
Madhav Khosla
- Associate Professor of Law
Ph.D., Harvard University, 2017
LL.M., Yale Law School, 2010
B.A, LL.B., National Law School, Bangalore, 2008
Comparative Constitutional Law
Constitutional Theory
Indian Constitutional Law
Ph.D., Harvard University, 2017
LL.M., Yale Law School, 2010
B.A, LL.B., National Law School, Bangalore, 2008
Comparative Constitutional Law
Constitutional Theory
Indian Constitutional Law
Madhav Khosla is an Associate Professor of Law at Columbia University. He is interested in the nature and form of constitutions, especially from a comparative and theoretical perspective. Much of his research and writing in comparative constitutional law has focused on South Asia and India. Khosla studied political theory at Harvard University, where his dissertation was awarded the Edward M. Chase Prize for “the best dissertation on a subject relating to the promotion of world peace”, and law at Yale Law School and the National Law School of India University, Bangalore. Before joining Columbia Law School, he was a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows.
Khosla's books include India’s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy (Harvard University Press 2020), which was an Economist Best Book of 2020 and co-winner of the Order of the Coif Book Award 2021, The Oxford Handbook of the Indian Constitution (ed. with Sujit Choudhry and Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Oxford University Press 2016), and Unstable Constitutionalism: Law and Politics in South Asia (ed. with Mark Tushnet, Cambridge University Press 2015). In addition, Khosla’s writings have been published in journals such as the American Journal of Comparative Law, Harvard Law Review, and the International Journal of Constitutional Law, as well as popular forums like the Atlantic, Foreign Affairs, New York Times, and Time. Khosla’s work has been cited by courts in India and Pakistan.
Comparative Constitutional Law (with Rosalind Dixon, Vicki Jackson, and Mark Tushnet, under contract, Oxford University Press)
“The Possibility of Modern India” (forthcoming, Global Intellectual History)
“Is a Science of Comparative Constitutionalism Possible?,” 135 Harvard Law Review 2110 (2022)
“Constituting India,” 4 Jus Cogens 79 (2022)
“The Three Faces of the Indian State,” 32 Journal of Democracy 111 (2021) (with Milan Vaishnav)
Regulation in India: Design, Capacity, Performance (ed. with Devesh Kapur, Hart Publishing 2019)
Letters for a Nation: From Jawaharlal Nehru to His Chief Ministers (ed., Penguin Allen Lane 2014)
The Indian Constitution (Oxford University Press, 2012) (Hindi translation, 2018)
“Inclusive Constitutional Comparison”, 59 American Journal of Comparative Law 909 (2011)
A leading thinker on comparative constitutionalism who has a Ph.D. in political theory, Khosla has written extensively about the seminal role of the Indian Constitution in the evolution of democracy around the globe.