
Konrad Borowicz is a socio-legal scholar whose research critically examines, explains, and critiques the networked rule production underlying modern finance. His scholarship maps the interplay of norms, standards, and relationships across organizational boundaries, highlighting governance mechanisms that extend beyond traditional law-centered analyses. By combining qualitative fieldwork with doctrinal inquiry, his work offers insights into regulatory design, directly relevant for both policymakers and industry practitioners. He has been awarded over 300,000 EUR in personal grants for his work from various organizations, including the European Central Bank (within the framework of the Legal Research Program). He has published in the Journal of Financial Regulation, Capital Markets Law Journal, New York University Journal of Law and Business, International Journal of Law and Information Technology, and Data in Brief, among other.
Currently, he is an Assistant Professor at the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society and a Research Coordinator at the Tilburg Law and Economics Center at Tilburg University in the Netherlands. He holds a J.S.D. from Columbia Law School, a Ph.D. in Law from the European University Institute, and an LLM from Duke Law School. He obtained his first law degree from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland.
Before coming to academia, he was a finance lawyer at Ropes & Gray in London. He is admitted to the New York Bar.