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Otis
H. Stephens
Alumni Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science and Resident
Scholar of Constitutional Law
A.B., 1957, M.A., 1958, University of Georgia
Ph.D., 1963, Johns Hopkins University
J.D., 1983, University of Tennessee
Advanced Constitutional Law, Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence, Supreme
Court Decision Making, Administrative Law, and Public Policy and American
Courts.
ostephen@utk.edu
Professor Stephens, a distinguished member of the University's political
science faculty since 1967, became the College of Law's Resident Scholar
of Constitutional Law in 2000. Professor Stephens has authored or co-authored
five books on the U.S. Constitution and Supreme Court and published numerous
articles, book reviews, and professional papers. He held a post doctoral
fellowship at Harvard Law School and, in addition to UT, has taught at
Johns Hopkins University and Georgia Southern College.
Recent Publications
Books, Chapters & Essays:
Presidential Power, Judicial Deference and the Status of Detainees
in an Age of Terrorism, in American National
Security and Civil
Liberties in an Aera
of Terrorism edited by David B.
Cohen and John W. Wells, Palgrave, Macmillan (forthcoming 2004).
Biographical Essays on St. George Tucker and Benjamin N. Cardozo in Great
American Judges:
An Encyclopedia,
edited by John R. Vile (ABC-CLIO 2003.
Equal Protestion of the Laws, Oxford Companion
to American Law,
edited by Kermit Hall, Oxford University Press, 2002, 265-68.
Co-author, American Constitutional
Law (West Publishing Co., 1993,
2nd ed., West/Wadsworth, 1999) (3rd ed. 2003).
Co-author, American Constitutional
Law: Essays
and Cases (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
1988).
Co-author, The Supreme
Court and the Allocation
of Constitutional Power
(W.H. Freeman Co., 1980).
The Supreme
Court and Confessions
of Guilt, (University of Tennessee
Press, 1973).
Articles:
Contributor to "Marbury v. Madison: 200 Years of Judicial Review
in America," symposium, 70 Tenn. L.
Rev. No. 4, 2003.
Co-author, Campus Hate Speech and Equal Protection: Competing Constitutional
Values, 6 Widener J. Public
L 349 (1997).
The Tennessee Constitution and the Dynamics of American Federalism,
61 Tenn. L. Rev.
707 (1994).
Patterns of Mitigating Factors in Juvenile Death Penalty Cases,
29 Crim. L. Bul.
246 (1992).
Edited Work:
Guest editor, special issue on the Rehnquist Court, Southeastern
Political Review
23: (September 1995), 379-556.
Book Reviews:
A History of the
Tennesee Supreme
Court, edited by James E. Ely, Jr.
(39 Tennessee Bar
Journal 24 January, 2003).
Steven D. Smith, Foreordained Failure:
The Quest for a
Constitutional Principle,
6 Law and
Politics Book
Review 20 (1996).
Recent Professional Presentations and Service
Overview of the U.S. Supreme Court's 2002-2003 Term, presentation at
the annual meeting of the American Blind Lawyers Association, Pittsburgh,
Pa., July 6, 2003.
Presentation on the U.S. Supreme Court's development of First Amendment
standards governing commercial speech, Advertising and Law Conference,
University of Tennessee, October 18, 2002 (co-sponsored by the College
of Law and the College of Communication and Information Sciences).
Program participant in Marbury v. Madison Symposium, University
of Tennessee College of Law, February 21, 2003.
"Hate Speech and the First Amendment: Implications for the University,"
American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., September 1993.
"State Action and the Rehnquist Court," American Political Science Association,
Washington, DC, August 1991.
"Mitigating Factors in Juvenile Death Penalty Cases," Academy of Criminal
Justice Sciences, Denver, 1990.
"The Rehnquist Court," Panel Chair, Southern Political Science Association,
Atlanta, 1992.
"The Distinctive Contribution of Carl Brent Swisher," Panel Chair, American
Political Science Association, Washington, DC, 1991.
Selected Achievements and Affiliations
University of Tennessee Macebearer, 2001-02.
Recipient of 2001 Migel Medal presented by the American Foundation for
the Blind.
L.R. Hesler Award for Excellence in Teaching and Service, University
of Tennessee, 1998-99.
Library Friends Outstanding Service Award, University of Tennessee, 1998.
Spring Commencement Speaker, University of Tennessee, 1994.
Golden Key Honor Society, University of Tennessee, 1991.
Chair, Editorial Committee reviewing A History of the American Council
of the Blind, history published and project completed 2003.
Member, American Bar Association, Tennessee Bar Association, Knoxville
Bar Association.
Member, American Political Science Association.
Member, American Association of University Professors.
Works in Progress
Co-editor of the Greenwood Encyclopedia
of American Civil
Rights and Liberties,
Greenwood Publishing Group (forthcoming 2005).
Book, Unreasonable Searches
and Seizures: Rights
and Liberties Under
the Law in America's Freedom's Series,
ABC-CLIO (forthcoming 2004).
Article, The Rehnquist Court: Changing Contours of American Federalism.
Editor-in-Chief coordinating preparation of A History
of the Georgia Academy
for the Blind.
September 18, 2003
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