Dranias serves as NeWay Capital LLC’s General Counsel, handling all corporate legal matters. Prior to this, he was Senior Litigation Counsel with the Government Accountability & Special Litigation Unit of the Arizona Attorney General. He also serves as Policy Advisor and Research Fellow with the Heartland Institute, as an expert and Speaker’s Bureau member with the Federalist Society, a Law and Civil Liberties Speaker for Students for Liberty, a Council of Scholars member with Compact for America Educational Foundation, as well as an Adjunct Instructor teaching Business Ethics and Law at Grand Canyon University.
Previously, Dranias served as President & Executive Director of Compact for America Educational Foundation where he led national efforts to organize the states to propose and ratify a federal Balanced Budget Amendment. Prior to that, Dranias was General Counsel, Policy Development Director and Constitutional Policy Director at the Goldwater Institute. Dranias led the Institute’s successful challenge to Arizona’s system of government campaign financing to the U.S. Supreme Court. Prior to that, he was an attorney with the Institute for Justice for three years and an attorney in private practice in Chicago for eight years, where he served as Young Lawyers Section co-editor of the Chicago Bar Association Record and earned the Oliver Wendell Holmes Award for his service.
Professor of Law, Georgia State University College of Law
Biography
Neil Kinkopf is Professor of Law at the Georgia State University College of Law. He has also taught at the law schools at Case Western Reserve and Duke Universities. Neil teaches courses on constitutional law, civil procedure, and legislation. His research and writing focuses on separation of powers, with an emphasis on presidential power. The fourth edition of his book, Separation of Powers Law, (co-authored with Peter Shane and Harold Bruff) was published last winter. Professor Kinkopf has also held appointments in the Office of Legal Counsel and the Office of Legal Policy, both in the Department of Justice.