Jasmine Gonzales Rose Joins BU Law
Professor Gonzales Rose is teaching Evidence, Criminal Law, and a seminar on Latinxs and the Law this year.

Jasmine Gonzales Rose Joins BU Law
Professor Gonzales Rose is teaching Evidence, Criminal Law, and a seminar on Latinxs and the Law this year.
Jasmine Gonzales Rose, a noted critical proceduralist who taught at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law for nearly a decade, has joined the faculty at Boston University School of Law.
Professor Gonzales Rose’s scholarship examines the intersections of race and language within two areas: juries and evidence. She is a leading criticalist voice on evidence law, with a focus on the evidentiary issues raised by racialized police violence. She is also an expert on juror language disenfranchisement.
Her work has appeared in several journals, including the Minnesota Law Review, Wisconsin Law Review, Hastings Law Journal, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, New York University Review of Law and Social Change, and Alabama Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Law Review. Her scholarship is also forthcoming in several books, including the Oxford Handbook on Race and Law in the United States, NOMOS LX: Truth and Evidence, A Guide to Civil Procedure: Integrating Critical Legal Perspectives, and Philosophical Foundations of the Law of Evidence.
Professor Gonzales Rose is teaching Evidence, Criminal Law, and a seminar on Latinxs and the Law this year. She has also taught Civil Procedure, Complex Litigation, Race and the Law, and Civil Rights Law. She received Pitt Law’s Robert T. Harper Award for Excellence in Teaching and the Distinguished Public Interest Professor Award, the latter twice. Due to her scholarly commitment to racial justice, she was twice selected as a Derrick A. Bell Fund for Excellence Scholar.
Professor Gonzales Rose is a graduate of Harvard Law School, where she served as an editor-in-chief of the Harvard Latinx Law Review and a member of the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau. She clerked for Judge Héctor M. Laffitte of the US District Court for the District of Puerto Rico and Judge Damon J. Keith of the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. She has worked for a variety of nonprofit and governmental organizations on issues of civil and human rights. Most recently, she served on the boards of directors of the American Civil Liberties Union of Greater Pittsburgh and the Abolitionist Law Center. She was recently appointed to the Supreme Judicial Court Advisory Committee on Massachusetts Evidence Law.