Amos N. Guora is a prolific author and prominent lecturer/speaker both in the United States and Europe on issues related to complicity, enablers, bystanders, the Holocaust, national security, limits of interrogation, religion and terrorism, the limits of power, multiculturalism, and human rights.
He is Professor of Law at the S.J. Quinney College of Law, the University of Utah and is actively involved in bystander legislation efforts in Utah and other states around the country.
His numerous books include Armies of Enablers: Survivor Stories of Complicity and Betrayal in Sexual Assaults (Sept. 2020); Five Words That Changed America: Miranda v. Arizona and the Right to Remain Silent (2020); Populist and Islamist Challenges for International Law (2019); Earl Warren, Ernesto Miranda and Terrorism (2018); The Crime of Complicity: The Bystander in the Holocaust (2017); Cybersecurity: Geopolitics, Law, and Policy (2017); Tolerating Intolerance: The Price of Protecting Extremism (2014); and Freedom from Religion: Rights and National Security (2009).
Professor Guiora has an A.B. in history from Kenyon College, a J.D. from Case Western Reserve University School of Law, and a PhD from Leiden University.
He is a Distinguished Fellow at The Consortium for the Research and Study of Holocaust and the Law (CRSHL), Chicago-Kent College of Law, and Distinguished Fellow and Counselor at the International Center for Conflict Resolution, Katz School of Business, University of Pittsburgh.