
Nidhi Singh is a legal academic and policy practitioner working at the intersection of competition law, technology regulation, and public policy. She joins the Dhirubhai Ambani University – School of Law as a Non-Resident Fellow, bringing with her over a decade of multidisciplinary experience spanning litigation, regulatory work, academic teaching, and global policy engagement. A trained lawyer and economist, she is currently practicing as an Advocate on Record before the Supreme Court of India and Panel Counsel, Delhi High Court.
She has previously held roles in District Attorney Office, California Department of Justice, State Superior Court, Los Angeles, Competition Commission of India, NITI Aayog, Parliament of India, LBSNAA, Mussoorie and leading law firms such as Trilegal. Her academic affiliations have included visiting faculty positions at premier Indian law schools including NLSIU Bangalore, NALSAR Hyderabad, and NUJS Kolkata, as well as research fellowships at institutions in India and abroad.
Nidhi holds a master’s degree in Law and Finance from the University of Oxford, where she was a Chevening and Weidenfeld-Hoffmann Scholar, and an MA Economics for Competition Law from King’s College London. She has also pursued advanced training in public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School and holds degrees in law from KIIT School of Law and in Investment law from the Universitat de Barcelona. She graduated with a JSM degree and as a SPILS Fellow from Stanford Law School, where her research focused on the implications of AI and algorithmic pricing for competition enforcement.
Her writing and scholarship have appeared in forums such as the Global Antitrust Review, Oxford Business Law Blog, Financial Express, The Hindu and the World Economic Forum Agenda. She has delivered lectures and presented her research at institutions and platforms including Harvard, Oxford, Yale, Cambridge, the WTO, the UN Internet Governance Forum, and the World Bank. Nidhi also serves as an academic member of the European Corporate Governance Institute and is a Global Shaper with the World Economic Forum.
At the DAU School of Law, she will contribute to the university’s emerging focus on technology regulation, data governance, and competition law, while mentoring students and supporting interdisciplinary research on digital public policy.