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howardaj@slu.edu
3700 Lindell Blvd.
St. Louis, MO 63108
General Inquiries:
314.977.2766
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EDUCATION
Cornell University, B.S. 1969; University of Chicago School of
Law, J.D. 1972, Associate Editor,
University of Chicago Law Review.
Recipient, 1980, 1986 and 1992
Professor of the Year, 1992
Thompson & Mitchell Award for
Exceptional Faculty Scholarship,
1991 Top Prize Research Conference
for the Bicentennial of the First
Amendment.
First Amendment Specialist; Frequent
Speaker in Academia and Media.
Member, National Commission of
Law and Social Action, American
Jewish Congress; Member, Bar of
the Supreme Court of the United
States of America.
AREAS OF EXPERTISE
Constitutional Law
First Amendment
COURSES
Constitutional Law I
Constitutional Law II
The First Amendment |
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Alan J. Howard
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Professor of Law
Alan Howard believes that although the First Amendment is a relative
latecomer to the legal scene, it has more than made up for lost time. “The
amendment was ratified in 1791,” he says, “but it wasn’t until 1919 that
the U.S. Supreme Court began to interpret it. And since then, the Court
has rendered at least one free speech decision each term.”
The Court’s absorption with the First Amendment mirrors Professor
Howard’s. After graduating from the University of Chicago School of
Law in 1972, he joined Sidley & Austin in Chicago where he worked
with Newton Minnow, a partner and former Federal Communications
Commission chairman under President John F. Kennedy. A Washington,
D.C., native, Professor Howard transferred a year later to the firm’s office
in the nation’s capital. The firm defended the First Amendment rights
of a stable of media clients, including CBS and the nation’s first cable
television operators.
The University of Georgia-Athens recruited Howard from private practice
by hiring him to become the first director of the newly created Legislative
Research Division in its Institute of Government. The research division
was established to provide unbiased research to Georgia legislators. He
had a joint appointment in the political science department, teaching
several courses, including criminal justice and a seminar on free speech,
and he was a frequent guest speaker in the law school.
“I sort of fell into teaching, but it was a graceful fall,” Howard says. “I
enjoy every aspect of the learning-teaching process.”
In 1977, Howard joined Saint Louis University School of Law as an
assistant professor and began establishing himself as an expert on the
First Amendment. He wrote the School’s first course description and
syllabus for the First Amendment and has been teaching the class ever
since.
The bulk of his scholarship focuses on the First Amendment — free
speech in particular. His most recent article, “Continuity on the Court:
The Rehnquist Court’s Free Speech Cases” (47 Saint Louis University
Law Journal, 835), tracks the Court’s decisions over the past 16 years.
“Between 1986 and 2002, the Rehnquist Court rendered 106 decisions in
free speech cases,” Professor Howard says. “That’s more than six percent
of the Court’s caseload. It’s a prolific area of constitutional adjudication,
which is one of the reasons I never tire of teaching it.”
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