Andrea L. Dennis serves as APRIES Legal and Prosecution Coordinator and is a member
                                          of CenHTRO faculty. She joined the University of Georgia School of Law faculty in
                                          2010 and was appointed to the John Byrd Martin Chair of Law in 2019. She currently
                                          serves as the school’s associate dean for faculty development. In this capacity, she
                                          works closely with the school’s professors to promote world-class scholarship, support
                                          the pursuit of extramural funding, oversee promotion and tenure matters, and work
                                          with the other associate and assistant deans on strategic initiatives.
                                          
                                          She came to UGA from the University of Kentucky College of Law, where she taught courses
                                          in criminal law and procedure, children and the law, and family law. Dennis received
                                          the University of Kentucky Alumni Association Great Teacher Award in 2010. Dennis
                                          has also taught legal analysis and writing and research at the University of Maryland
                                          School of Law.
                                          
                                          Previously, Dennis served as an assistant federal public defender in the District
                                          of Maryland. She also worked for the Office of the Corporation Counsel prosecuting
                                          child abuse and neglect cases on behalf of the District of Columbia. At Covington
                                          & Burling in Washington, D.C., Dennis practiced corporate and patent litigation and
                                          antitrust law as an associate. She has also served as a judicial clerk for Judge Raymond
                                          A. Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. In addition
                                          to her legal experience, Dennis was a senior associate in the National Office of Job
                                          Corps for the U.S. Department of Labor, where she engaged in strategic analysis and
                                          planning for national vocational training programs for at-risk youth.
                                          
                                          Her scholarship explores criminal defense lawyering, race and criminal justice, criminal
                                          informants and cooperators, youth advocacy, legal socialization of youth and the cradle-to-prison
                                          pipeline. Dennis’ book “Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics and Guilt in America” has received
                                          national attention, and courts nationwide have cited her research on rap lyrics as
                                          criminal evidence. She has also published works in the American Criminal Law Review,
                                          the Catholic University Law Review, the Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts, the
                                          Howard Law Journal, the Marquette Law Review, the Nebraska Law Review, the Nevada
                                          Law Journal and the Journal of Legal Education. Additionally, she has been quoted
                                          in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and other media outlets about rap lyrics
                                          being used as criminal evidence in trials across the country.