About the interviewees
Phoebe A. haddon
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Dr. Phoebe Haddon is a Professor of Law and the Dean of Francis King Carey School of Law at University of Maryland. Dean Haddon has also co-written two casebooks on constitutional law and tort law and has also written several articles on equal protection. She has also served as the co-president of the board of governors, she is a member of the executive committee of the Society of American Law Teachers and a trustee of the Law School Admissions Council. Before Dean Haddon got appointed as Dean of the Francis King Carey School of Law, she was a faculty member at Temple University in Philadelphia. (Personal Interview)
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Allan Kittleman
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Allan Kittleman is currently a member of the Maryland Senate. Senator Kittleman has been a member of the Maryland Senate since 2004, representing Howard County and Carroll County (9th district). He has also served as a member of the Howard County Council from 1998 to 2004. So far, he has been in the Maryland Senate for 10 years. (Personal Interview)
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Sherae M. McNeal
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Sherae McNeal is currently the chief judge in Howard County's Orphans Court, MD. She has been a judge on the court since 1998 and has been the Chief Judge since April of 2007. She has also been a member of Conference of Orphans' Court Judges since 2011. She got her major in English at the University of Maryland and got into the bar in 1991. (Personal Interview)
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Jeffery crouch
Dr. Jeffrey Crouch is currently an Assistant Professor of American politics at the American University. Dr. Jeffrey Crouch is an expert on the topic of presidential power and he wrote a book called "Pardon Power", which was published in 2009. Dr. Crouch's research is mostly on the Constitution, presidency and separation of powers. He has also taught courses on American Presidency, Presidency, the Executive Branch and many more. (Email Interview)
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Louis Fisher
Dr. Louis Fisher is a Scholar in Residence at the Constitution Project and a well known Constitutional Scholar. He previously has worked at the Library of Congress as a Senior specialist in Separation of Powers and as a specialist in Constitutional Law. Dr. Fisher's specialties include constitutional law, war powers, budget policy, executive-legislative relations and judicial-congressional relations. He has also been invited to testify before Congress over 50 times on issues such as presidential impoundment powers. Dr. Fisher has also (co)written more than 470 articles. (Email Interview)
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Christopher J. Peters
Christopher Peters currently teaches constitutional law, constitutional theory and many other subjects at the University of Baltimore. Over the years, he has written many articles and books on constitutional law. Professor Peters had published numerous articles in the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Law Journal and many others. Before teaching at the University of Baltimore, Professor Peters also taught at the University of Chicago Law School and Wayne State University located in Detroit. Professor Peters has also won many awards one of them being the President’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. (Email Interview)
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Max Stearns
Max Stearns is currently a Professor of Law and Marbury Research Professor, Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Development at the University of Maryland King Carey School of Law. Over the years, Professor Stearns has written dozens of articles and books on Law. At the UM Carey School of Law, Professor Stearns teaches Constitutional Law, Public Choice and Law and Economics. Before teaching in Maryland, he was a faculty member at the George Manson University School of Law. He is also a visiting professor at the University of Florida, Fredric g. Levin College of Law, and the University of Michigan Law School. (Email Interview)
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Mark Graber
Mark Graber is currently a Professor of Law and Government at the University of Maryland King Carey School of Law. Over the years, Professor Graber has written many articles and books about Law and Government, including a chapter about Constitutional Law and American Politics in the Oxford Handbook of Law and Politics. Professor Graber is also recognized as one of the leading scholars in the country on constitutional law and politics. He is currently working on a book called Forger in Failure that talks about how changes to the constitution have been caused by the failure of constitutional laws to be used as expected. (Email Interview)
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Eric easton
Professor Eric Easton currently teaches Introduction to lawyering stills, constitutional law, contracts, torts and media law electives at the University of Baltimore’s School of Law. Before teaching at the University of Baltimore, Easton taught media law and other subjects at Loyola University in Maryland. Easton is a member of the University of Maryland School of Law’s Order of the Coif. Before joining, he was a professional journalist and publisher. He also currently serves on the editorial advisory board in Maryland’s Daily Record. Over many years, Professor Easton has written/co-written many books and articles including case notes. ( Email Interview)
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Elizabeth j. samuels
Elizabeth J. Samuels is currently a Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore. Professor Samuels has been a full- time member of the law faculty at Baltimore since 1989. Before going to law school, she was a journalist working as an editor of the University of Chicago Law Review and as an attorney in the Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. Professor Samuels also does pro bono work in areas of civil rights and child and family law. She is also a member of the Alabama Bar. Over the years, she has written many papers and articles mostly about child and family law. (Email Interview)
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Garrett epps
Garrett Epps is currently a Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore Law School. Professor Epps currently teaches Constitutional Law and Creative Writing. Over the years, Professor Epps has written numerous articles and books on the topic of constitutional law and civil rights. As a novelist and former journalist, Professor Epps is a former writer for the Washington Post, Inter Alia, The New York Times, the New Republic and the New York Review of Books.
(Phone Interview) |