Cato Institute event "Law, Politics, and Same-Sex Marriage" on C-SPAN 2
Walter Olson is a senior fellow at the
Cato Institute's
Center for Constitutional Studies. Prior to joining
Cato, Olson was a senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute, and has been a columnist for
Great Britain's Times Online as well as
Reason. His writing appears regularly in such publications as the
Wall Street Journal,
The New York Times, and the
New York Post. He has appeared numerous times before
Congress and advised many public officials.
The Washington Post has dubbed him the "intellectual guru of tort reform." His approximately 400 broadcast appearances include all the major networks,
CNN,
Fox News,
PBS,
NPR, and "
Oprah".
Olson's most recent book, Schools for
Misrule:
Legal Academia and an Overlawyered
America (
Encounter Books), appeared in
2011 and was described by
Publisher's Weekly as "cutting-edge commentary," "astute," "witty" and "hard-hitting." His previous book on mass litigation, The
Rule of Lawyers, was hailed in leading publications including
Forbes,
The American Lawyer, and
Barron's. The Excuse
Factory, his
1997 book on lawsuits in the workplace, was met with accolades in the
London Times and the
A.B.A.
Journal. Olson's widely discussed first book, The Litigation
Explosion, was cited by
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in a major
Supreme Court case. On the web, he founded and continues to run Overlawyered.com, widely cited as the oldest blog on law as well as one of the most popular.
Ilya Shapiro is a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute and editor-in-chief of the Cato
Supreme Court Review. Before joining Cato, he was a special assistant/advisor to the
Multi-National Force in Iraq on rule of law issues and practiced international, political, commercial, and antitrust litigation at
Patton Boggs and
Cleary Gottlieb. Shapiro has contributed to a variety of academic, popular, and professional publications, including the Wall Street Journal,
Harvard Journal of Law &
Public Policy,
L.A. Times,
USA Today,
National Law Journal,
Weekly Standard,
New York Time Online, and
National Review Online, and from 2004 to
2007 wrote the "
Dispatches from
Purple America" column for
TCS Daily.com. He also regularly provides commentary for various media outlets, including CNN, Fox News,
ABC,
CBS,
NBC, Univision and Telemundo,
The Colbert Report, NPR, and
American Public Media's
Marketplace. Shapiro has provided testimony to Congress and state legislatures and, as coordinator of Cato's amicus brief program, filed more than
100 "friend of the court" briefs in the
Supreme Court. He lectures regularly on behalf of the
Federalist Society and other groups, is a member of the
Legal Studies Institute's board of visitors at
The Fund for American Studies, was an inaugural
Washington Fellow at the
National Review Institute, and has been an adjunct professor at the
George Washington University Law School. Before entering private practice, Shapiro clerked for
Judge E. Grady Jolly of the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit, while living in
Mississippi and traveling around the
Deep South. He holds an
A.B. from
Princeton University, an
M.Sc. from the
London School of Economics, and a
J.D. from the
University of Chicago Law School (where he became a
Tony Patiño Fellow). Shapiro is a member of the bars of
New York, the
District of Columbia, and the U.S. Supreme Court. He is a native speaker of
English and
Russian, is fluent in
Spanish and
French, and is proficient in
Italian and
Portuguese.
http://www.cato.org/people/walter-olson
http://www.cato.org/people/ilya-shapiro