Natasha Varyani

Natasha Varyani
Natasha VaryaniAssociate Professor of Law

Contact Information

401-254-4617nvaryani@rwu.eduCurriculum Vitae

Education

JD, Suffolk University Law School
MBA, Suffolk University Sawyer School of Management
BA, Smith College

Professor Natasha Varyani, a dynamic legal scholar, has joined the faculty at Roger Williams University School of Law.  From 2020 to 2023 she served as an associate professor of law at New England Law | Boston where she led their First-Generation Student Program and co-chaired their Charles Hamilton Houston Enrichment Program.  Previously, Professor Varyani served as the Associate Director of the Academic Enrichment Program and a Visiting Assistant Professor at Boston University School of Law. 

With an impressive background in private practice, specializing in complex tax planning and litigation for nearly a decade, Professor Varyani brings a wealth of practical expertise to her teaching. Throughout her career, Professor Varyani has demonstrated a strong commitment to promoting diversity in the legal profession. She has actively engaged with affinity bar associations at both local and national levels, assuming leadership roles to advance diversity, equity and inclusion in the legal profession. In addition, she has collaborated closely with various organizations in her community, including the Boston Bar Association and the Boston Public School system, contributing her expertise to help change the face of the legal profession.

Professor Varyani brings an impressive combination of teaching and business experience to RWU Law where she empowers students and fosters belonging with her infectious passion for teaching and social justice. 

BOOKS

Property Supplement (title TBD), (Carolina Academic Press – forthcoming). This scholarly project seeks to support professors and students in 1L Property classrooms in examining the ways in which our laws have created and supported systems and structures that reinforce racial inequality. Chapters will particularly focus on bar tested areas of law and each will conclude with a sample exercise aimed at retaining doctrine and building legal analysis skills.  

Feminist Judgment Series (Property): Coggan v. Coggan.  (Cambridge University Press with Stevie Leahy) Co-Authored chapter containing re-written judicial opinion in a Florida case on the topic of Tenancy in Common and gendered treatment of former spouses. 


ARTICLES 

Social Justice & Multi-Jurisdictional Tax: A Critical Examination of the Digitization of Commerce, Multi-Jurisdictional Tax and an Opportunity to Correct a Systemic Preference to Protect Wealth Capital University Law Review, Volume 50, Number 2 (Fall 2022)

Response to “Identity Capitalists”: Implications for Property, Academia, and Affirmative Action, New England Law Review, Volume 56, Number 2 (Spring 2022). 

Boston Bar Journal; Viewpoint: Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard: Affirmative Action, Race Based Policies and Preference Falsification. (April 7, 2021)    

National Jurist; September 2020: https://www.nationaljurist.com/smartlawyer/if-youre-planning-asking-black-friend-or-colleague-how-help-blm-movement-dont

Massachusetts Bar Association Section Review: COVID-19 and State Emergency Orders (July / August 2020)

Boston Business Journal Viewpoint: Taxing Short Term Rentals May Spoil the Season, July 19, 2019 Op-Ed. 

A New Purpose: Shifting Foundations That May Reprioritize the Needs of Corporate Stakeholders and Social Movements, New England Law Review, Volume 54, No. 1 (2019). 

Being Present: What a Sales Tax Case Demonstrates About Federalism, The Dormant Commerce Clause, and the Direction of Supreme Court Jurisprudence, Boston University Public Interest Law Journal, Volume 28, No. 1 (Winter 2019)

States Unbound: Examining the Authority of the Multistate Tax Compact in a Modern, Multijurisdictional Economy, Wayne State Law Review Journal of Business (Summer 2018)

Cognitive Load Theory and Learning the Law: How and Why Minority Students Struggle in Law School, The Learning Curve, Winter 2018. 

A Contract Among States: Capturing Income of the World’s Multi-Jurisdictional Taxpayers, University of Bologna Law Review, Vol. 1, No. 2, January 2017.

Taxing Electronic Commerce: The Efforts of Sales and Use Tax to Evolve with Technology, (lead article), Oklahoma City University Law Review, Volume 39, Issue 2 (Summer 2014).

Understanding Discovery: The Supreme Judicial Court Clarifies the Attorney-Client Privilege and Work-Product Doctrine as Related to Tax Memoranda, Volume 11, No. 2, Mass Bar Assn Section Review, 41-42 (2009).  

Combined Reporting in Massachusetts: A Primer on the Controversy, Volume 10, No. 3, Mass Bar Assn Section Review, 29-31 (2008).

Defining Manufacturing Activity in Massachusetts: Recent decisions Clarify the Availability of Sales and Use Tax Exemptions for Entitles Engaged in Manufacturing, Volume 10, No. 1, Mass Bar Assn Section Review, 35-36 (2008).
 

Close Course Type Descriptions

Course Types

We have classified RWU Law classes under the following headers. One of the following course types will be attached to each course which will allow students to narrow down their search while looking for classes.

Core Course

Students in the first and second year are required to take classes covering the following aspects of the law—contracts, torts, property, criminal law, civil procedure, and constitutional law, evidence, and professional responsibility.  Along with these aspects, the core curriculum will develop legal reasoning skills.

Elective

After finishing the core curriculum the remaining coursework toward the degree is completed through upper level elective courses.  Students can choose courses that peak their interests or courses that go along with the track they are following.

Seminar

Seminars are classes where teachers and small groups of students focus on a specific topic and the students complete a substantial research paper.

Clinics/Externships

Inhouse Clinics and Clinical Externships legal education is law school training in which students participate in client representation under the supervision of a practicing attorney or law professor.  RWU Law's Clinical Programs offer unique and effective learning opportunities and the opportunity for practical experience while still in law school.