Seidenfeld earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in physics from Reed College, a Master of Arts in applied physics from Brandeis University, and a Juris Doctor from Stanford Law School.
[1] Seidenfeld began his career as research physicist and engineer at Intel, After graduating from law school, he served as a law clerk for Judge Patricia Wald and as assistant counsel for the New York Public Service Commission.
He is also known for proposing civic republicanism as a justification for the administrative state.
[2] In addition to his publications on how administrative law doctrine relates to institutional behavior and agency accountability, he is the author of Microeconomic Predicates to Law and Economics (Anderson Pub.
[2][3] This biographical article about an American legal academic is a stub.