Richard E. Morgan | |
---|---|
Born | Philipsburg, Pennsylvania | May 17, 1937
Died | November 13, 2014 77) Harpswell, Maine | (aged
Occupation | Constitutional theorist, professor of government and legal studies |
Richard Ernest Morgan (May 17, 1937 – November 13, 2014) was a conservative author, contributing editor of City Journal, and the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Government at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, United States. His areas of academic interest included the history, law and politics of the First Amendment. At the time of his death, Morgan was one of the leading conservatives of his generation.[1]
Works
Authored, co-authored or edited:
- The Politics of Religious Conflict
- The Supreme Court and Religion
- Domestic Intelligence: Monitoring Dissent in America
- American Politics: Direction of Change, Dynamics of Choice and People, Power and Politics
- Disabling America: The Rights Industry in Our Time
References
- ↑ "Remembering Richard E. Morgan '59, Bowdoin's William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Constitutional Law Archives". Bowdoin. 14 November 2014. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
External links
- Official Bio
- Interview with the Bowdoin Orient
- 2000 Madison Memorial Speech
- "Why Bakke Has No Case" by Ronald Dworkin
- "Coming Clean About Brown"
- "Limits to Diversity"
- "Negating Affirmative Action", 1995
- First Things Symposium, "End of Democracy?"
- "Why the Founding is Back in Vogue"
- "First Things First", 1997
- Obituary
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