
Ngozi Okidegbe
Moorman-Simon Interdisciplinary Career Development Associate Professor of Law
Assistant Professor of Computing & Data Sciences
BA, Concordia University
BCL, McGill University
LLB, McGill University
LLM, Columbia Law School
Biography
Ngozi Okidegbe is a Moorman-Simon Interdisciplinary Career Development Associate Professor of Law and Assistant Professor of Computing & Data Sciences. Her focus is in the areas of law and technology, evidence, criminal procedure, and racial justice. Her work examines how the use of predictive technologies in the criminal justice system impacts racially marginalized communities.
Professor Okidegbe is a Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and an Affiliated Fellow at Information Society Project at Yale Law School. She is also on the program committee of the Privacy Law Scholars’ Conference and serves on the advisory board for the Electronic Privacy Information Center.
Prior to joining Boston University, Professor Okidegbe was an Assistant Professor of Law at Cardozo School of Law, where she first joined as the inaugural Harold A. Stevens Visiting Assistant Professor in 2019. Before joining Cardozo, Professor Okidegbe served as a law clerk for Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga of the Constitutional Court of South Africa and for the Justices of the Court of Appeal for Ontario. She also practiced at CaleyWray, a labor law boutique in Toronto.
Professor Okidegbe holds a Bachelor of Civil Law and a Bachelor of Laws from McGill University’s Faculty of Law. She subsequently earned her Master of Laws from Columbia Law School, where she graduated as a James Kent Scholar.
Professor Okidegbe’s articles have been published or are forthcoming in theCritical Analysis of Law, Connecticut Law Review, UCLA Law Review, Cornell Law Review, and Michigan Law Review.
- Profile Types
- Faculty, Full-Time Faculty, and Professors & Clinical Instructors
- Areas of Interest
- Criminal Law & Procedure, Evidence Law, Law & Technology, and Racial Justice
Publications
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Kate Weisburd, Emmett Sanders & James Kilgore, A Conversation on the Carceral Home, 103 Boston University Law Review (2024)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Chapter 16: Revisioning Algorithms as a Black Feminist Project, in Feminist Cyberlaw (Meg Leta Jones and Amanda Levendowski,2024)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, To Democratize Algorithms 69 UCLA Law Review (2023)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Beyond More Accurate Algorithms: Takeaways from McCleskey Revisited 121 Michigan Law Review (2023)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Discredited Data 107 Cornell Law Review (2022)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, The Democratizing Potential Of Algorithms? 53 Connecticut Law Review (2022)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Of Afrofuturism, Of Algorithms 9 Critical Analysis of Law (2022)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, When They Hear Us: Race, Algorithms and The Practice of Criminal Law 29 Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy (2020)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, A ‘Bad Rap’: R. v. Skeete and the Admissibility of Rap Lyric Evidence 66 Criminal Law Quarterly (2018)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Redressing HIV/AIDS Discrimination in Nigeria: The Implications of the Anti-Discrimination Act of 2015 11 Africa Policy Journal (2015)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, Rethinking Online Privacy in Canada: Commentary on Voltage Pictures v. John and Jane Doe 12 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology (2014)
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Ngozi Okidegbe, I Love a Man in Uniform: The Debate Surrounding Uniforming the New York Police Force in the 19th century, in Staat Macht Uniform: Uniformen als Zeichen staatlicher Macht im Wandel? (Sandro Wiggerich and Steven Kensy,2011)
Scholarly Commons
In the Media
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The Mail and Guardian April 10, 2025
Justice in the Digital Age: Can AI Transform Labour Dispute Resolution?
Ngozi Okidegbe's work is mentioned.
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Boston University March 6, 2025
What Is Convergent Research and Why Is Bu Embracing It?
Ngozi Okidegbe is featured.
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Futurity March 6, 2023
Criminal Justice Algorithms Still Discriminate
Ngozi Okidegbe is quoted.
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The Brink February 23, 2023
Algorithms Were Supposed to Reduce Bias in Criminal Justice—Do They?
Ngozi Okidegbe provides commentary.
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Stories from The Record
Activities & Engagements
No upcoming activities or engagements.
GW JOLT Symposium on the Future of Al and Surveillance
Get DetailsColorado Law Feminist Cyberlaw Symposium: Participatory Access and Governance
Get DetailsDiscredited Data: The Epistemic Origins of Algorithmic Discrimination
Get DetailsThe Association of America Law Schools 2024 Annual Meeting
Get DetailsBrooklyn Law School Faculty Workshop
Get DetailsCourses
Evidence: LAW JD 831
Donweber/Gonzales Rose/Lowy: Practical and theoretical aspects of the rules of evidence. The purpose and policies underlying the evidentiary rules are stressed throughout in order to make the rules meaningful, predictable, and functional both for students interested in trial practice and for students who anticipate engaging in a more diversified practice. In addition to covering the substantive rules of evidence, the course demonstrates the significance of evidence as a tactical device at the trial and as a vital skill for the office lawyer. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: Professor Gonzales Rose’s section may be used to satisfy the requirement partially or in full. Pedro: In this course, we will examine evidence rules and principles with a focus on the U.S. Federal Rules of Evidence, relevant constitutional provisions, and cases interpreting both. In addition to covering the rules of evidence, the course explores the significance of evidence as a strategic device in civil and criminal litigation, especially at trial. Some topics covered include: hearsay and its exceptions; relevance and prejudice; examination and impeachment of witnesses; privileges; expert testimony; and scientific, character, and propensity evidence. We will frequently use anonymous polling and discussion with a problems-based approach. We will engage in thoughtful discussions about cases alleging serious criminal offenses and civil injuries that may be disturbing. The course includes mandatory, practice quizzes and a practice midterm (specific student performance on the practices do not count toward the final grade) and assessment for the course will be based upon a final examination
FALL 2025: LAW JD 831 A1 , Sep 2nd to Dec 19th 2025Days | Start | End | Credits | Instructors | Bldg | Room |
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Tue,Thu | 10:40 am | 12:40 pm | 4 | Jasmine Gonzales RoseHaefner |
Days | Start | End | Credits | Instructors | Bldg | Room |
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Mon,Wed | 4:30 pm | 6:30 pm | 4 | LowyHaefner |
Days | Start | End | Credits | Instructors | Bldg | Room |
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Tue,Thu | 8:30 am | 10:30 am | 4 | Ngozi Okidegbe |
Days | Start | End | Credits | Instructors | Bldg | Room |
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Mon,Wed | 10:45 am | 12:45 pm | 4 | Stephen M. DonweberHaefner |
Days | Start | End | Credits | Instructors | Bldg | Room |
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Tue,Thu | 10:40 am | 12:40 pm | 4 | Portia PedroHaefner |