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Julie Andersen Hill

Associate Professor of Law, University of Alabama

Julie Andersen Hill is a tenured associate professor at the University of Alabama School of Law. She writes and teaches in the areas of banking and commercial law. Her scholarship often focuses on the unwritten rules of banking regulation. Before entering the legal academy, Professor Hill practiced law in the Washington, D.C. office of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meager & Flom LLP. She received her bachelor's degree in economics from Southern Utah University and her law degree from Brigham Young University.

Experience

  • 2013–present
    Associate Professor, University of Alabama School of Law
  • 2007–2013
    Assistant Professor, University of Houston Law Center

Education

  • 2001 
    Brigham Young University, J.D.
  • 1998 
    Southern Utah University, B.I.S.

Publications

  • 2015
    When Bank Examiners Get it Wrong: Financial Institution Appeals of Material Supervisory Determinations, Washington University Law Review
  • 2015
    Banks, Marijuana, and Federalism, Case Western Law Review
  • 2012
    Shifting Losses: The Impact of Fannie's and Freddie's Conservatorships on Commercial Banks, Hamline Law Review
  • 2012
    Bank Capital Regulation by Enforcement: An Empirical Study, Indiana Law Journal
  • 2012
    Transaction Account Fees: Do the Poor Really Pay More than the Rich?, University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law
  • 2010
    Bailouts and Credit Cycles: Fannie, Freddie, and the Farm Credit System, Wisconsin Law Review
  • 2009
    Divide and Conquer: SEC Discipline of Litigation Attorneys, Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics