Early career Choudhry joined the faculty of the University of Toronto in 1999 and received tenure in 2004. As of 2006 he was professor and the Scholl chair in law at the University of Toronto. From 2008 to 2011 he served as associate dean. Choudhry left the University of Toronto in 2011 when he was hired by
New York University. At NYU, Choudhry was the Cecelia Goetz Professor of Law and the faculty director of the Center for Constitutional Transitions in 2012.
UC Berkeley and sexual harassment lawsuit In June 2014, Choudhry became Dean of Law at the
University of California, Berkeley School of Law, Choudhry denied sexually harassing Sorrell, but acknowledged giving hugs and kisses without sexual intent. The university's office for the prevention of harassment and discrimination concluded that Choudhry's behavior had violated campus sexual harassment policies, and also said sexual intent was not required to demonstrate a violation. and against the
Regents of the University of California for their failure to respond effectively to her complaint against Choudhry. Choudhry thereafter went on an indefinite leave of absence from his position as dean, but continued to remain a member of faculty. His return to the Berkeley campus in September 2016 as a member of faculty was met by a student protest. The lawsuit resulted in settlement agreements, under which Choudhry agreed to pay a total of $50,000 to Sorrell's attorneys, a contribution that his lawyer William Taylor called "relatively minimal." Choudhry also agreed to pay $50,000 to charities of Sorrell's choice. The university terminated the disciplinary process, and Choudhry was permitted to remain a member of the faculty "in good standing", until he "voluntarily" resigned the following year. Choudhry sued Berkeley, alleging
racial discrimination, but dropped the complaint following the settlement. In 2021, Choudhry represented Canadian author
Joel Bakan in a lawsuit against
Twitter, claiming Twitter's refusal to publish a paid tweet promoting Bakan's documentary
The Corporation violated Bakan's free speech rights; Choudhry also sued the Canadian government for failing to issue regulations that protect constitutional freedom of speech on technology platforms. In 2023, the
Ontario Superior Court ruled against Twitter's attempt to have the case thrown out. In 2021, Choudhry represented seven families in a citizenship case challenging the constitutionality of a 2009 change in the
Canadian Citizenship Act. He argued that the law unconstitutionally cut off
birthright citizenship to children born abroad to Canadian parents who were also born outside Canada, effectively making the children
stateless persons. Choudhry also participated in the
Public Order Emergency Commission hearing of Trudeau's actions in October 2022. He cross-examined the
Prime Minister about his decision to invoke the Emergencies Act. Choudhry questioned Trudeau on whether he properly disclosed information about deliberations leading to the decision. == Scholarship ==