The Stanford Constitutional Law Center, founded in September 2006 by former dean Kathleen M. Sullivan and Derek Shaffer '00, grows out of the long and distinguished tradition of constitutional law scholarship at Stanford Law School. The Center seeks to carry on that tradition in a variety of ways—academic conferences, public lectures, policy research projects, and pro bono litigation—aimed at gathering consensus and advancing constitutional norms both domestically and internationally. Stanford law students, particularly those enrolled in a Constitutional Law Workshop, are intimately involved in all of the Center's activities.
Since its inception, the Center has been actively contributing to constitutional litigation in our nation's courts, with special emphasis upon individuals' speech and privacy rights and the structural separation of powers within our system of government. The Center has also sponsored a variety of conferences, lectures, and other events gathering experts from around the world to address issues ranging from constitutional reform and the formation of new constitutions, to developments affecting voting rights in our democracy, to the interplay between national security and civil liberties.
The Center runs four interrelated programs, each aimed at promoting constitutional inquiry and understanding, particularly within the Center's substantive areas of focus. The Center is led by Director Kathleen M. Sullivan and Executive Director Derek L. Shaffer, with the assistance of Administrative Director Diana Jansons Quihuis.
The Center sponsors and hosts a variety of conferences, symposia, and speakers in order to promote constitutional discussion and debate within Stanford Law School and beyond. These are reflected in its schedule of past and upcoming events, as regularly updated.
The Center pursues academic research through Fellows who are appointed annually. The Center's inaugural Fellow, Laura Donohue (SLS 2006), is studying anti-terrorism initiatives in the United States and United Kingdom and their consequences for individual liberty, privacy, and property rights.
The Center contributes to the process of constitutional adjudication by assisting in litigation in the nation's courts at both the trial and the appellate level, in both the Federal and State systems. The Center is prepared to do so through its own staff and resources, and also in concert with other advocates whose efforts might specially benefit from the Center's expertise in constitutional analysis. Cases in which the Center is involved are listed here, as regularly updated.
At the intersection of the Center's programs is a student workshop. Here, law students work in close concert with the Center's staff during the academic year to support, sustain, and shape the Center's efforts by preparing research papers as well as working on actual cases in which the Center is involved.
Students working under the supervision of relevant faculty (typically in teams of three as part of a constitutional law workshop) are integrally involved in the Center's litigation efforts. Each of the submissions below reflects the work of the relevant student team at every phase of development, including drafting.
The Center regularly identifies debates over important constitutional issues, and it collects and organizes various contributions to those debates for ease of public reference. These are set out below and updated on an ongoing basis. If you have or know of a salient contribution that you believe should be added, please alert the Center's Administrative Director.
As part of the mission of the The Stanford Constitutional Law Center to encourage exploration of current constitutional issues we are proud to share the latest book published by our inaugural Fellow, Dr. Laura K. Donohue, The Cost of Counterterrorism: Power, Politics and Liberty.
In the aftermath of a terrorist attack political stakes are high: legislators fear being seen as lenient or indifferent and often grant the executive broader authorities without thorough debate. The judiciary's role, too, is restricted: constitutional structure and cultural norms narrow the courts' ability to check the executive at all but the margins. The dominant 'Security or Freedom' framework for evaluating counterterrorist law thus fails to capture an important characteristic: increased executive power that shifts the balance between branches of government. This book re-calculates the cost of counterterrorist law to the United Kingdom and the United States, arguing that the damage caused is significantly greater than first appears. Donohue warns that the proliferation of biological and nuclear materials, together with willingness on the part of extremists to sacrifice themselves, may drive each country to take increasingly drastic measures with a resultant shift in the basic structure of both states.
The Cost of Counterterrorism: Power, Politics and Liberty was reviewed in The New York Review of Books.
Comprehensive and penetrating, The Cost Of Counterterrorism is an eye-opening examination of how we too often react to terrorism by promoting executive power. Dr. Laura K. Donohue will be discussing the cost of counterterrorist law and her new book at the following events.
| April 4, 2008 | Winston-Salem, North Carolina |
| April 23, 2008 | Stanford Law School, California |
| April 25, 2008 | Calgary, Canada |
| May 6, 2008 | San Francisco, California |
| May 13, 2008 | Mountain View, California |
| May 14, 2008 | Los Altos, California |
| May 19, 2008 | Los Angeles, California |
| May 20, 2008 | San Francisco, California |
| May 21, 2008 | Chicago, Illinois |
| May 29, 2008 | Akron, Ohio |
| May 29, 2008 | Eastern Michigan, Michigan |
| May 30, 2008 | Stanford University, California |
| June 2, 2008 | Napa, California |
| June 3, 2008 | Bloomington, Illinois |
| June 3, 2008 | Detroit, Michigan |
| June 5, 2008 | Fresno, California |
| June 9, 2008 | Phoenix, Arizona |
| June 11, 2008 | Washington, DC |
| June 12, 2008 | Washington, DC |
| June 13, 2008 | Washington, DC |
| June 13, 2008 | Oxford, North Carolina |
| June 17, 2008 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
| June 19, 2008 | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
| June 22, 2008 | San Francisco, California |
| July 2, 2008 | Amherst, Massachusetts |
| July 2, 2008 | Portland, Oregon |
| August 22-25, 2008 | Sun Valley, Idaho |
| September 9, 2008 | New York, New York |
| September 10, 2008 | Washington, DC |
Laura Donohue is the inaugural Fellow at the Center, researching anti-terrorism initiatives in the United States and United Kingdom and their consequences for individual liberty, privacy, and property rights. She is also a member of Stanford Law School's Class of 2006. Fellows such as Ms. Donohue are appointed on an annual basis.
Kathleen Sullivan is the Center's Director, shaping its agenda and overseeing all aspects of its operations, including the Constitutional Law Workshop for students. A nationally prominent scholar and teacher of constitutional law, she previously served as Stanford Law School's Dean and presently is its Stanley Morrison Professor of Law.
Derek Shaffer is the Center's Executive Director, working closely with Professor Sullivan to help shape its agenda and carrying out its day-to-day operations, including its litigation activities. He also serves as a Lecturer in Law, assisting with the Constitutional Law Workshop.
Laura Donohue is the inaugural Fellow at the Center, researching anti-terrorism initiatives in the United States and United Kingdom and their consequences for individual liberty, privacy, and property rights. She is also a member of Stanford Law School's Class of 2006. Fellows such as Ms. Donohue are appointed on an annual basis.
Diana Jansons Quihuis is the central contact for the Center and handles all of its everyday administration. She also coordinates the management of cases in which the Center is involved, and shares responsibility with the Executive Director in planning events. Prior to holding this position, she supported Professor Kathleen Sullivan as Dean, and Dean Larry Kramer.
Sun Valley Writer's Conference
Panel event and book signing at DEMOS: A Network For Ideas & Action, sponsored by the Stanford Alumni Association and the World Policy Institute.