Tara Leigh Grove is the Vinson & Elkins Chair in Law at the University of Texas School of Law. Grove graduated summa cum laude from Duke University and magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where she served as the Supreme Court Chair of the Harvard Law Review. Grove clerked for Judge Emilio Garza on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and then spent four years as an attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Division, Appellate Staff, where she argued fifteen cases in the courts of appeals.
Grove’s research focuses on the federal judiciary, interpretive theory, and the constitutional separation of powers. She has published with such prestigious law journals as the Harvard Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Columbia Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the New York University Law Review, the University of Chicago Law Review, the Virginia Law Review, the Texas Law Review, the Cornell Law Review, the Northwestern University Law Review, and the Vanderbilt Law Review. Grove has received awards for both her research and her teaching.
In 2021, Grove served on the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States, a bipartisan commission created by President Biden and charged with examining proposals for Supreme Court reform. Since 2022, Grove has worked on the Princeton Initiative on Reclaiming the Constitutional Powers of Congress, which brings together former members of Congress, political scientists, and law professors. Grove serves as the Co-Chair of the section on the Appointments Process for the Princeton Initiative. Grove is a co-author of Low & Jeffries' Federal Courts and the Law of Federal-State Relations, a leading federal courts casebook, and she has served as the Chair of the Federal Courts Section of the Association of American Law Schools. Grove has been a visiting professor at both Harvard Law School and Northwestern Pritzker School of Law.
Book Signings
2022 National Lawyers Convention
Washington, DCShowcase Panel I: The Legal Profession and Constitutional Culture
2022 National Lawyers Convention
Washington, DC2022 National Lawyers Convention (closed, do not touch)
The Current State of the Legal Profession
Washington, DCThe Bane of the Administrative State? The Nondelegation and Major Questions Doctrines After West Virginia v. EPA
DC Young Lawyers Chapter
Washington, DCThe Future of Chevron Deference at the Supreme Court
Thomas W. Merrill, Eli Nachmany, Yaakov M. Roth
The Supreme Court decided multiple administrative law cases this term, but in no majority opinion...
The Future of Chevron Deference at the Supreme Court
Thomas W. Merrill, Eli Nachmany, Yaakov M. Roth
The Supreme Court decided multiple administrative law cases this term, but in no majority opinion...
The Future of Chevron Deference at the Supreme Court
TeleforumLuncheon Address & Panel: Administrative State on the Brink?
Philip A. Hamburger, Sally Katzen, Neomi Rao
Over the past 85 years the administrative state has been a dominant feature in the...
Luncheon Address & Panel: Administrative State on the Brink?
Tenth Annual Executive Branch Review
Washington, D.C., DCTenth Annual Executive Branch Review Conference —EBRX
The Administrative State, Law, and Culture
Washington, DC