Greg Day

Assistant Professor of Legal Studies at Terry College of Business

Schools

  • Terry College of Business

Links

Biography

Terry College of Business

Greg Day is an Assistant Professor of Legal Studies at the Terry College of Business and holds a courtesy appointment in the School of Law. He is also a Visiting Fellow at Yale Law School's Information Society Project. His research focuses on the intersections of competition, technology, innovation, and privacy. Representative works rely on analyses of antitrust or intellectual property laws, or both. One can find his scholarship in journals such as the Michigan Law Review, Minnesota Law Review, Iowa Law Review, and Fordham Law Review. He is also internationally recognized for his knowledge of the art market and the laws governing it.

Research Interests and Areas of Expertise:

  • Antitrust Law
  • Competition
  • Intellectual Property
  • Art Law

Education:

  • J.D., University of North Carolina School of Law, 2013
  • Ph.D., M.A., Political Science, University of Mississippi, 2010
  • B.A., Social and Global Studies, Antioch College, 2003

Prior professional positions:

  • Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP, Associate (M&A, Alternative Entities, Commercial Counseling), 2013-2014

Awards, Honors and Recognitions:

  • 2022 ALSB Distinguished Early Career Faculty Award
  • 2020 Holmes-Cardozo Distinguished Paper Award
  • 2019 Jerry S. Cohen Memorial Fund Writing Award for antitrust scholarship, category award
  • 2019 Holmes-Cardozo Award
  • 2019 MBAA Distinguished Paper Award, Infracompetitive Privacy
  • 2017 SEALSB Junior Scholar Award
  • 2015, 2016, 2017 Southeastern Academy of Legal Studies in Business Award for Best Proceedings Paper
  • 2013 University of North Carolina School of Law Outstanding Writing Award, Explaining The Art Market’s Frauds, Forgeries, and Thefts (And Why the Art Market Does Not Seem to Care)

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