Ronald K. L. Collins

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Ronald K. L. Collins

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Ronald K.L. Collins is the Harold S. Shefelman Scholar at the University of Washington School of Law and was a scholar at the Washington, D.C., office of the First Amendment Center[1] from 2002-09. During his tenure there he wrote and lectured on freedom of expression and oversaw the online library component of the First Amendment Center’s Web site. He also helped to organize conferences at the Newseum and hosted the "Topics of Our Times" lecture series there. He is currently a fellow at the Center.

Contents

Biography

Born in Santa Monica, California, Collins grew up in Southern California. He graduated from the University of California at Santa Barbara with a degree in political philosophy and took his law degree from Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. Afterwards, Collins served as a law clerk to Justice Hans A. Linde on the Oregon Supreme Court and thereafter was a Supreme Court Fellow under Chief Justice Warren Burger at the United States Supreme Court. In 2009, he served as the president of the Supreme Court Fellows Alumni Association, and in 2011 he received the Association's Administration of Justice award "in recognition of his scholarly and professional achievements in advancing the rule of law." In 2012, Collins received the Outstanding Faculty Award from the editors of the Washington Law Review.

After working with the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles and the Legal Aid Society of Orange County, Collins was a teaching fellow at Stanford Law School. Thereafter, he taught constitutional law and commercial law at Temple Law School and The George Washington University Law School, among other schools. Collins has written constitutional briefs that were submitted to the Supreme Court and various other federal and state high courts. He has also published some 50 articles in scholarly journals such as the Supreme Court Review and the Harvard, Stanford, and Michigan law reviews. His writings on the First Amendment have appeared in Columbia Journalism Review, The Nation, The New York Times and The Washington Post, among numerous other publications.

Collins is the author, co-author, and editor of several books, listed below, and the co-author of a forthcoming book titled On Dissent (with David Skover), which will be published by Cambridge University Press. Also forthcoming from Cambridge is Hugo Black & the First Amendment: A Free Speech Chronicle and Reader (2013).

In 2003, Collins and David Skover successfully petitioned the governor of New York to posthumously pardon Lenny Bruce. In 2004, they received the Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award.

In September 2006 Collins conducted a public interview with Anthony Lewis at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. A transcript of that interview can be found here. On February 11, 2008 he did another interview with Mr. Lewis on C-SPAN's Book TV ("Afterwords"). On September 26, 2008, he co-chaired a workshop held at Seattle University Law School on "The Future of Law School Course Books." Collins is profiled in Congressional Quarterly's Encyclopedia of the First Amendment (2009), vol. I. On April 25, 2011, he was again on Book-TV", this time with Sam Chaltain, to discuss their book We must not be Afraid to be Free.

More recently, Collins was a fellow in residence at the Norman Mailer Writers Colony in Provincetown, MA (Spring, 2010). He is also on the board of editors for the Washington Independent Review of Books.

He is on the advisory board of Collaboration on Government Secrecy, a non-partisan, non-profit group dedicated to fostering openness in government.

In 2011, he became a contributor to SCOTUSblog, a blog devoted to news and analysis concerning the US Supreme Court and its cases.

Years ago, in 1967, just before he entered college, Collins appeared on "The Dating Game" and was the bachelor chosen.

Selected publications

Books

Forewords & Digests

  • Symposium: "The Guardians of Truth in the Modern State: Post's Republic & the First Amendment," 87 Washington Law Review ____ (2012) (with David Skover)
  • David M. O'Brien, Congress Shall Make No Law Except for Unprotected Expression: Categories and Contexts (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010)
  • Robert Benson, The Interpretation Game (Carolina Academic Press, 2008)
  • Geoffrey R. Stone, Top Secret:When Our Government Keeps Us in the Dark (Rowman & Littlefield, 2007)
  • Symposium, “Foreword: To America’s Tomorrow -- Commerce, Communication & the Future of Free Speech,” 41 Loyola Los Angeles Law Review 1 (2007)
  • Symposium, "Nike v. Kasky and the Modern Commercial Speech Doctrine," 54 Case Western Reserve Law Review 965 (2004) (with David Skover)

Articles: scholarly & online (partial listing)

References

  1. ^ Collins, John Kifner; Glenn; Michelle O'Donnell Contributed Reporting For This Article. (24 December 2003). "No Joke! 37 Years After Death Lenny Bruce Receives Pardon". The New York Times: p. 1. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/24/nyregion/no-joke-37-years-after-death-lenny-bruce-receives-pardon.html?src=pm. Retrieved 19 August 2011. 



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