Ori Aronson is an associate professor of law and the deputy director of the Manomadin Center for Jewish and Democratic Law at the Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law, Israel. Working in the fields of constitutional law and theory, courts and adjudication, and law and pluralism, his research concerns primarily the institutional conditions of adjudication and the organization of legal power in multicultural societies. Aronson received his LLB (2004) from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and his LLM (2006) and SJD (2010) from Harvard Law School, and he served as law clerk on the Israel Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. He has published on such topics as the constitutional role of trial courts, jurisdictional politics in religious tribunals, formal and informal judicial hierarchies, judicial behavior on collegial courts, public perceptions of legal institutions, the design of judicial review, and forms of court specialization. In the context of Israeli law, Aronson has studied the features of an incomplete constitutional order, the significance of Israel’s definition as a “Jewish and democratic” state, and the regulation of religion in the public sphere.

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