CURRICULUM VITAE
Ralph A. Rossum Salvatori Professor of
American Constitutionalism Director, Rose Institute of State and Local
Government |
Personal Information:
Born: December
17, 1946, Alexandria, Minnesota
Married to Constance Rossum, three children
Home Address:
2687 San Angelo
Drive
Claremont,
California 91711
(909) 625-3802
(phone)
(909) 621-1321
(fax)
College Address:
Claremont McKenna College
850 Columbia Avenue, Pitzer Hall 110
Claremont, California
91711-8201
(909) 607-3392 (phone)
(909) 621-8416 (fax)
ralph.rrossum@claremontmckenna.edu
Education:
Ph.D., 1973, University of Chicago
M.A., 1971, University of Chicago
B.A. (Summa Cum Laude), 1968, Concordia College
Areas of Academic Specialization:
Constitutional Law
The American Founding
Criminal Justice and Procedure
Academic Experience:
Claremont McKenna College, Henry Salvatori Professor of
Political Philosophy and American Constitutionalism (with tenure).
1994-present. Member of the Graduate
Faculty, Claremont Graduate University. 1994-present.
Visiting Scholar, The Liberty Fund, Indianapolis,
Indiana, July – December 1998.
University of Redlands, Fletcher Jones Professor of
American Politics (with tenure), 1993-1994.
Claremont McKenna College, Visiting Professor, Department
of Government, 1992-1993.
Hampden-Sydney College, President and Professor of
Political Science, 1991-1992.
Claremont McKenna College, Vice President and Dean of
the Faculty, 1988-1991; Director of the Henry Salvatori Center for the Study of
Freedom in the Modern World, 1984‑1989. Alice Tweed Tuohy Professor of
Government and Ethics, 1984‑1988.
Tenure granted, 1984. Member of the Graduate Faculty, Claremont Graduate
School, 1984-1991.
Louisiana State University Law Center. Team‑taught a course on the American Founding with Justice Antonin Scalia at the University of Aix‑Marseilles Law School, Aix‑en‑Provence, France, Summer 1987.
Loyola University of Chicago, Associate Dean of the
Graduate School, 1981‑1983; Associate Professor, Department of Political
Science, 1980‑1983. Tenure
granted, 1982.
Memphis State University, Associate Professor,
Department of Political Science, 1977‑1980. Tenure granted, 1978. Assistant Professor, 1973‑1977.
Grinnell College, Instructor, Department of Political
Science, 1972‑1973.
Chicago City Colleges, Department of Police Academy
Services, Instructor of Behavioral Sciences, 1970‑1971.
Administrative Experience:
Director, Rose Institute of State and
Local Government, Claremont McKenna College, 2000 – present.
The Rose Institute of State and Local Government is one
of eight research institutes at Claremont McKenna College. It focuses its attention on the 20 million
people of Southern California by undertaking research in four primary
areas: survey research, demographic
studies, fiscal analysis, and legal and regulatory analysis. The Director is responsible for the overall
research program and administration of the Institute, including budget, grants,
and contract management; fund development; and the provision of staff support
for its Board of Governors.
Director, Judicial Seminar on the
Constitution, Liberty Fund Inc., Indianapolis, IN., 1993 -present.
Co-directed since 1988 and directed since 1993 an annual
week-long seminar for federal judges on the drafting and ratification of the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Responsibilities include recruitment and
selection of approximately 15 federal appellate and district court judges for
each seminar; selection of discussion leaders (nationally-prominent law
professors, historians, and political scientists), readings, and seminar
location; overall planning; budget management; coordination of all travel and
conference accommodations; chairing all seminar sessions; and program
evaluation.
President, Hampden-Sydney College,
Hampden-Sydney, VA., 1991-1992.
The President is the chief executive officer of the
College, exercising executive and administrative direction in the planning,
implementation, coordination, and surveillance of all College financial,
educational, and operational programs and ensuring adherence to College
policies, procedures, and directives.
Vice President and Dean of the
Faculty,
Claremont McKenna College, 1988‑1991.
