
Noah Feldman is an American author and professor of law at Harvard Law School. Feldman grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, where he attended the Maimonides School. He graduated from Harvard College in 1992, ranked first in the College, and earned a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University, where he earned a D.Phil in Islamic Thought in 1994. Upon his return from Oxford, he received his J.D., in 1997, from Yale Law School, where he was the book review editor of the Yale Law Journal. He later served as a law clerk for Associate Justice David Souter on the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2001, he joined the faculty of New York University Law School (NYU), leaving for Harvard in 2007. In 2008, he was appointed the Bemis Professor of International Law. He worked as an advisor in the early days of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq following the 2003 invasion of the country. He regularly contributes features and opinion pieces to The New York Times Magazine and is a senior adjunct fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Books

Geopolitikens återkomst
striden om framtidens historia
2017

Takeover
How a Conservative Student Club Captured the Supreme Court
2023

What We Owe Iraq
War and the Ethics of Nation Building
2004

Scorpions
The Battles and Triumphs of FDR's Great Supreme Court Justices
2010

After Jihad
America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracy
2003

Cool War
The Future of Global Competition
2013

The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State
2008

The Three Lives of James Madison
Genius, Partisan, President
2017

To Be a Jew Today
A New Guide to God, Israel, and the Jewish People
2024

The Broken Constitution
Lincoln, Slavery, and the Refounding of America
2021

Divided by God
America's Church-State Problem--and What We Should Do About It
2005

The Arab Winter
A Tragedy
2020