B.A., 2000, summa cum laude (Phi Beta Kappa) Middlebury College J.D., 2003, magna cum laude (Order of the Coif) Northwestern University LL.M., 2006, Columbia University J.S.D., 2009, Columbia University
Professor Colangelo’s scholarly and teaching interests are in the fields of Conflict of Laws, Civil Procedure, U.S. Foreign Relations Law, and Private and Public International Law.
His scholarship has been selected multiple times for presentation at the prestigious Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, and his articles have been cited at the U.S. Court of Appeals and U.S. District Court levels, as well as in a recent U.S. Military Commission ruling, regarding among other things the extraterritorial application of U.S. law implementing the U.N. Torture Convention to Chuckie Taylor (son of former Liberian dictator Charles Taylor), the proper exercise of universal jurisdiction in relation to Alien Tort Statute claims by South African plaintiffs against corporations alleged to have been complicit in apartheid-era abuses by the South African government, Salim Hamdan’s (Osama bin Laden’s driver) challenges to U.S. Military Commission jurisdiction, claims against international financial institutions for financing terrorism abroad, and piracy off the coast of Somalia.
Prior to coming to SMU, Professor Colangelo held an Associate-in-Law research and teaching fellowship at Columbia Law School. Before Columbia, he worked as a litigation associate at the law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen and Hamilton LLP in the New York and Rome offices.
Professor Colangelo clerked for the Honorable Ralph K. Winter, United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Professor Colangelo received his B.A., summa cum laude, from Middlebury College and his J.D., magna cum laude, from Northwestern University, where he was Notes Editor of the Northwestern University Law Review. He holds an LL.M. and J.S.D. from Columbia Law School. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif.
Spatial Legality, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW (forthcoming 2012) A Unified Approach to Extraterritoriality, 97 VIRGINIA LAW REVIEW (2011) *selected for presentation at 2011 Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum The Foreign Commerce Clause, 96 VIRGINIA LAW REVIEW (2010) *selected for presentation at 2010 Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum
Double Jeopardy and Multiple Sovereigns: A Jurisdictional Theory, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW (2009) *selected for presentation at 2008 Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum
"De Facto Sovereignty": Boumediene and Beyond, GEORGE WASHINGTON LAW REVIEW (2009)
Universal Jurisdiction as an International "False Conflict" of Laws, MICHIGAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2009) (invited symposium contribution)
The Supreme Court's Role After 9/11: Continuing the Legal Conversation in the War on Terror, SMU LAW REVIEW (2009) (invited contribution)
Constitutional Limits on Extraterritorial Jurisdiction: Terrorism and the Intersection of National and International Law, HARVARD INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL (2007)
The Legal Limits of Universal Jurisdiction, VIRGINIA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2006)
The New Universal Jurisdiction: In Absentia Signaling Over Clearly Defined Crimes, GEORGETOWN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW (2005)
The Unitary Executive in the Modern Era, 1945-2004, IOWA LAW REVIEW (2005) (with Christopher S. Yoo & Steven G. Calabresi)
Comment, Manipulating International Criminal Procedure: The Decision of the ICTY Office of the Independent Prosecutor not to Investigate NATO Bombing in the Former Yugoslavia, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW (2003)
Book Chapter: Universal Jurisdiction as an International “False Conflict” of Laws, in INTERNATIONAL LAW: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES AND FUTURE PROBLEMS (S. Silverburg. ed., Westview Press 2011).
“U.S. Jurisdiction on the Seas,” Presentation to Vietnam NOIP Officials, SMU Law School (February 2011) "Extraterritorial Jurisdiction in International Law" Chinese Rule of Law Forum, SMU Law School (November 2007) "Overview of U.S. Civil Procedure" for Vietnam NOIP Officials, SMU Law School (October 2007)