Professor Andrew Hammond is Professor of Law & Harry T. Ice Faculty Fellow at Indiana University Maurer School of Law where he writes and teaches in the areas of administrative law, civil procedure, and poverty law. His scholarship focuses on how agencies, courts, and legislatures respond to poor people’s claims. His articles have appeared in or are forthcoming in the California Law Review, the Georgetown Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review, the Northwestern University Law Review, and the Yale Law Journal, as well as other publications. For his research, he won the American Constitution Society’s Richard D. Cudahy Writing Prize for Regulatory and Administrative Law and served as the Clifford Scholar-in-Residence at DePaul College of Law. Before joining the Maurer faculty, Professor Hammond taught at the University of Florida, where he won a university-wide prize for excellence in research, and the University of Chicago. Before entering academia, he practiced as a Skadden Fellow at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law in Chicago. He also clerked for then-Chief Judge Diane P. Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and Judge Robert M. Dow of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.  Hammond holds degrees from the University of Chicago, the University of Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar, and Yale Law School.