Class of 1977 Distinguished Scholar Expertise: Constitutional Law, First Amendment, Comparative Constitutionalism, Constitutional Design, Latin American Studies
Education
JD, Tulane University
MA, Tulane University
BA, Tulane University
Experience
Selected Publications
Significant Accomplishments
As a child, Miguel Schor immigrated with his parents to the United States from Argentina to escape the nation’s political turmoil during the 1960s. He became a naturalized citizen when he turned 18.
“Part of the oath of citizenship I took was to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic,” Schor says. “I never thought that one day I would be teaching and writing about the Constitution.”
Schor is a professor at Drake University Law School and an expert in constitutional law and comparative constitutionalism. He teaches Constitutional Law I and II, The First Amendment, and advanced Constitutional Law courses.
Schor’s path to constitutional law came from a unique source: Latin American studies. Drawing from his own experiences, Schor pursued a master’s degree, focusing on comparative studies of Latin American constitutions. He notes that while the region adopted many ideas from the U.S. Constitution, it experienced vastly different political outcomes.
That research sparked his interest in constitutional law. After earning his law degree, Schor clerked for two years, spent a year as a Bigelow Fellow at the University of Chicago School of Law, and then practiced law in New Orleans. He was a professor at Suffolk University in Boston before joining the Drake Law faculty full-time in 2012.
During his career, Schor has presented and published numerous articles on topics including the debate between originalism and the living constitution; constitutional dialogue and judicial supremacy; and comparative judicial review. His research focuses on problems of constitutional design.