The Dean of the Faculty is the chief academic officer of
the college and presides in the president's absence. Responsibilities include clarification of the academic mission of
the college; new program and curriculum development; program evaluation;
administration of the college's appointment, promotion, and tenure process;
supervision of the college's study abroad and other off‑campus
programs; faculty evaluation and
development; supervision of the college's institutional research, registration,
and record‑keeping operations; and administrative and budgetary supervision
of academic computing and all academic departments. A member of the College's Development Strategy Group, the Dean
plays a key role, along with the President, Director of Development, and
selected Trustees, in identifying and developing foundation, corporate, and
private contacts, connecting donor interests to institutional needs, drafting
proposals (especially in the academic area), meeting with present and
prospective donors, and assuring that gifts and endowment funds are used in
conformity with donor intentions.
Seminar Director, "On the Continued
Relevance of the Constitution," Salvatori Center, Claremont McKenna
College, Summer 1986.
Conducted a three‑week seminar for 15 federal
judges and law professors on the Founding of the Constitution of the United
States. Seminar was funded by a $56,000
grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Project Director, "Juvenile Justice
Reform," Rose Institute for State and Local Government, Claremont McKenna
College, 1985‑1987.
"Juvenile Justice Reform" was a million
dollar, two‑year research and legislative training program funded by the
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) of the U. S.
Department of Justice. Its objectives
included the drafting of a model juvenile justice code and the provision of
legislative training through a national conference, major workshops, and
intensive liaison/training sessions in selected states. Responsibilities as Project Director
included overall supervision of all major activities of the project and of the
nine professionals assigned to it; service as chairman of the project's
national conference and major workshops and of the meetings of the project's
advisory board; and contributions to the project's final research products.
Deputy Director, Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), U. S. Department of Justice, 1983‑1984.
BJS is the national repository for statistical
information dealing with crime and the response to crime by criminal justice
systems at all levels of government.
Responsibilities as Deputy Director (a position equal in rank to Deputy
Assistant Attorney General) included coordination, review, and approval of all
BJS's publications, including monthly Bulletins, Special Reports, and all major
annual publications; coordination, review, and approval of the publication of
The Report to the Nation on Crime and Justice:
The Data; administration of BJS's research solicitation program;
oversight of the National Crime Survey Redesign effort; and provision of
leadership and expertise in the development, management, implementation, and
evaluation of all BJS programs.
Associate Dean, Graduate School, Loyola
University of Chicago, 1981‑1982.
Responsibilities included new program and curriculum
development; program evaluation; budgetary management and general
administration of the Graduate School office; service on the Ph.D. Council, the
MA/MS Council, and the Graduate Studies Coordinating Board; and administrative
and budgetary supervision of Loyola's graduate level interdisciplinary
institutes and programs, including the Institute of Industrial Relations, the
Institute of Pastoral Studies, the Parmly Hearing Institute, the Doyle
Counseling Center and Day School, and the Graduate Program in Oral Biology
(School of Dentistry), Urban Studies, and Community and Organizational
Development.
Professional Services:
Member, Editorial Advisory Board, The Public Interest Law Review, 1988-1995
Research Editor, Benchmark,
1986‑1992. Senior Editor,
1983-1986.
Consulting Editor, Perspectives
on Political Science, 1983-present.
Consulting Editor, Current,
1990-present.
Review Panelist, National Endowment for the Humanities,
1984-present.
Review Panelist, National Institute of Justice,
1985-present.
Review Panelist, Commission on the Bicentennial of the
United States Constitution.
Manuscript Reviewer, St. Martin's Press, Prentice-Hall,
University of California Press.
Editorial Board, Marcel Dekker, Inc., 1976-1981.
Editor, Public Affairs Forum, 1974-1977.
Public Service:
Member, National Board of the Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education, 2002-present.
Member, Council of Scholars, American Academy of Liberal
Education, 1994-present, Chairman, 1997-present.
Member, Board of Advisors, American Friends Fund,
Institute of United States Studies, University of London, 1992-present.
Member, Legal Policy Advisory Board, Washington Legal
Foundation, 1988-present.
Member of the Council, Californians in Congress
Recognition Program, 1988-1993.
