Michael Avery
American lawyer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Avery is a professor at Suffolk University Law School and a civil rights lawyer.[1] He was the president of the National Lawyers Guild from 2003 to 2006.[2]
Michael Avery | |
|---|---|
| Citizenship | American |
| Occupation | Professor |
| Employer | Suffolk University Law School |
He is currently the President of the Board of the National Police Accountability Project.
Avery edited and was a contributing author to the 2008 book We Dissent: Talking Back to the Rehnquist Court, which received favorable reviews in Trial[3] and Choice.[4]
He is also the coauthor of:
- Avery, Michael, David Rudovsky, Karen Blum, and Jennifer Lauin, Police Misconduct: Law and Litigation. New York: Thomson Reuters, updated annually.
- Brodin, Mark and Avery, Michael, Handbook of Massachusetts Evidence, Wolters Kluwer, updated annually.
- Avery, Michael, and Danielle McLaughlin. The Federalist Society: How Conservatives Took the Law Back from Liberals+ book. Nashville, Tenn: Vanderbilt University Press, 2013
- Avery, Michael, Glannon Guide to Evidence, Wolters Kluwer, 2018.
His first novel, The Cooperating Witness, will be published by Literary Wanderlust in the summer of 2020.