Announcing Âé¶¹ÉçÇø Law’s New Faculty

The University of Âé¶¹ÉçÇø of Law is excited to welcome new faculty members to our community in the 2025–2026 academic year.
Adam EisenbergÂ
Associate Teaching Professor
Director, Externship Program

Adam Eisenberg is an Associate Teaching Professor and the Director of the Externship Program. He also serves part time as an Associate Judge for the Tulalip Tribal Court and as the Washington state Judicial Outreach Liaison (JOL) for impaired driving. Adam has been an elected Seattle Municipal Court judge, criminal prosecutor, civil trial attorney, filmmaker and Los Angeles-based freelance entertainment journalist. His writing on movies and TV have appeared in The Los Angeles Times, The Denver Post, American Film, Twilight Zone Magazine, CinefexÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýVFX Voice and he has interviewed such Hollywood notables as Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Sigourney Weaver, Harrison Ford, Tom Cruise and James Cameron. In addition to teaching a variety of courses including Museum Law, Adam currently practices the martial art of aikido and is the author of the nonfiction book, A Different Shade of Blue: How Women Changed the Face of Police Work.
Rose Carmen Goldberg
Associate Teaching Professor
Director, Veterans Clinic

Rose Carmen Goldberg is an Associate Teaching Professor and the Director of the Veterans Clinic, beginning Winter 2026. She has more than a decade of experience in veterans law and policy. She is a George W. Crawford Visiting Clinical Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School, where she teaches the Veterans Legal Services Clinic, and a Visiting Senior Fellow at the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy at Yale Law School. Previously, she advanced veterans’ access to justice as Associate Director of Policy and Programs at Stanford Law School’s Deborah L. Rhode Center. She also taught UC Berkeley School of Law’s Veterans Law Practicum and served as faculty co-founder of the Legal Obstacles Veterans Encounter (L.O.V.E.) pro bono project. She began her legal practice as a Skadden Fellow at Swords to Plowshares, where she founded a Medical-Legal Partnership for veterans in Oakland, California. Rose has served in all branches of the federal government, including working at the White House on Native American Affairs and clerking for Judge Theodore McKee of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. She also served as a Deputy Attorney General in the California Attorney General’s Office. Rose received her J.D. from Yale Law School, her M.P.A. from Columbia University, and her B.A. from St. John's College in New Mexico.
Jeannine Lemker
Assistant Teaching Professor
Associate Dean for the Center for Career Development
Co-Director, Global Business Law Institute
Director, Entrepreneurial Law Clinic

Jeannine Lemker is an Assistant Teaching Professor and the Associate Dean for the Center for Career Development. She is also a Co-Director of the Global Business Law Institute and the Director of the Entrepreneurial Law Clinic. Prior to joining the faculty, Jeannine was a managing director at Major, Lindsey & Africa, consulting for a broad range of global, national and regional companies. She spent 13 years as a senior member of Meta and Microsoft’s compliance and ethics programs, leading diverse teams who designed and landed culture and controls programs and strategies. These include award-winning training in corporate compliance, programs in culture and data analytics, strategies for enterprise risk management, approaches to emerging regulatory compliance risk management, and policies addressing ESG/human rights and corporate compliance.
Carrie Griffin Basas
Acting Associate Professor

Carrie Griffin Basas is an Acting Associate Professor and will teach the Children and Youth Legislative Advocacy Clinic. Beyond academia, she has been a civil rights attorney, nonprofit leader and public-sector executive. Most recently, she served as the Executive Director of Disability Rights Washington and before that of Disability Law Colorado and was previously the Director of the Washington State Governor’s Office of the Education Ombuds. A graduate of Swarthmore College (B.A. with Honors), Harvard Law School (J.D.) and the University of Washington (M.Ed.), Carrie has published widely on disability law, employment, health equity and governance. She is the co-editor of Lawyers, Lead On: Lawyers with Disabilities Share Their Insights (ABA Press, 2011) and the author of numerous law review articles.