Elected Member

Professor Saira Mohamed

Berkeley, CA
University of California, Berkeley School of Law
Education
Yale University, BA, History and International Studies
Columbia School of International & Public Affairs, Master of International Affairs
Columbia Law School, JD

Saira Mohamed is a professor of law at UC Berkeley School of Law. Her primary interests are in the areas of criminal law and human rights, with her research focused on responses to mass atrocity. Examining the roles of criminal law and armed force in preventing and stopping widespread violence, her work considers the meaning of responsibility in mass atrocity crimes and seeks to unsettle conventional conceptions of choice and participation in this context. Her most recent articles have appeared in the California Law Review, Columbia Law Review, Yale Law Journal. Her article “Deviance, Aspiration, and the Stories We Tell: Reconciling Mass Atrocity and the Criminal Law,” 124 Yale L.J. 1628 (2015), won the Junior Scholars Paper Award from the Association of American Law Schools Section on Criminal Justice.

Mohamed previously served as Senior Advisor in the Office of the U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan, where she counseled government officials on legal and policy issues regarding the work of the International Criminal Court in Darfur and the resolution of the civil war in Sudan. She also was an Attorney-Adviser for human rights and refugees in the State Department’s Office of the Legal Adviser, where her portfolio included asylum cases and human rights litigation in U.S. courts. Mohamed represented the United States in negotiations of the Third Committee of the U.N. General Assembly and received the State Department’s Superior Honor Award for her participation in drafting a U.N. resolution condemning the use of rape as an instrument to achieve political objectives. Immediately prior to joining Berkeley Law, she was the James Milligan Fellow at Columbia Law School.

Mohamed is a graduate of Columbia Law School, where she was Executive Articles Editor of the Columbia Law Review and recipient of the David Berger Memorial Prize for international law. She also received a Master of International Affairs from Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs. She clerked for Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She is a member of the Executive Council of the American Society of International Law and a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Professor Saira Mohamed Image
Areas of Expertise
Criminal Law
Human Rights (Constitutional Law)
International Law