David M. Golove is a faculty co-director at the Center on Law and Security and is the Hiller Family Foundation Professor of Law and Director of the J.D./LL.M. Program in International Law at the NYU School of Law. He has secured a reputation as one of the most original scholars in constitutional law. Among his notable academic writings is a book-length article, “Treaty-Making and the Nation: The Historical Foundations of the Nationalist Conception of the Treaty Power,” 98 Michigan Law Review 1075 (2000). His other notable articles include “Against Free-Form Formalism,” 70 NYU Law Review 1791 (1998); “Is NAFTA Constitutional?” 108 Harvard Law Review 801 (1995) (with Bruce Ackerman); “From Versailles to San Francisco: The Revolutionary Transformation of the War Powers,” 70 Colorado Law Review 1491 (1999); and “Philosophy of International Law,” Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law 808-934 (2002) (with Allen Buchanan). Professor Golove received his B.A. from Berkeley in 1979 and has law degrees from Boalt Hall and Yale. He teaches constitutional law and international law. Professor Golove is a member of the faculty Executive Committee of the NYU Institute for International Law and Justice and director of the J.D.-LL.M. program in international law.
Posts:
New Directions in Terrorism Policy, April 16th, 2010

