
Evan Epstein is the founding Executive Director of the UC Center for Business Law San Francisco, and Adjunct Professor at UC Law SF.
Professor Epstein has advised founders, executives, directors and investors for over 17 years in Silicon Valley and internationally. He has been retained as an expert in corporate governance litigation both in the U.S. and abroad, particularly involving fiduciary duties of corporate directors. In 2023, Mr. Epstein was named one of the most influential leaders in corporate governance by the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) as part of the 2023 NACD Directorship 100™, an annual list of leading corporate directors and governance advocates. He was included among the top 50 governance professionals “who exemplify the knowledge, leadership, and excellence that our organization promotes.”
Evan is also the founder and managing partner of Pacifica Global, a corporate governance advisory firm based in San Francisco, California. He is the host of the Boardroom Governance Podcast (ranked #1 in its category) and the author of the Boardroom Governance Newsletter (on Substack). Prior, Evan was the Executive Director of the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance, a joint initiative between Stanford Law School and the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Evan holds a JD (equivalent) from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and an LL.M. (Master of Laws) in Corporate Governance and Practice from Stanford Law School. In addition, he was part of the exchange program “Cycle du Diplôme” at Sciences-Po in Paris, France.
Evan Epstein
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Highlights
The "Secondary Market" Liquidity Revolution
When Evan Epstein appeared on Boardchair, he traced the rise of secondary markets, which are now worth nearly $100 billion annually.
The "Steward-Ownership" Model (Novo Nordisk)
OpenAI isn’t the first for-profit company to be owned by a foundation. Evan Epstein shared this historical context during our conversation on Boardchair.
The PBC Dilemma: Humanity vs. The Supply Chain
Anthropic turned down $200 million from the Department of War (Defense). Evan Epstein walked through this case when I spoke to him.


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