Alexander Tsesis

Biography

Alexander Tsesis is D’Alemberte Distinguished Chair in Constitutional Law at Florida State University College of Law. He is also the general editor of the Cambridge Studies on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties and the Oxford Theoretical Foundations in Law. Tsesis’ scholarship and teaching focus on a breadth of subjects, including constitutional law, civil rights, constitutional reconstruction, interpretive methodology, free speech theory, and legal history.

Tsesis’ books include Free Speech in the Balance (Cambridge University Press 2020), Constitutional Ethos: Liberal Equality for the Common Good (Oxford University Press 2017), For Liberty and Equality: The Life and Times of the Declaration of Independence (Oxford University Press 2012), We Shall Overcome: A History of Civil Rights and the Law (Yale University Press 2008), The Thirteenth Amendment and American Freedom (New York University Press 2004), and Destructive Messages: How Hate Speech Paved the Way for Harmful Social Movements (New York University Press 2002). He also edited a collection of essays in Promises of Liberty (Columbia University Press 2010). The subjects of his articles range from cyber speech, constitutional interpretation, civil rights law, and human rights. They have appeared or will appear in a variety of law reviews across the country, including the Boston University Law ReviewColumbia Law ReviewCornell Law ReviewMinnesota Law ReviewNorthwestern University Law ReviewSouthern California Law ReviewStanford Law ReviewUniversity of Pennsylvania Law Review, and Vanderbilt Law Review.

Alexander Tsesis

Florida State University College of Law


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