John Q. Barrett is a Professor of Law at St.
John's University in New York City, where he teaches
constitutional law, criminal procedure and legal
history, and he is the Elizabeth S. Lenna Fellow at
the Robert H. Jackson
Center in Jamestown, New York. He is a graduate of
Georgetown University (1983) and Harvard Law School (1986).
Justice Robert H. Jackson: Professor
Barrett is writing a biography of the late U.S.
Supreme Court Justice and Nuremberg prosecutor
Robert H. Jackson (1892-1954). This work will
include the first inside account of Justice Jackson's service,
by appointment of President Truman, as the chief
prosecutor at Nuremberg, Germany, of the principal surviving
Nazi leaders during 1945 and 1946.
The Jackson List: Professor Barrett
sends periodic emails to thousands of readers who are
interested in Justice Robert H. Jackson and related
topics. To read archived copies of
some Jackson List posts,
click here. To join the Jackson List, which does not
display recipient identities or email addresses, send a
"subscribe" note to barrettj@stjohns.edu.
That Man: An Insider's Portrait of Franklin
D. Roosevelt. Professor Barrett discovered and
edited Justice Robert H. Jackson's previously
unknown, never published, now acclaimed book
That Man: An Insider's Portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt
(Oxford University Press).
That Man, Jackson's intimate, eloquent memoir of FDR from their
first meeting as young men in 1911 through their very
close working relationship and friendship during the New Deal
years and World War II, is available in
paperback in bookstores and on line, including
through
Amazon.Com and
Barnes&Noble.Com.
That Man, a Main Selection of the
Book of the Month Club and the
History Book Club and a Choice Outstanding Academic
title, has been reviewed prominently in many
publications, including The New York Times Book
Review,
The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times,
The Wall Street Journal,
The Washington Monthly,
The New Republic and Legal Times. Professor Barrett
has discussed
That Man in major media and public venues throughout
the United States, including on
NPR's "All Things Considered".
Recent Activities: Professor
Barrett's article, A Rehnquist Ode on the Vinson
Court (circa Summer 1953), which will be published later
this month in The Green Bag
2d, is available for downloading through the Social Science
Research Network (SSRN): click
here.
Last November, Professor Barrett
helped to organize and participated as a panelist in the Presidential
Libraries/National Archives conference, "The Presidency &
the Supreme Court," at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential
Library in Hyde Park, New York. Last September,
Professor Barrett was featured in the report,
"Gonzales Case Echoes FDR's AG Problems," on National Public
Radio's "Morning Edition." Last August,
Professor Barrett gave the opening lecture at the first International Humanitarian
Law Dialog, an unprecendented gathering of chief prosecutors
from international criminal tribunals; this lecture
is available for viewing on FORA.tv. In July, he
participated in a D.C. Circuit
Historical Society examination of the Steel Seizure Cases,
introduced former Solicitor General Seth P. Waxman's Robert H.
Jackson Lecture at Chautauqua Institution and gave the
principal speech at the Jackson Center's annual Jackson Society
summer meeting.
During the past three years,
Professor Barrett was a principal speaker at numerous
conferences commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Nuremberg
Trial, including conferences in Nuremberg itself, at the Russian
Academy of Sciences in Moscow and, in the United States, at
locations including Harvard University, the Truman Presidential
Library, Chautauqua Institution, Washington University in St.
Louis, and Bowling Green State
University. He appears in the film
Hitler's Courts: Betrayal of the Rule of Law in Nazi
Germany and in the PBS/WGBH American
Experience documentary, The Nuremberg Trials. His chapter
"One Good Man": The Jacksonian Shape of Nuremberg,
is in The
Nuremberg Trials: International Criminal Law Since 1945
(K.G. Saur, München, 2006), and his chapter Terry v.
Ohio: The Fourth Amendment Reasonableness of Police Stops and
Frisks Based on Less Than Probable Cause, appears in
Criminal Procedure Stories (Foundation Press
2006).
Before joining the St. John's faculty, Professor Barrett was
Counselor during 1994-1995 to U.S. Department of
Justice Inspector General Michael R. Bromwich. From
1988-1993, Barrett was Associate Counsel in the Office of
Independent Counsel Lawrence E. Walsh (Iran/Contra). From
1986-1988, Barrett served as a law clerk to Judge A. Leon
Higginbotham, Jr. of the United States Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit in Philadelphia (1986-1988).
In addition to teaching Constitutional Law
and Criminal Procedure, Professor
Barrett has taught legal history seminars
on American Judicial Biography, the Hughes and Stone
Courts (1930-46), and the Nuremberg Trial, Introduction
to Law & the Legal Profession, Professional
Responsibility, and White Collar Crime. Professor
Barrett also has taught Constitutional Law modules in St.
John's Summer Prep Program for College Students and a
course, "Nuremberg, International Human Rights &
Humanitarian Law," in Touro Law Center's summer
program at the
University of Potsdam Law School in Germany.
Professor Barrett speaks regularly on the Supreme
Court, Justice Jackson, Nuremberg, Franklin D. Roosevelt,
That Man and other legal and historical topics
in public venues and to community, campus, corporate and other
audiences and groups throughout the United States and abroad.
Professor Barrett also is a regular national media
commentator on legal and historical issues.
Professor Barrett is a member of the Supreme Court Historical
Society, serves on The Roosevelt
Institution advisory board, is a member New York City Bar Association
and its Legal History Committee, and is a supporter of The Parent-Child Home
Program and the National
Association for Urban Debate Leagues.
Last updated 5/14/2008.