Session Two: Serving a Lawless President
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Start Date
16-10-2020 10:45 AM
End Date
16-10-2020 12:00 PM
Description
The second presentation was made by William R. Casto.
- Paul Whitfield Horn Distinguished Professor, 1983
- Texas Tech University School of Law
- Admitted to practice in Tennessee.
Professor Casto received his law degree from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and a Doctor of the Science of Law degree from Columbia University. He joined the Texas Tech faculty in 1983 after practicing law for a number of years. He has written a number of well received books and articles on international tort law and on the federal courts. The United States Supreme Court has frequently cited or relied upon his published scholarship. He is a member of the American Law Institute and holds a Paul Whitfield Horn Distinguished Professorship, which is the highest honor that Texas Tech may bestow on a faculty member. He is currently writing a book on the process of providing legal advice in government.
He has written three well-received books: The Supreme Court in the Early Republic, Oliver Ellsworth and the Creation of the Federal Republic, and Foreign Affairs and the Constitution in the Age of Fighting Sail. Professor Casto has written articles on judicial review, foreign policy, and the relationship between religion and public life in the Founding Era.
- B.A., University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1970
- J.D., University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1973
- J.S.D., Columbia University, 1983
Recommended Citation
William R. Casto, Serving a Lawless President, 72 Mercer L. Rev. 855 (2021).
Session Two: Serving a Lawless President
The second presentation was made by William R. Casto.
- Paul Whitfield Horn Distinguished Professor, 1983
- Texas Tech University School of Law
- Admitted to practice in Tennessee.
Professor Casto received his law degree from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and a Doctor of the Science of Law degree from Columbia University. He joined the Texas Tech faculty in 1983 after practicing law for a number of years. He has written a number of well received books and articles on international tort law and on the federal courts. The United States Supreme Court has frequently cited or relied upon his published scholarship. He is a member of the American Law Institute and holds a Paul Whitfield Horn Distinguished Professorship, which is the highest honor that Texas Tech may bestow on a faculty member. He is currently writing a book on the process of providing legal advice in government.
He has written three well-received books: The Supreme Court in the Early Republic, Oliver Ellsworth and the Creation of the Federal Republic, and Foreign Affairs and the Constitution in the Age of Fighting Sail. Professor Casto has written articles on judicial review, foreign policy, and the relationship between religion and public life in the Founding Era.
- B.A., University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1970
- J.D., University of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1973
- J.S.D., Columbia University, 1983
Comments
Read Professor Casto's article in the Mercer Law Review.