Kate Shaw

Editor-in-Chief, 2005-2006


Professor of Law and the Co-Director of the Floersheimer Center for Constitutional Democracy, Cardozo Law School

Kate Shaw is a Professor of Law and the Co-Director of the Floersheimer Center for Constitutional Democracy. Before joining Cardozo, Professor Shaw worked in the White House Counsel’s Office as a Special Assistant to the President and Associate Counsel to the President. She clerked for Justice John Paul Stevens of the U.S. Supreme Court and Judge Richard A. Posner of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.

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Image of Justice John Paul Stevens with three Northwestern University Law School journals.

Justice John Paul Stevens

Co-Editor-in-Chief, 1946-1947


Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court,
1975-2010

“Justice Stevens was born in 1920 here in Chicago, Illinois, and he graduated from Northwestern Law School sixty-four years ago with the highest grade point average ever earned up to that time in the history of the law school. He served on the United States Supreme Court from 1975 to 2010, when he retired at the age of ninety after the third-longest tenure in the Court’s history.”– Steven G. Calabresi, Tribute to Justice John Paul Stevens, 106 Nw. U. L. Rev. 413, 413 (2012).

ABOUT JUSTICE STEVENS: “During his thirty-five years on the high court, he wrote many landmark opinions on subjects like the constitutionality of term limits, the line item veto, the death penalty, and the freedom of speech and of religion. Justice Stevens’s opinion in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC revolutionized the field of administrative law while his famous dissents in the flag burning case and in Bush v. Gore inspired many critics of the Supreme Court. Justice Stevens’s opinions were exceptionally well written and well crafted, and he enjoyed a sterling reputation as an intellectual leader on the Supreme Court. He started out strong in 1975, and, if anything, his opinions got even better in his last fifteen years on the Supreme Court. “– Steven G. Calabresi, Tribute to Justice John Paul Stevens, 106 Nw. U. L. Rev. 413, 413 (2012).

QUOTE: “Extracurricular work, such as moot court and writing for the criminal law journal or the Law Review, was not particu­larly appealing to students facing what already seemed to be a daunting challenge simply to survive. Nevertheless, our frightening but inspiring dean, Leon Green, convinced some of us that the extra effort would pay off in the long run.” –Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, A Personal History of the Law Review, 100 Nw. U. L. Rev. 25, 26 (2006).


Image of Justice John Paul Stevens with three Northwestern University Law School journals.

Test

Co-Editor-in-Chief, 1946-1947


Associate Editor, United States Supreme Court,
1975-2010

“Justice Stevens was born in 1920 here in Chicago, Illinois, and he graduated from Northwestern Law School sixty-four years ago with the highest grade point average ever earned up to that time in the history of the law school. He served on the United States Supreme Court from 1975 to 2010, when he retired at the age of ninety after the third-longest tenure in the Court’s history.”– Steven G. Calabresi, Tribute to Justice John Paul Stevens, 106 Nw. U. L. Rev. 413, 413 (2012).

ABOUT JUSTICE STEVENS: “During his thirty-five years on the high court, he wrote many landmark opinions on subjects like the constitutionality of term limits, the line item veto, the death penalty, and the freedom of speech and of religion. Justice Stevens’s opinion in Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. NRDC revolutionized the field of administrative law while his famous dissents in the flag burning case and in Bush v. Gore inspired many critics of the Supreme Court. Justice Stevens’s opinions were exceptionally well written and well crafted, and he enjoyed a sterling reputation as an intellectual leader on the Supreme Court. He started out strong in 1975, and, if anything, his opinions got even better in his last fifteen years on the Supreme Court. “– Steven G. Calabresi, Tribute to Justice John Paul Stevens, 106 Nw. U. L. Rev. 413, 413 (2012).

QUOTE: “Extracurricular work, such as moot court and writing for the criminal law journal or the Law Review, was not particu­larly appealing to students facing what already seemed to be a daunting challenge simply to survive. Nevertheless, our frightening but inspiring dean, Leon Green, convinced some of us that the extra effort would pay off in the long run.” –Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, A Personal History of the Law Review, 100 Nw. U. L. Rev. 25, 26 (2006).