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.
Topics
What’s At Stake for the U.S. at the World Radiocommunication Conference 2023?
In November 2023, delegates from around the world will gather in Dubai for a month-long...
A Cord of Three Strands: How Kennedy v. Bremerton School District Changed Free Exercise, Establishment, and Free Speech Clause Doctrine
Stephanie Taub, Kayla Ann Toney
In 2015, Bremerton High School football coach Joseph Kennedy lost his job for kneeling at...
Anti-Bias CLE: Lawyer Shaming: Legal Ethics, the Rule of Law, and Equal Access to Justice
Topics
Partisan Enforcement and Increasing Uncertainty at the FTC: Commissioner Wilson’s Departure and Recent FTC Administrative Actions
The Federal Trade Commission has amped up its administrative activity of late, portending changes in...
Topics
State Sovereignty at Stake in Dispute Between New York and New Jersey
Can a state surrender some of its sovereignty? Of course. It’s how our current federal...
Panel V: Is Judicial Review Democratic?
2023 National Student Symposium
Austin, TXPanel IV: Does Federalism Lead to a More United or Disunited Democracy?
2023 National Student Symposium
Austin, TXPanel III: Unique Aspects of American Democracy: Structural Bugs or Features?
2023 National Student Symposium
Austin, TXPanel I: What is Democracy?
2023 National Student Symposium
Austin, TXGovernment Censorship, Disinformation, and Scientific Consensus – A Litigation Update on Missouri v. Biden & Hoeg v. Newsom
Margaret A. Little, Jenin Younes
How are we to understand scientific consensus? Who is authorized to speak on behalf of...