Member, National Institute of Corrections Advisory
Board, U.S. Department of Justice, 1988-1991.
Member, Robert Presley Institute of Corrections Research
and Training, State of California, 1988-1990.
Member, Board of Trustees, The Episcopal Theological
School of Claremont, Claremont, California, 1987-1991.
Major Honors:
Phi Beta Kappa.
Who's Who in America, 45th edition, 1988
- 56th edition, 2002.
Four-year Ford Foundation Doctoral Fellowship,
1968-1972.
Tozer Foundation Fellowship, 1968.
Pi Gamma Mu Fellowship, 1968.
References:
Available on request.
Publications:
Books:
Federalism, the Supreme Court, and the Seventeenth
Amendment: The Irony of Constitutional
Democracy. Lanham, MD:
Lexington Press, 2001. Author
American Constitutional Law. Vol. I: The Structure of Government. 6th
edition, Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2003; 5th edition, New York: St Martin’s/Worth, 1999; 4th
edition, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995. Co-author.
American Constitutional Law. Vol. II: The Bill of Rights and Subsequent Amendments.
6th edition, Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2003; 5th edition,
New York: St Martin’s/Worth, 1999; 4th edition, New York: St.
Martin's Press, 1995. Co-author.
American Constitutional
Law: Cases and Interpretation. New York: St. Martin's Press, 3rd Edition, 1991; 2nd
Edition, 1987;1st Edition, 1983. Co-author.
The American Founding:
Politics, Statesmanship, and the Constitution. Port
Washington, New York: Kennikat Press Corporation, 1981. Co-author.
Reverse Discrimination: The
Constitutional Debate. New York: Marcel Dekker,
Inc., 1980. Author.
The Politics of the Criminal
Justice System: An Organizational
Analysis. New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc., 1978. Author.
Police, Criminal Justice, and
the Community. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1976.
Co-author.
Urban Administration: Management, Politics and Change. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press Corporation, 1976. Co-editor and Contributor.
Monographs, Articles, and Chapters in Books:
“Text and Tradition:
The Originalist Jurisprudence of Antonin Scalia,” in Earl Maltz (ed.), Rehnquist
Justice (Lawrence: University Press
of Kansas, 2003).
“The Textualist Jurisprudence of Antonin Scalia,” in
Byran-Paul Frost and Jeffrey Sikkenga (eds.), History of American Political Thought (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003).
“California and the Seventeenth
Amendment,” Nexus, Vol. 6, no. 1 (Spring, 2001).
“Federalism, Constitutional
Structure, and the Securing of Liberty,” in Bradley C. S. Watson (ed.), Citizens and
Statesmen: Ann Annual Review of
Political Theory and Political Life. Latrobe, Pa.: Center for Economic and Policy Education, St. Vincent
College, 2001.
“Herbert J. Storing’s Constitutionalism,” Political Science Reviewer, Vol. 30
(2000).
“The Irony of Constitutional Democracy: Federalism, the Supreme Court, and the
Seventeenth Amendment,” San Diego Law
Review, Vol. 36, No. 3 (August-September 1999).
“Scalia's Textualist Jurisprudence,” Perspectives on Political Science, Vol.
28, no. 1 (Winter 1999).
Symposium Editor, “Justice Scalia and A Matter of Interpretation,” Perspectives on Political Science, Vol.
28, no. 1 (Winter 1999).
“The Supreme Court:
Republican Schoolmaster,” in John A. Murley and Kenneth Deutsch (eds.), The Influence of Leo Strauss on the Study of
the American Regime: An Enduring and
Contested Legacy. Savage, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999.
“The Twenty-Sixth Amendment,” in Roger Newman (ed.), The Constitution and Its Amendments. New York:
Macmillan Publishing Co., 1999.
“Juvenile Justice Professionals: Opponents of Reform,” in Gary L. McDowell
and Jinney S. Smith (eds.), Juvenile
Delinquency in the United States and United Kingdom. London: Macmillan, 1999.
“Applying the Voting Rights Act to Judicial Elections: The Supreme Court's Misconstruction of
Section 2 and Misconception of the Judicial Role,” in Anthony A. Peacock (ed.),
Affirmative Action and
Representation: Shaw v. Reno and the
Future of Voting Rights. Durham, N.C.:
Carolina Academic Press, 1997.
