Professor Suja A. Thomas's research interests include the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Amendment jury provisions, civil procedure, employment law, theories of constitutional interpretation, and consumer issues. She is currently working on two books, one entitled The Missing American Jury: Restoring Its Fundamental Constitutional Role, which Cambridge University Press will publish, and the other, co-authored with Sandra Sperino, entitled Unequal Justice: Why Employment Discrimination Plaintiffs Lose, which Oxford University Press will publish. Her article "Why Summary Judgment is Unconstitutional," published by the Virginia Law Review, has been the basis of arguments in the federal courts and was featured in a piece in The New York Times where her argument was referred to as "perfectly plausible." A panel of the 6th Circuit referred to her historical analysis in that article as "interesting," and her article was the impetus for a symposium of the Iowa Law Review. Professor Thomas's other work has also been influential. Her article on remittitur was the basis of a petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court, and a federal judge has commented that "her caution [regarding the effective elimination of the jury trial right through remittitur] merits evaluation by the federal courts." Also, recently, theWall Street Journal ran an article based on her co-authored article "Employer Costs and Conflicts Under the Affordable Care Act," published by the Cornell Law Review Online.
Professor Thomas earned her bachelor of arts from Northwestern University in mathematics and received her law degree from New York University School of Law. At N.Y.U., she served as an articles editor on the N.Y.U. Law Review, and she received several awards including the Leonard M. Henkin Prize for her note on equal rights under the 14th Amendment, the Mendes Hershman Prize for excellence in writing in the field of property law and the William Miller Memorial Award for outstanding scholarship in the field of municipal law. After graduating from law school and a federal clerkship in Chicago, Professor Thomas practiced law in New York City with Cravath, Swaine & Moore, Vladeck, Waldman, Elias & Engelhard, P.C. and Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP.
Professor Thomas began her academic career as a professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Law in 2000 and was a visiting professor at Vanderbilt University Law School in the spring of 2008. She joined the University of Illinois College of Law faculty in the fall of 2008.
Back in the day, Professor Thomas ran several marathons, including Boston, with a personal best of 3:02. She lives in Urbana with her husband Scott and dog Javi.
- J.D. New York University
- B.A. Northwestern
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95% Plead Guilty: Is Plea Bargaining Constitutional?
St. Louis Student Chapter
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Saint Louis, MO 63101
95% Plead Guilty: Is Plea Bargaining Constitutional?
Southern Illinois Student Chapter
Southern Illinois University School of Law1150 Douglas Drive Mailcode 6804
Carbondale, IL 62901
Criminal Law
Washington-St. Louis Student Chapter
Washington University School of Law1 Brookings Dr.
St. Louis, MO 63130
95% Plead Guilty: Is Plea Bargaining Constitutional
Case Western Student Chapter
Case Western Reserve University School of Law, Room #15711075 East Blvd
Cleveland, OH 44106
Are Plea Bargaining and Summary Judgment Constitutional?
Dayton Student Chapter
University of Dayton Law School300 College Park
Dayton, OH 45469
The Past and Future of the Criminal and Civil Jury
19th Annual Faculty Conference
This debate will discuss the proper role of the criminal and civil jury in modern...
The Past and Future of the Criminal and Civil Jury
19th Annual Faculty Conference
This debate will discuss the proper role of the criminal and civil jury in modern...
Downsides of Civil Juries - Podcast
Litigation Practice Group Podcast
As with many things in life and in the law, there are pros and cons....
Panel 2: Civil Pleading Standards After Iqbal
12th Annual Faculty Conference
Prof. Suzanna Sherry, Vanderbilt University Law School Prof. Suja Thomas, University of Illinois College of...
Panel 2: Civil Pleading Standards After Iqbal
12th Annual Faculty Conference
Prof. Suzanna Sherry, Vanderbilt University Law School Prof. Suja Thomas, University of Illinois College of...