Akhil Reed Amar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Akhil Reed Amar (born 1958) is Southmayd Professor of Law at Yale Law School, an expert on constitutional law and criminal procedure.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Amar is a summa cum laude graduate of Yale College (B.A., 1980) and the Yale Law School (J.D. 1984) and was an editor of the Yale Law Journal. Amar clerked for now-U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer when he was a judge on the First Circuit Court of Appeals.
He is the author of numerous publications and books. He was a consultant to the television show The West Wing, on which the character Josh Lyman refers to him in an episode in Season Five. His course on constitutional law is one of the most popular undergraduate offerings at Yale College. Amar's younger brother, Vikram Amar, teaches at the UC Davis School of Law.
Among Amar's students at Yale were John Yoo and Neal Katyal. Katyal would later serve as (victorious) lead counsel in the landmark Supreme Court case Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. Amar and Katyal also published articles together in law review and political opinion journals in 1995 and 1996.
Amar is currently a Visiting Professor of Law at Columbia Law School.[1]
In 2008, Presidential candidate Mike Gravel said that he would name Amar to the Supreme Court if elected President.
Amar graduated from Las Lomas High School in Walnut Creek, CA in 1976.
[edit] Books
- The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles (1997)
- For the People (with A. Hirsch) (1997)
- The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction (1998)
- Processes of Constitutional Decisionmaking (ed. with P. Brest, S. Levinson, and J.M. Balkin), (2000)
- America's Constitution: A Biography (2005)
[edit] See also
- Amar Plan
- Akhil.K.Ashok