“Reforming Juvenile Justice and Improving Juvenile
Character: The Case for the Justice
Model,” Pepperdine Law Review, Vol.
23, No. 3 (1996).
“Holding Juveniles Accountable: Reforming America's ‘Juvenile Injustice
System,’” Pepperdine Law Review, Vol.
22, No. 3 (1995).
“The Supreme Court and the 1992 Election: The Dog that Did Not Bark,” in Roger M.
Barrus and John H. Eastby (eds.), America
through the Looking Glass: A
Constitutionalist Critique of the 1992 Election. Savage, MD: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 1994.
“The Least Dangerous Branch?” in Peter Augustine Lawler
and Robert Martin Schaefer (eds.), The
American Experiment: Essays on the
Theory and Practice of Liberty.
Savage MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. 1994.
“Constituting and Preserving the Republic,” in Eugene W.
Hickok, Gary L. McDowell, and Philip J. Costopoulos (eds.), Our Peculiar Security: The Written Constitution and Limited
Government. Latham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield, 1993.
An Atlas of South-Central Los
Angeles. Claremont, CA: Rose Institute for State and Local Government, 1992. Co-author.
Statistical Profile of
South-Central Los Angeles. Claremont, CA: Rose Institute for State and Local
Government, 1992. Co-author.
“Civic Virtue and Republican Government: The Prudence of
James Wilson's Constitutional Theory,” in John A. Murley, William T.
Braithwaite, and Robert L. Stone (eds.), Law
and Philosophy: The Practice of Theory.
Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1992.
“James Wilson,” Leonard W. Levy and Louis Fisher (eds.),
Encyclopedia of the American Presidency. New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1992.
“Prisoners' Rights,” Encyclopedia
of the American Constitution, Supplement No. 1, edited by Leonard W.
Levy. New York: Macmillan Press, 1992.
“Self‑Incrimination: The Original Intent,” in Eugene W. Hickok (ed.), The Bill of Rights: Original Meaning and
Current Understanding.
Charlottesville: University
Press of Virginia, 1991.
“Power and Republicanism: The Creation of the Presidency,” in Restoring the Presidency: Reconsidering the Twenty‑Second
Amendment. Washington, D.C.: National Legal Center for the Public
Interest, 1990.
“Historical Trends, Legislative Developments, and
Professional Attitudes: Implications
for Legislative Reform of Juvenile Justice,” New Designs for Youth Development, Vol. 9, No. 1-3 (1989).
Congressional Control of the
Judiciary: The Article III Option. Washington, D.C.: Center for Judicial Studies, 1988.
Juvenile Justice Reform: A
Model for the States. Claremont, California: The
Rose Institute of State and Local Government, 1987. Co‑author.
“The Courts and the Judicial Power,” in Leonard W. Levy
and Dennis J. Mahoney (eds.), The Framing
and Ratification of the Constitution.
New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1987.
“The Federalist's Understanding of the Constitution as a
Bill of Rights,” in Charles R. Kesler (ed.), Saving the Revolution: The Federalist Papers and the American Founding.
New York: Free Press, 1987.
“To Render These Rights Secure: James Madison's
Understanding of the Relationship of the Constitution to the Bill of Rights,” Benchmark, Vol. III, Nos. 1 and 2
(1987).
“Separation of Powers and the Legislative Power,”
(Symposium issue on the American Founding) Teaching
Political Science, Vol. 14, No. 1 (Fall 1986).
“Naturalization,” “Denaturalization,” “Expatriation,”
“Deportation,” and “James Wilson and the American Constitution,” five signed
articles for Leonard W. Levy (ed.), Encyclopedia
of the American Constitution. New
York: Macmillan Press, 1986.
“A Means‑Ends Approach to the Study of the
Constitution and Constitutional Law,” Teaching
Political Science, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Fall 1985).
“Plessy, Brown, and the Reverse Discrimination
Cases: Consistency and Continuity in Judicial Approach,” American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 28, No. 6 (July-August 1985).
