Henderson taught at the University of Washington School of Law from 1962 to 1991.[4] Henderson authored and coauthored ten significant books related to Japanese law, and he wrote almost 100 articles and other works. Daniel Harrington Foote, author of Law in Japan: A Turning Point, said "These works have had a tremendous impact on scholars and practitioners alike."[5]
Hattori, Takaaki, Dan Fenno Henderson, Yasuhei Taniguchi, Pauline C. Reich, and Hiroto Miyake. Civil Procedure in Japan. Juris Pub., 2000. ISBN1-57823-081-0, 9781578230815.
Henderson, Dan Fenno. Village "Contracts" in Tokugawa Japan: Fifty Specimens With English Translations and Comments. University of Washington Press, 1975. ISBN0-295-95405-1, 9780295954059.
Henderson, Dan Fenno. "Chapter One The Role of Lawyers in Japan." in Thyssen-Stiftung, Fritz (editor) Japan, Economic Success and Legal System. Walter de Gruyter, 1997. ISBN3-11-015160-X, 9783110151602.
In: Yanagida, Yukio, Daniel H. Foote, Edward Stokes Johnson, Jr., J. Mark Ramseyer, and Hugh T. Scogin, Jr. Law and Investment in Japan: Cases and Materials. East Asian Legal Studies Program, Harvard Law School, 2000. ISBN0674005090, 9780674005099:
Henderson, Dan Fenno. "Foreign Enterprise in Japan: Laws and Policies." 173-174 (1973). p. 56
Haley, John Owen, Daniel H. Foote, and Dan Fenno Henderson. "Law and the Legal Process in Japan." Part II, 75-78 (1994). p. 57