Ndjuoh joined the Seton Hall Law faculty in 2020 and teaches torts, civil rights law, critical race theory, and remedies. He was selected as Faculty Teacher of the Year in 2022. His scholarship explores ways to shore up protections for marginalized groups in the carceral state and has appeared or is forthcoming in journals including the California Law Review, North Carolina Law Review, UC Irvine Law Review, and Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.
Ndjuoh was formerly law clerk to federal Judge Jack B. Weinstein, Howard Law School’s inaugural Thurgood Marshall Law Teaching Fellow, and a legal fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center. At the SPLC, he helped incarcerated people press their claims to improve their conditions of confinement and worked on issues involving educational equity in K-12 schools.
Ndjuoh serves on the Executive Board of the AALS Sections on Civil Rights Law and Children and the Law. Before law school, Ndjuoh was a special education and math teacher in the South Bronx, New York. Raised in Jersey City, New Jersey, he holds a B.A. in Africana Studies with highest honors and a B.A. in economics from Rutgers University-New Brunswick. He is a graduate of the University of Chicago Law School, where he was recognized with the Dean’s award for Pro Bono services.