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Ronald K.L. Collins

Ronald K.L. Collins is a scholar at the Washington, D.C. office of the First Amendment Center. He writes and lectures on freedom of expression and oversees the online library component of the First Amendment Center's Web site.

Before coming to the Center, Collins served as a law clerk to Justice Hans A. Linde on the Oregon Supreme Court and thereafter was a Judicial Fellow under Chief Justice Warren Burger at the U.S. Supreme Court.

He has taught constitutional law and commercial law at Temple Law School and George Washington Law School. Collins has written constitutional briefs that were submitted to the Supreme Court and various other federal and state high courts. He has also published some 50 articles in scholarly journals such as the Harvard, Stanford and Michigan law reviews. His writings on the First Amendment have appeared in Columbia Journalism Review, The Nation, The New York Times and The Washington Post, among other publications.

Collins is co-author (with David Skover) of The Trials of Lenny Bruce (2002) and The Death of Discourse (1996/ 2nd ed., 2006), and the editor of Constitutional Government in America (1981). His next book, with Sam Chaltain, is We Must Not Be Afraid to be Free (Oxford University Press, 2007) followed by Those Who Won Our Independence: A True Story about Free Speech & Those Who Had the Courage to Defend It (with David Skover (Rowman & Littlefield, 2007).

In 2003, Collins and Skover successfully petitioned the governor of New York to posthumously pardon Lenny Bruce. In 2004, they received the Hugh Hefner First Amendment Award. Their latest scholarly articles are: "What is War? Free Speech in Wartime," 36 Rutgers Law Journal 833 (2005), "Curious Concurrence: Justice Brandeis’ Vote in Whitney," 2005 Supreme Court Review 333 and "Foreword: The Landmark Free-Speech Case that Wasn’t: The Nike v. Kasky Story," 54 Case Western Reserve Law Review 965-1047 (2004).

In September of 2006 Collins conducted a public interview with Anthony Lewis at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University.




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