Biography
Daniel M. Isaacs is an Associate Professor of Instruction in Legal Studies at the Fox School of Business. He teaches Business Ethics, Corporate Governance, Contracts, Sustainability in Business, and Legal and Regulatory Environment of Business courses at the undergraduate and graduate levels. His research interests focus on normative legal studies, corporate governance, and business ethics.
In private practice, Daniel represented financial institutions in contract disputes arising out of loan origination agreements and underlying residential real estate transactions. Daniel’s professional experience also includes a large New York bank, where he served as Counsel, and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, where he served as a law clerk. Daniel holds a Bachelor’s degree in Government from Franklin & Marshall College, Master’s degrees in Education and Environmental Studies from the University of Pennsylvania, and a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School.
Courses Taught
Number | Name | Level |
---|---|---|
BA 1903 | Honors Legal and Ethical Reasoning in Business | Undergraduate |
LGLS 4596 | Legal Reasoning in Action | Undergraduate |
RMI 3504 | Managing Property Liability Risk II | Undergraduate |
LGLS 5701 | Legal and Ethical Foundations of Business | Graduate |
Selected Publications
Featured
Isaacs, D.M. (2018). When Government Contractors May or May Not Spend Money On Political Speech. Journal of Business Ethics, 161(1), 91-102. doi: 10.1007/s10551-018-3947-6.
Recent
Grunwald, H. & Isaacs, D. (2022). Nonprofit Organizations Should Prioritize Governance in Board Selection Decisions–Those That Prioritize Money May Pay Too Much. Fordham Journal of Corporate and Financial Law, 27(2), 443-443. Fordham J. Corp. & Fin. L.. Retrieved from https://news.law.fordham.edu/jcfl/2022/10/05/non-profit-organizations-should-prioritize-governance-in-board-selection-decisions-those-that-prioritize-money-may-pay-too-much/.