Todd Haugh

Assistant Professor of Business Law and EthicsJesse Fine Fellow, The Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions at Kelley School of Business

Schools

  • Kelley School of Business

Links

Kelley School of Business

Todd Haugh is an Assistant Professor of Business Law and Ethics. His scholarship focuses on white collar and corporate crime,

Areas of Expertise

White collar and corporate crime; behavioral ethics; moral decision-making and critical thinking; sentencing and punishment for economic crime and public corruption.

Academic Degrees

  • JD, University of Illinois College of Law, 2002
  • BA, Brown University, 1999

Professional Experience

  • Supreme Court Fellow, Supreme Court of the United States, 2011-12
  • Senior Associate Attorney, Winston & Strawn, Chicago, 2007-09
  • Law Clerk, Hon. Suzanne B. Conlon, Senior District Judge, Northern District of Illinois, 2006-07
  • Associate Attorney, Stetler, Duffy & Rotert, Chicago, 2002-06

Awards, Honors & Certificates

  • Recipient, Jesse Fine Fellowship, The Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions, 2016-17
  • Recipient, MBAA International McGraw-Hill Education Distinguished Paper Award, 2016
  • Recipient, Innovative Teaching Award, Kelley School of Business, 2015

Selected Publications

  • Haugh, Todd, and Kevin Bernardo (2016), "Sentencing," The Improvement of the Administration of Justice, Eighth Edition, American Bar Association.
  • Haugh, Todd (2015), "Overcriminalization’s New Harm Paradigm," 68 Vanderbilt Law Review 1191.
  • Haugh, Todd (2015), "SOX on Fish: A New Harm of Overcriminalization," 109 Northwestern University Law Review 835.
  • Haugh, Todd (2015), "The Most Senior Wall Street Official: Evaluating the State of Financial Crisis Prosecutions," 9 Virginia Law & Business Review 153.
  • Haugh, Todd (2014), "Sentencing the Why of White Collar Crime," 82 Fordham Law Review 3143.
  • Haugh, Todd (2014), "The Reform Commission," 26 Federal Sentencing Report 258.
  • Haugh, Todd (2013), "Chicago’s ''Great Boodle Trial,''" Then & Now: Stories of Law and Progress, Lori Andrews and Sarah Hardings, eds., IIT Chicago-Kent.
  • Haugh, Todd (2012), "Can the CEO Learn From the Condemned? The Application of Capital Mitigation Strategies to White Collar Cases," 62 American Law Review 1.
  • Haugh, Todd, and John Hagan (2011), "Ethnic Cleansing as Euphemism, Metaphor, Criminology and Law," Forging a Convention for Crimes against Humanity, Leila Nadya Sadat ed., Cambridge University Press.
  • Haugh, Todd, John Hagan, and Richard Brooks (2010), "From the Trenches and Towers: Reasonable Grounds Evidence Involving Sexual Violence in Darfur," 35 Law & Social Inquiry 881.

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