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American lawyer
Richard W. Garnett (born November 6, 1968) is the Paul J. Schierl / Fort Howard Corporation Professor of Law, a Concurrent Professor of Political Science, and the founding Director of the Notre Dame Program on Church, State & Society at
Notre Dame Law School . He teaches in the areas of criminal law, constitutional law,
First Amendment law, and the death penalty.
[1] He has contributed to research in such topics as
school choice and
Catholic social teaching . His articles have appeared in a variety of prominent law journals, including the
Cornell Law Review ,
[2] the
Georgetown Law Journal ,
[3] the
Michigan Law Review ,
[4] and the
UCLA Law Review .
[5] He also regularly appears in
The New York Times ,
[6]
USA Today ,
[7]
[8]
[9]
[10] and
The Wall Street Journal
[11] and as a guest on
National Public Radio .
[12]
[13]
[14]
Education and experience
Raised in Alaska, Garnett majored in philosophy at
Duke University . In 1995, he earned his
J.D. from
Yale Law School . He
clerked for Judge
Richard Sheppard Arnold on the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit , then for Chief Justice
William H. Rehnquist on the
United States Supreme Court . He practiced for two years at Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin in Washington, D.C.
[15]
Personal life
He is married to
Nicole Stelle Garnett , a professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School. The couple met while students at Yale Law School.
See also
References
^
"Richard W. Garnett, Professor of Law" . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Garnett, Richard W. (2003). "The New Federalism, the Spending Power, and Federal Criminal Law". Cornell Law Review . 89 (1): 1–94.
SSRN
428903 .
^ Garnett, Richard W. (2006). "Religion, Division, and the First Amendment". Georgetown Law Journal . 94 (6): 1667–1724.
SSRN
855104 .
^ Garnett, Richard W. (2004).
"American Conversations With(in) Catholicism" . Michigan Law Review . 102 (6): 1191–1218.
doi :
10.2307/4141942 .
JSTOR
4141942 .
^ Garnett, Richard W. (2004). "Assimilation, Toleration, and the State's Interest in the Development of Religious Doctrine". UCLA Law Review . 51 (6): 1645–1702.
SSRN
564601 .
^ Linda Greenhouse (1 July 2007).
"In Steps Big and Small, Supreme Court Moved Right" . The New York Times . p. A1. Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Richard W. Garnett (25 March 2007).
"On religious liberty, what would Kagan do?" . USA Today . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Richard W. Garnett (26 July 2010).
"China's lesson on freedom of religion" . USA Today . Retrieved 2010-07-27 .
^ Richard W. Garnett (16 July 2006).
"Downsizing and the Catholic Church" . USA Today . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Richard W. Garnett (16 April 2006).
"Campaigning from the pulpit: Why not?" . USA Today . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Richard W. Garnett (17 April 2010).
"The Minority Court" . The Wall Street Journal . Retrieved 2010-04-17 .
^ Nina Totenberg (7 April 2010).
"Supreme Court May Soon Lack Protestant Justices" . National Public Radio . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Alex Chadwick (5 September 2005).
"A Former Clerk Recalls the Chief Justice" . National Public Radio . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^ Nina Totenberg (3 July 2007).
"The Roberts Court and the Role of Precedent" . National Public Radio . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
^
"Richard W. Garnett, Curriculum Vitae" (PDF) . Retrieved 2010-04-15 .
External links