Sung Hui Kim

Professor of Law Faculty Director of the Program on In-House Counsel, Lowell Milken Institute for Business Law and Policy UCLA School of Law

Sung Hui Kim True
Sung Hui Kim

Sung Hui Kim

Professor of Law Faculty Director of the Program on In-House Counsel, Lowell Milken Institute for Business Law and Policy
UCLA School of Law

Sung Hui Kim is the Faculty Director of the Program on In-House Counsel, Lowell Milken Institute for Business Law and Policy, UCLA School of Law. She has taught Business AssociationsContractsProfessional ResponsibilitySecurities Regulation, and seminars on the psychology of modern legal practice and legal ethics. She has written on a wide range of topics, including the role of in-house counsel in corporate compliance, cognitive science and the legal profession, fiduciary law, public and private corruption, insider trading law, legal ethics, social psychology and ethics, the role of gatekeepers in securities regulation, sovereign debt, and supermajority provisions in the U.S. Constitution. Her scholarship has appeared in both peer-reviewed and student-edited publications, such as Cambridge University PressCapital Markets Law JournalCornell Law ReviewFordham Law ReviewGeorgetown Journal of Legal EthicsOxford University PressUCLA Law ReviewProceedings of the American Philosophical SocietySecurities Law Review, and University of Chicago Press. She holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School, cum laude, and a B.A., summa cum laude, and M.A. in History from Emory University. Prior to law school, she was a Henry Luce Foundation Scholar in South Korea. Following law school, she was a Robert Bosch Foundation Fellow in Germany. After six years in private practice as a transactional lawyer, she joined Red Bull North America, Inc. as its first general counsel and served for four years prior to making the transition to law teaching. In 2005, she joined Southwestern Law School and in 2010 joined the faculty of UCLA School of Law. From 2013-14, she was an Emile Noël Fellow of the Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice, NYU School of Law.