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J. Herbie DiFonzo
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Professor of Law
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B.S., St. Joseph's College
J.D., M.A., Ph.D., University of Virginia |
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- Family Law with Skills
- Civil Procedure
- Alternatives to Litigation
- Modern Divorce Advocacy
- Adoption & Family Formation
- Juvenile Justice
- Family Law LL.M.: Thesis I & II
- Comparative Law
Biography
Professor DiFonzo’s interests include family law, civil procedure, juvenile justice, and legal history. Following law school graduation, he was selected to serve as an Attorney General’s Honors Law Graduate at the United States Department of Justice. He had a wide-ranging two decades of law practice before becoming a full-time professor, including stints as a federal prosecutor and as a litigator in the areas of family law, criminal defense, negligence, and professional malpractice. In all, he conducted over 30 jury trials and several dozen appeals. After teaching for a year at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, he began his career at Hofstra in 1995. From 1995-2003, he served as Director of the Criminal Justice Clinic. From 2005-2008, he served as Director of the LL.M. Program in Family Law. In 2010-2011, he served as Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs.
Prof. DiFonzo has won numerous awards for his teaching and writing. He teaches courses in family law, civil procedure, and alternatives to litigation; and he writes primarily on issues in family law and criminal justice. In 1997, he published Beneath the Fault Line: The Popular and Legal Culture of Divorce in Twentieth-Century America, a book which began as his Ph.D. Dissertation. In 2004, he gave the Peter E. Herman Prize for Literary Excellence Lecture: Unbundling Marriage: Interpreting the Legal and Cultural Changes in Family Structure. In 2005, Prof. DiFonzo gave the Hofstra University Distinguished Faculty Lecture: The Surprising Unreliability of DNA Evidence: A Tale of Bad Labs and Good Statutes of Limitations. He served as the Co-Reporter (with Prof. Mary E. O’Connell) of the Family Law Education Reform (FLER) Project, a national effort to improve family law teaching, and for which he and Prof. O’Connell jointly received the 2006 Stanley Cohen Distinguished Research Award.
Recent articles and essays include How Marriage Became Optional: Cohabitation, Gender, and the Emerging Functional Norms, A Vision for Collaborative Practice: The Final Report of the Hofstra Collaborative Law Conference; From Dispute Resolution to Peacemaking; The Crimes of Crime Labs; and five articles co-authored with Ruth C. Stern: The Children of Baby M.; The End of the Red Queen's Race: Medical Marijuana in the New Century; The Winding Road from Form to Function: A Brief History of Contemporary Marriage; Addicted to Fault: Why Divorce Reform Has Lagged in New York; and Devil in a White Coat: The Temptation of Forensic Evidence in the Age of CSI. He and Ms. Stern are currently at work on a new book, tentatively entitled Intimate Associations: The Law and Culture of Families in Twenty-First Century America. In his spare time, he sings in a choir, roots for the Mets, and plays as much piano as he can.



