Lackland H. Bloom, Jr.

Headshot of Lackland H. Bloom, Jr., faculty member at SMU Dedman School of Law.

Professor Emeritus of Law

Emeritus faculty

Email

lbloom@smu.edu

Lackland H. Bloom, Jr. is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif, as well as administrative editor of the Michigan Law Review. He clerked for Chief Justice John R. Brown of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. He later was associated with the Washington firm of Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering. A specialist in constitutional law, he has published articles concerning freedom of speech and the rhetoric of Supreme Court opinions. The Oxford University Press has published Professor Bloom’s book DO GREAT CASES MAKE BAD LAW? (2014), as well as his previous book METHODS OF INTERPRETATION: HOW THE SUPREME COURT READS THE CONSTITUTION (2009). Professor Bloom is also active in the field of copyright.

Area of expertise

  • Constitutional Law

Education

B.A.,  Southern Methodist University
J.D.,  University of Michigan Law School

Courses

Constitutional Law
Freedom of Speech, Press and Religion

Books

DO GREAT CASES MAKE BAD LAW? (Oxford University Press 2014)

METHODS OF INTERPRETATION: HOW THE SUPREME COURT READS THE CONSTITUTION (Oxford University Press 2009)

Articles

Reversing Grutter, 77 SMU Law Journal 305 (2024)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Defiance, 55 St. Mary's Law Journal 641 (2024)
SSRN | SMU Repository

John Stuart Mill and Political Correctness, 56 University of Louisville Law Review 1 (2017)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Copyright Under Seige: The First Amendment Front, 9 Computer Law Review 41-61 (2004)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Grutter and Gratz: A Critical Analysis, 40 Houston Law Review 459-513 (2004)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Interpretive Issues in Seminole and Alden, 55 SMU Law Review 377 (2002)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Bad Consequences, 55 SMU Law Review 69 (2002)
SSRN | SMU Repository

NEA v. Finley: A Decision in Search of a Rationale, 77 Washington University Law Quarterly 1 (1999)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Long Live the Bill of Rights! Long Live Akhil Amar's The Bill of Rights, 33 University of Richmond Law Review 313 (1999)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Hopwood, Bakke and the Future of the Diversity Justification, 29 Texas Tech Law Review 1 (1998)
SSRN | SMU Repository

Other publications

Joe McKnight and the Oxford Summer Program, 71 SMU Law Review 15 (2018)
SMU Repository

A Meeting of the Minds: SMU and NYU Host Historic Summit with Russian, U.S. and Texas Justices, 33 The Brief 3 (Summer 2001)
SMU Repository

Media

Defamation, Privacy and the "Rotten Neighbors" Website
Interview
NBC Today Show
(January 22, 2008)