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Choose from publications in the following areas:
American Constitutional History
Books: Forging New Freedoms: Nativism, Education and the Courts, 1917-1927 (University of Nebraska Press, 1994) (recipient of the Outstanding Book Award from the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Human Rights in North America); The Chief Justiceship of Charles Evans Hughes (University of South Carolina Press, forthcoming in projected date of 2006). Book Chapters: “The Hughes Court (1930-1941): Evolution and Revolution,” in The United States Supreme Court: The Pursuit of Justice (Houghton-Mifflin, Christopher Tomlins, ed., 2005); "Meyer v. Nebraska," in A Legal History of Nebraska (Ohio University Press, Alan Gless, ed., forthcoming).
Selected Articles: Attacks on the Warren Court by State Officials: A Case Study in Why Court-Curbing Movements Fail, 50 Buffalo Law Review 483-612 (2002); The Role of Judicial Issues in Presidential Campaigns, 42 Santa Clara Law Review 391-482 (2002); The 75th Anniversary of Pierce v. Society of Sisters: Reasons to Celebrate, 78 Detroit Mercy Law Review 443-62 (2001) (article solicited for conference); The Constitutional Significance of the Scottsboro Cases, 28 Cumberland Law Review 591-97 (1998); The Ratings Game: Ranking Supreme Court Justices, 79 Marquette Law Review 401-452 (1996); Walter Clark of North Carolina: Antagonist of the Federal Judiciary, 3 Journal of Southern Legal History 1-35 (1994); The Legal Career of John Quincy Adams, 23 Akron Law Review, 415-453 (1990); A Judicial Janus: Meyer v. Nebraska in Historical Perspective, 57 The University of Cincinnati Law Review 125-204 (1988). Book Reviews: Philippa Strum, Brandeis: Beyond Progressivism, in 540 The Annals of the American Academy of Social Science 177-78 (1995); Owen Fiss, History of the Supreme Court of the United States: Troubled Beginnings of the Modern State, 1888-1910, in 34 American Journal of Legal History 99-100 (1995); David C. Frederick, Rugged Justice: The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and the American West, in 26 Western Historical Quarterly 251 (1995); James W. Ely, The Chief Justiceship of Melville W. Fuller, in 101 American Historical Review 923 (June 1996); Gilbert C. Gall, Lee Pressman, the New Deal, and the CIO in 105 American Historical Review 952-953 (June 2000);
Ruth O’Brien, Worker’s Paradox: The Republican Origins of New Deal Labor
Policy, 1886-1935, 106 American Historical Review 590-91 (April 2001). |
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