Peter Oh’s scholarly and teaching interests are in the areas of corporate law and economic analysis of law. His work has appeared in numerous academic journals, including the Boston University Law Review, Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, and Texas Law Review, as well as been cited by numerous prominent courts, including the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. He has been described as “the country’s foremost thinker on issues of veil piercing,” and his contributions to this area as being “among the most important of any scholar working today.”
Professor Oh received his BA in Philosophy and Ethics, Politics & Economics from Yale University, and his JD from The University of Chicago Law School, where he was a member of the Law Review. He currently serves as the faculty advisor for the Journal of Law and Commerce as well as the JD/MBA programs with the University of Pittsburgh Katz School of Business and Carnegie Mellon University Tepper School of Business.