Professor John O. McGinnis
John
O. McGinnis, M.A., J.D. is
George C. Dix Professor in Constitutional Law at Northwestern University
Law School. His areas of expertise include:
international transactions, constitutional law, law and economics,
international law, antitrust law, and international trade.
The many courses he teaches include the course
Law in an Age of Accelerating Technology.
John is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School where he
was an
editor of the Harvard Law Review. He clerked
on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia from 1983 to
1984. From 1987 to
1991, He was deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal
Counsel at the Department of Justice.
He is a scholar in
both the areas of constitutional and international law. The Office of
the U.S. Trade Representatives has added him to the roster of Americans
who can be appointed as panelists to resolve World Trade Organization
disputes. He is a past winner of the Paul Bator award given by the
Federalist Society to an outstanding academic under 40.
John authored
Accelerating AI,
Losing the Law War: The Bush Administration’s Strategic
Errors, and
The Political Economy of Global Multilateralism,
and coauthored
Originalism and the Good Constitution,
Federalism Vs. States’ Rights: A Defense of Judicial Review in a
Federal System,
Should International Law Be Part of Our Law?,
Democracy and International Human Rights Law,
Lawrence V. Texas and Judicial Hubris,
Against Global Governance in the WTO,
A Pragmatic Defense of Originalism,
The World Trade Constitution,
Original Interpretative Principles as the Core of
Originalism, and
Our Supermajoritarian Constitution.
Read the
full list of his publications!
John earned his BA (magna cum laude) in
Classical Languages at Harvard College in 1978,
his M.A. in Philosophy and Theology
at Balliol College, Oxford in 1980, and his
J.D. (magna cum laude) at Harvard University in 1983.
Watch
International Legal Norms in American Jurisprudence,
The Case Against Collective Bargaining By Public Employees,
Alternatives to Originalism: Conservative and Libertarian
Perspectives
1–7-11, and
America as Hegemon and International Law 11–19–10.
Read his
Wikipedia profile.