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Jeremy J. Waldron

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Jeremy J. Waldron
Waldron.jpg
Basic facts
Organization:New York University School of Law
Role:Professor
Education:•University of Otago
•University of Oxford


Jeremy J. Waldron is a legal scholar and became a professor at the New York University School of Law in 2006.[1] He focuses on jurisprudence and political theory, according to his New York University School of Law faculty profile.[2]

For more information about Waldron's contribution to administrative state scholarship click here.

Career

Below is a summary of Waldron's education and other professional accomplishments:[2][1]

Academic degrees:

  • 1974, B.A., University of Otago, New Zealand
  • 1978, L.L.B., University of Otago, New Zealand
  • 1980, M.A., University of Oxford
  • 1986, D.Phil., University of Oxford

Professional positions and honors:

  • Assistant lecturer, University of Otago, 1975-1978
  • Tutor in political theory, University of Oxford, 1980-1982
  • Lecturer, University of Edinburgh, 1983-1987
  • Professor of law, University of California at Berkeley, 1989-1996
  • Professor of politics, Princeton University, 1996-1997
  • Professor of law, Columbia Law School, 1997-2006
  • Elected member, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1998
  • Professor of law, New York University, 2006-present
  • Professor of social and political theory, University of Oxford, 2010-2014
  • Elected fellow, British Academy, 2011
  • Elected member, American Philosophical Society, 2015

Academic scholarship

The following table contains articles from professor Waldron about the administrative state and related issues. Any links in the table below feature Ballotpedia summaries of that scholarly work.

Articles related to the administrative state
Title Source
"Thoughtfulness and the Rule of Law" Harvard University Press (2023)
"The Rule of Law and the Role of Courts" Global Constitutionalism (2021)
"State Inspection" Seton Hall Law Review (2020)
"Exclusion: Property Analogies in the Immigration Debate" Theoretical Inquiries (2017)
"Why Tolerate Religion?" Ethics (2014)
"Five to Four: Why do Bare Majorities Rule on Courts?" Yale Law Journal (2014)
"Separation of Powers in Thought and Practice" Boston College Law Review (2013)
"Stare Decisis and the Rule of Law: A Layered Approach" Michigan Law Review (2012)
"Bicameralism and the Separation of Powers" Current Legal Problems (2012)
"Legislatures Judging in their own Cause" Legisprudence (2009)
"Representative Lawmaking" Boston University Law Review (2009)
"Can there be a Democratic Jurisprudence?" Emory Law Journal (2009)
"The Concept and the Rule of Law" Georgia Law Review (2008)
"Lucky in your Judge" Theoretical Inquiries in Law (2008)
"Legislation and the Rule of Law" Legisprudence (2007)
"Are Constitutional Norms Legal Norms?" Fordham Law Review (2006)
"The Core of the Case against Judicial Review" Yale Law Journal (2006)
"Judicial Review and the Conditions of Democracy" Journal of Political Philosophy (1998)
"Custom Redeemed by Statute" Current Legal Problems (1998)
"Vagueness in Law and Language—Some Philosophical Perspectives" California Law Review (1994)
"The Appeal of Law: Efficacy, Freedom, or Fidelity" Law and Philosophy (1994)
"A Right-Based Critique of Constitutional Rights" Oxford Journal of Legal Studies (1993)
"The Rule of Law in Contemporary Liberal Theory" Ratio Juris (1989)

See also

External links

Footnotes