Philip Hamburger

Philip Hamburger | |
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Basic facts | |
Organization: | Columbia Law School |
Location: | New York, N.Y. |
Education: | •Princeton University •Yale Law School |
Philip Hamburger is an American lawyer and professor. As of May 2024, Hamburger was the Maurice and Hilda Friedman Professor of Law at Columbia Law School in New York City. According to his faculty profile page on the Columbia Law School website, Hamburger studies "constitutional law and its history" and "works on many topics, including religious liberty, freedom of speech, academic censorship, judicial review, the office and duty of judges, administrative power, and the early development of liberal thought."[1]
Career
Below is a summary of Hamburger's education and career:[1][2]
Academic degrees:
- B.A. (1979), Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
- J.D. (1982), Yale Law School, New Haven, Connecticut
Professional positions and honors:
- Associate, Schnader, Harrison, Segal and Lewis, 1982-1985
- Faculty, University of Virginia Law School, Fall 1986
- Faculty, University of Connecticut School of Law, 1985-1992
- Faculty, George Washington University National Law Center, 1991-2000
- Member, American Society of Legal History, 1992-2009
- Visiting professor of law, Northwestern University School of Law, 1999
- Professor, University of Chicago Law School, 2000-2005
- Professor of law, Columbia Law School, 2006-Present
- Member, American Bar Association section on administrative law and regulatory practice, committee on the history of administrative law, 2015-Present
- Member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2015-Present
- Winner, Bradley Prize, 2017
- Member, James Madison Society, 2017-Present
Academic scholarship
The following table contains a selection of works by Hamburger about the administrative state and related issues. Any links in the table below feature Ballotpedia summaries of that scholarly work.
Works related to the administrative state | |||
---|---|---|---|
Title | Source | ||
"Administrative Discrimination" | American Mind (2020) | ||
"Delegation or Divesting" | Northwestern University Law Review (2020) | ||
"The Administrative Threat to Civil Liberties | "Cato Supreme Court Review (2018) | ||
"The Administrative Evasion of Procedural Rights" | NYU Journal of Law and Liberty (2018) | ||
"The Administrative State and The Rule of Law" | Federalist Society Teleforum Call (2017) | ||
"Confronting the Administrative Threat" | RealClearPolicy Podcast Series (2017) | ||
"Chevron Bias" | George Washington Law Review (2016) | ||
"Is Administrative Law Unlawful?" | Chicago University Press (2014) |
See also
- Ballotpedia's administrative state coverage
- Administrative State Bibliography
- Scholarly work related to the administrative state
External links
Footnotes