Christopher Green, "Does the Privileges and Immunities Clause Support Judicial Activism?"

With commentary by Michael Pollack 

Professor Green graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University and was the  senior editor of the Yale Law Journal at Yale Law School. He joined the faculty of the University of Mississippi Law School in 2006. He practiced law with Phelps Dunbar in Jackson, Miss., specializing in appellate litigation, and clerked for Judge Rhesa H. Barksdale of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Professor Green teaches Criminal Law, Constitutional Law, Administrative Law, Property, Real Estate Transactions and Commercial Paper. His current research projects include the punishment of corporations, the application of constitutional theory to the Fourteenth Amendment, the epistemology of testimony, memory and perception, and the law and ethics of self-defense.

Michael Pollack graduated summa cum laude from the New York University School of Law in 2011. He clerked for Justice Sonia Sotomayor of the U.S. Supreme Court, and for Judge Janice Rogers Brown of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. He was also a trial attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice Federal Programs Branch. He studied political science and economics as an undergraduate, and graduated with highest honors from Swarthmore College. His research interests include local and private government law, property law and land use regulation, administrative law, and the interaction between judicial deference and institutional decisionmaking. He is currently a Lecturer in Law and Bigelow Fellow at the Law School. 

Recorded November 10, 2015, and presented by the Federalist Society.