Pamela Brandwein

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Pamela Brandwein

Professor

Office Location(s): 7765 Haven Hall
734.647.7995
pbrand@umich.edu
View Curriculum Vitae

  • Fields of Study
    • American Constitutional Development
    • Race, Politics, and Civil Rights
    • Law and Gender
  • About

    Pamela Brandwein’s research focuses on constitutional law and politics, constitutional development, and civil rights. She is also particularly interested in the rise and impact of distorted constitutional knowledge about Reconstruction. She is author of the award-winning book, Reconstructing Reconstruction (Duke University Press, 1999), which examined the institutional establishment of an error-ridden account of Fourteenth Amendment history and the way this account rendered Warren Court rights expansions vulnerable to the charge that they were the result of “politics, not law.” In general, her work is situated at the intersection of law, history, American political development, and the sociology of knowledge.

    Her most recent book, The Supreme Court, State Action, and Civil Rights: Rethinking the Judicial Settlement of Reconstruction, rethinks conventional wisdom about the Supreme Court’s settlement of the great debates involving race and rights opened by the Civil War. This book offers the first major legal and historical rethinking of the Fourteenth Amendment doctrine of “state action,” the rule that puts merely private conduct outside the scope of the Amendment. By recovering the post-Civil War concept of “state neglect” and by linking it to an emerging revisionist literature on political development, the book offers a new interpretation of the landmark Civil Rights Cases (1883). The result is a transformation in the scope of federal power to protect rights, as well as a revision of the standard view that state action doctrine represented a definitive abandonment of the freedmen to Southern “home rule.”

    Selected Publications

  • Education
    • Northwestern, Ph.D. (Sociology)
    • Northwestern, M.A. (Sociology)
    • University of Michigan, B.A. LSA Honors, magna cum laude & high distinction (Political Science)
  • Awards
    • "Red Republicanism" centers around the impact of nineteenth-century European revolutions on “free labor” ideology and antislavery politics in America.
  • Grants
    • Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, American Bar Foundation (1991-1993)
    • Dissertation Year Grant, Northwestern University (1991)
    • Research Grant, Law and Social Science Program, Northwestern University (1988)
  • Presentations
    • The Civil-Social Distinction: Reconstruction, An Intramural Republican Dispute, and the Construction of Rights (Western Political Science Association, 2010)
    • Regime Politics and U.S. v. Cruikshank: A New Look (Harvard Law School, 2008)
    • Rethinking U.S. v. Cruikshank: Regime Politics during a Transitional Era (American Society for Legal History, 2008)
  • Courses Taught
    • Public Law Proseminar
    • Law and Inequality
    • Race, Politics and Civil Rights
  • Selected Publications:
  • Books
  • Articles