Michèle Alexandre is a graduate of Colgate University and Harvard Law School, is an Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphries School of Law. Her teaching interests include property, trusts and estates, and feminist legal theory. Professor Alexandre's prior professional experience includes serving as a civil rights attorney with Chestnut Sanders Sanders Pettaway Campbell & Albright L.L.C. in Selma, AL; as an Associate in the Corporate Real Estate Department of the Debevoise & Plimpton law firm; and as a Law Clerk for the Hon. John P. Fullam, U.S. Eastern District Court of Pennsylvania. Professor Alexandre has received Fulbright and Watson Fellowships to pursue her research projects. Her publications include “Dance Halls, Masquerades, Body Protest and The Law: The Female Body as a Redemptive Tool against Trinidad's Gender-Biased Laws,” 13 Duke J. of Gender L.& Pol'y 177 (2006) ; “Maximizing on Interest Convergence and Redefining Kelo v. City of London's Public Purpose: Can Katrina Serve as a Catalyst for Change?” (UCLA Chicano/a-Latino/a Law Review Vol. 26, 2006);  “Big Love: Is Feminist Polygamy an Oxymoron or a True Possibility?”(18 HSTWLJ 3);Human Rights Still Matter? Oxford Round Table’s Forum on Public Policy” (Volume 2, Number 2, 2006); “Love Don't Live Here Anymore: Economic Incentives for More Equitable Models of Urban Redevelopment” (Forthcoming in the Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review in December 2007)