Andrew Miller
M.Sc., Oxford University, 2011
M.Sc., London School of Economics, 2010
A.B., Harvard College, 2009
Civil Procedure
Privacy Law
Consumer Protection
Biography
Professor Andrew Miller joined Brooklyn Law School as Assistant Professor of Law in the summer of 2025, bringing expertise in privacy law and technology, including artificial intelligence (AI). He teaches Civil Procedure and courses relating to the intersection of law and technology.
Professor Miller previously taught at Yale Law School, where he was a Clinical Lecturer in Law, Clinical Fellow in Private Law, and Associate Research Scholar in Law. He also served as the Director of Yale Law’s Private Law Clinic, which he co-founded in 2022 and where students worked on cutting-edge and theoretically challenging matters in consumer protection, contract, tort, and property law. His research focuses on the theoretical and doctrinal implications of algorithmic decision-making in consumer markets. He is also a frequent presenter at scholarly symposia on AI and the law, speaking on topics such as bias in AI, perspectives on the No AI Fraud Act, comparative perspectives on facial recognition regulation, and the future risks, opportunities, and challenges of AI.
After graduating from Yale Law School in 2018, Professor Miller clerked for Judge Diane Wood on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and spent two years at Loevy & Loevy, a Chicago civil rights firm. At Loevy & Loevy, Miller focused on seeking redress for people harmed by the misuse of facial recognition, digital surveillance, and other artificial intelligence technologies.