“The Problem of Prison Crowding: On the Limits of Prison
Capacity and Judicial Capacity,” Benchmark,
Vol. I, No. 6 (November-December 1984).
“Government and Ethics: The Constitutional Foundation,”
in Alan Heslop (ed.), Government and
Ethics (Claremont, California: John Brown Cook Association, 1982‑83),
reprinted in Teaching Political Science,
Vol. 11, No. 3 (Spring 1984).
“Congress, the Constitution and the Appellate
Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court: The Letter and Spirit of the Exceptions
Clause,” William and Mary Law Review,
Vol. 24, No. 3 (April 1983). Reprinted
in Congressional Record, September
10, 1985.
“ABSCAM: On the Nature of Separation of Powers and Entrapment,”
in Walter P. Krolikowski, ed., Faith and
Justice. Chicago, Illinois: Loyola
University Press, 1982.
“Weber and the
Limits of Judicial Policy-Making,” Law
and Policy Quarterly, Vol. IV, No. 1 (January 1982).
“The Supreme Court as Republican Schoolmaster: Freedom
of Speech, Political Equality, and the Teaching of Political Responsibility,”
in Gary McDowell, ed., Taking the
Constitution Seriously: Essays on the Constitution and Constitutional Law. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co.,
1981.
“The Courts and the Delivery of Urban Services. The Rise and Fall of Equalization
Litigation.” The Urban Interest, Vol. 2, No. 1 (1980). Reprinted in Current
Municipal Problems, Vol. 7, No. 1 (1980).
“The Entrapment Defense and the Teaching of Political
Responsibility: The Supreme Court as Republican Schoolmaster,” American Journal of Criminal Law, Vol.
6, No. 3 (November 1978). Reprinted in
Paul L. Murphy, ed., The Bill of Rights
and American Legal History: Criminal Procedure. New York: Garland
Publishing, 1990.
“Representation and Republican Government: Contemporary
Court Variations on the Founders' Theme,” American
Journal of Jurisprudence, Vol. 23 (1978).
Reprinted in Gary McDowell, ed., Taking
the Constitution Seriously: Essays on the Constitution and Constitutional Law. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co.,
1981.
“The Entrapment Defense and the Supreme Court: On
Defining the Limits of Political Responsibility,” Memphis State University Law Review, Vol. VII, No. 3 (Spring 1977).
“The Foundations of the American Commercial Republic,”
in J. Chaudhuri (ed.), The Non-Lockean
Roots of American Democratic Thought.
Tucson: University of Arizona
Press, 1977.
“Ameliorative Racial Preference and the Fourteenth
Amendment: Some Constitutional Problems,” Journal
of Politics, Vol. 38, No. 2 (May 1976).
“James Wilson and the ‘Pyramid of Government,’” Political Science Reviewer, Vol. VI
(1976).
“Compliance Theory and the Criminal Process: Towards an
Understanding of Interface Problems in the Criminal Justice System,” Midwest Review of Public Administration,
Vol. 9, No. 4 (October 1975).
“New Rights and Old Wrongs: The Supreme Court and the
Problem of Retroactivity,” Emory Law
Journal, Vol. 23, No. 2 (Spring 1974).
“Problems in Municipal Court Administration and the
Stress of Supreme Court Decisions: A Memphis Case Study,” American Journal of Criminal Law, Vol. 3, No. 1 (Spring 1974).
“Theodore R. Marmor and The Politics of Medicare,” American
Politics Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 3 (July 1974).
“Judicial Administration in Tennessee: Problems and
Prospects,” Public Affairs Forum,
Vol. IV, No. 1 (October 1974).
Research in Progress:
“Text and Tradition: The Originalist Jurisprudence of Antonin Scalia.” Book-length manuscript in preparation.
Papers:
Papers presented to the annual meetings of the American Political Science Association, the Communitarian Summit, the Southwestern Political Science Association, the Western Political Science Association, and the American Statistical Association.
Book Reviews:
Book reviews in the American
Political Science Review, the Journal
of Politics, Publius, Benchmark, Constitutional Commentary, Perspectives
on Politics, The Claremont Review of
Books, and the Social Science
Quarterly.