Thomas Hilbink

Thomas Hilbink is a program officer for the Transparency and Integrity Fund at the Open Society Institute, where he works on issues of government transparency & integrity, judicial independence, federal judicial nominations, and transparency grantmaking in the Gulf Coast.

Prior to joining OSI, Hilbink spent five years as a professor in the department of legal studies at the University of Massachusetts. He taught courses on law and social change; race and inequality; religion, law and politics; and, the sociology of law. He received his JD from NYU School of Law where he was a Root-Tilden Public Interest Scholar. He received his PhD from the NYU Institute for Law & Society. His research has been published in academic journals and books, including Law & Social Inquiry, and Cause Lawyers & Social Movements. His most recent research is on popular constitutionalism in recent U.S. history.

Hilbink serves on the editorial boards of the academic journals Law & Society Review, and Studies in Law, Politics & Society. Before teaching, he clerked for Judge Stephanie Seymour of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit. He has also worked for the ACLU, the Supreme Court Historical Society, Wisconsin Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, the U.N. International Law Commission, and SOS Racisme (a Spanish human rights organization).

More about Thomas

Thomas's Posts

When Corporations Become People

February 3, 2010

Making Transparency a Reality

December 16, 2009

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The Open Society Foundations work to improve the lives of the world's most vulnerable people and to promote human rights, justice, and accountability. This blog aims to bring that work a little closer by giving our experts and grantees a platform to reflect on their issues, sharpen their thinking, and engage in a conversation on how to advance open society values around the globe.

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