Edlay became a professor of
administrative law. Working with
Gary Orfield, Edley founded the
Harvard Civil Rights Project. Edley was a leading figure in Democratic policy circles for four decades, serving as a senior member of five presidential campaigns, as an economic policy and budget official under Presidents
Jimmy Carter and
Bill Clinton, and as a chair of the
Obama-Biden transition team. In 2011, he was appointed by
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan as co-chair of the congressionally chartered National Commission on Equity and Excellence in Education. Edley served as an advisor to President Clinton's
One America Initiative, was a member of the
United States Commission on Civil Rights, and chaired President Clinton's 1998 Affirmative Action Review. In the
2008 presidential election, he supported and advised candidate
Barack Obama, one of his former students at Harvard Law School. Having served since 2004, Edley resigned as Dean of the
UC Berkeley School of Law at the end of 2013 to undergo treatment for
prostate cancer. In 2016, he returned to teaching law at Berkeley and served as interim dean of the
UC Berkeley School of Education between 2021 and 2023. According to legal journalist
Emily Bazelon, Edley "has written thoughtfully and moderately about
affirmative action." == Personal life and death ==