me back