



















Ronald
D. Rotunda, University Professor and Professor of Law, joined the faculty
in 2002. He was the George Mason University Foundation Professor
of Law from 2002 to 2006, when he became University Professor and Professor of Law. Before that, he was the Albert E. Jenner,
Jr. Professor of Law, at the University of Illinois. He is a magna cum laude graduate of
Harvard College
and a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard
Law School,
where he was a member of Harvard Law Review. He joined the
University of Illinois
faculty in 1974 after clerking for Judge Walter R. Mansfield of the United
States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, practicing law in Washington, D.C.,
and serving as assistant majority counsel for the Watergate Committee. He has
co-authored the most widely used course book on legal ethics, Problems and Materials on
Professional Responsibility (Foundation Press, 9th ed. 2006) and is the
author of a leading course book on constitutional law, Modern Constitutional Law
(West Publishing Co., 8th ed. 2007). He is the coauthor of, Legal Ethics: The
Lawyer's Deskbook on Professional Responsibility (ABA-West Group, St. Paul,
Minnesota, 5th ed., 2007) (jointly published by the ABA and West Group, a
division of Thompson Publishing) (with John Dzienkowski). Rotunda is also the
co-author (with John Nowak) of the five volume Treatise on Constitutional
Law (West Publishing Co., 4th ed. 2007), and a one volume Treatise on
Constitutional Law (West Publishing Co., 7th ed. 2004). He is also the
author of several other books and more than 200 articles in various
law reviews, journals, newspapers, and books in this country and in Europe. His works have been translated into French,
German, Romanian, Czech, Russian, and Korean. These books and articles have been cited more
than 1000 times by state and federal courts at every level, from trial courts
to the U.S. Supreme Court. He has been interviewed on radio and television on
legal issues, both in this country
and abroad. In 1993 he was the Constitutional Law Adviser to the Supreme
National Council of Cambodia and assisted that country in writing its first
democratic constitution. He has consulted with various new democracies in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union, including Moldova,
Romania,
and Ukraine,
on their proposed constitutions and judicial codes. He chaired the subcommittee
that drafted the American Bar Association's Model Rules for Lawyer Disciplinary
Enforcement; is a member of the Publications Board of the A.B.A. Center for
Professional Responsibility since 1994; was a member of the A.B.A. Standing
Committee on Professional Discipline (1991-1997); and was Liaison to the A.B.A.
Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility (1994-1997). He was a Fulbright Professor in Venezuela in
1986 and a Fulbright Research Scholar in Italy in 1981. In 1996 he assisted the Czech Republic in
drafting the first Rules of Ethics for lawyers in that country. During
the Spring, 1999 semester, he was Visiting Professor at the University of
Alabama School of Law, holding the John S. Stone Endowed Chair of Law. During the summer and fall of 2000, he was
the Visiting Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, in Washington, DC. In the fall of 2001, he was visiting
professor at George Mason University School of Law. During November-December, 2002, he was Visiting
Scholar, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Faculty of Law, Leuven, Belgium. In May, 2004, and December, 2005, he was
visiting lecturer at the Institute of Law and Economics, Institut für Recht und
Ökonomik, at the University of Hamburg.
From early June, 2004 to May, 2005, he was the Special Counsel to the General Counsel of the Department of
Defense. He was on the Panel of
Contributing Editors that produced, Black's
Law Dictionary (Thompson-West, 8th ed. 2004). From 2005-2006, he was a member of the Task
Force on Judicial Functions of the Commission
on Virginia Courts in the 21st Century: To Benefit All, to Exclude
None. In May, 2000, American Law
Media, publisher of The American Lawyer, the National Law Journal,
and the Legal Times picked Professor Rotunda as one of the ten most
influential Illinois Lawyers. Also in
2000, a lengthy study that the
University of Chicago Press published, which sought to determine the influence,
productivity, and reputations of law professors over the last several decades,
listed Professor Rotunda as the 17th highest in the nation. The 2002-2003 New Educational Quality
Ranking of U.S. Law Schools (EQR) ranks Professor Rotunda as the eleventh
most cited of all law faculty in the United States. See http://www.leiterrankings.com/faculty/2002faculty_impact_cites.shtml
. In July, 2007, he was one of the main speakers at the
International Judicial Conference hosted by the United States Embassy, the
Supreme Court of Latvia, and the Latvian Ministry of Justice. The other main
speakers were Justice Samuel Alito, the President of Latvia, the Prime Minister
of Latvia, the Chief Justice of Latvia, and the Minister of Justice of Latvia.
On February 27, 2008, President George
W. Bush nominated Ronald Rotunda to become a member of the Privacy and Civil
Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) for an initial four-year term and sent his
nomination to the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
for confirmation hearings on the nominees.
