Amanda Tyler
Thomas David & Judith Swope Clark Professor of Constitutional Law
Amanda Tyler
Thomas David & Judith Swope Clark Professor of Constitutional Law
Biography
Amanda L. Tyler holds the inaugural Thomas David & Judith Swope Clark Chair in Constitutional Law at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law. Professor Tyler’s research and teaching interests include the Supreme Court, federal courts, constitutional law, legal history, civil procedure, and statutory interpretation.
She is the co-author, with the Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue: A Life’s Work Fighting for a More Perfect Union, published by the University of California Press in 2021 and released in paperback by Simon & Schuster in 2023. The book is an outgrowth of Justice Ginsburg’s 2019 visit to Berkeley Law when she and Tyler sat down for a conversation about Justice Ginsburg’s life. Tyler is also the author of Habeas Corpus in Wartime: From the Tower of London to Guantanamo Bay, published in 2017 by Oxford University Press and released in paperback in 2019, as well as Habeas Corpus: A Very Short Introduction, published in 2021 by Oxford University Press.
Tyler has contributed to many books and published with the Atlantic, the Lawfare Blog, other media outlets, and numerous law journals. Recent articles include Courts and the Executive in Wartime: A Comparative Study of the American and British Approaches to the Internment of Citizens During World War II and Their Lessons for Today, 107 California Law Review 789 (2019); and Habeas Corpus in Wartime and Larger Lessons for Constitutional Law, Harvard Law Review Online (April 2019). Another article, Judicial Review in Times of Emergency: From the Founding Through the COVID-19 Pandemic, published in 2023 with the Virginia Law Review.
Since 2016, Professor Tyler has served as a co-editor of Hart and Wechsler’s The Federal Courts and the Federal System (Foundation Press), publishing annual supplements to the Seventh Edition through 2023 (with Richard H. Fallon, Jr., Jack L. Goldsmith, John F. Manning, and David L. Shapiro), and preparing the Eighth Edition of the widely used casebook and treatise for publication in December 2025 (with William Baude, Jack L. Goldsmith, John F. Manning, and James Pfander).
Prior to joining the Berkeley Law faculty in 2012, Professor Tyler served on the faculty of the George Washington University Law School and was a visiting professor at Harvard Law School, New York University School of Law, and the University of Virginia School of Law. In 2017, she was a Visiting Senior Fellow in the Law Department of the London School of Economics and the Order of the Coif Distinguished Visitor. Tyler is a past Chair of the Federal Courts Section of the American Association of Law Schools and is an elected member of the American Law Institute. In 2020, Professor Tyler received the law school’s Rutter Award for Teaching Distinction.
Professor Tyler holds a degree in Public Policy, with honors and distinction, from Stanford University, and a J.D., magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School. At Stanford, she played on the Division I Women’s Soccer Team. At Harvard, she served as Treasurer of the Harvard Law Review and won the George Leisure Award for Best Oralist in the James Barr Ames Moot Court Finals.
Following law school, Professor Tyler served as a law clerk to the Honorable Guido Calabresi at the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and the Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg at the Supreme Court of the United States. She also practiced as an associate with the law firm of Sidley & Austin in Washington, D.C. Before law school, Tyler worked at the United States Department of Justice.
Professor Tyler has run 26 marathons, including 16 Boston Marathons. Since 2015, she has served as Faculty Fellow to the Cal Women’s Soccer Team.
Speech Topics
Exploring Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Legacy
Drawing on inspiring stories from the book she co-wrote with U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg—Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue—Amanda Tyler traces her mentor’s lifelong pursuit of gender equality and unwavering commitment to achieving “a more perfect Union" through her career as a civil rights lawyer and as a judge on the high court. In a more personal vein, Tyler explores the impact of Justice Ginsburg on the lives of those who worked with and for her—from her exacting and meticulous standards to her deep integrity, personal warmth, and generosity as a mentor and friend. With special insights into Justice Ginsburg’s legacy, audiences are left inspired by her example to keep up the work toward the U.S. Constitution’s aspiration of “a more perfect Union.”
Behind the Curtain View of the U.S. Supreme Court
As a former law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and a distinguished scholar of civil liberties, constitutional law, and the federal court system, Amanda Tyler offers audiences a deeply informed, behind-the-curtain perspective on the inner workings of the Supreme Court. With stories that bring the latest and most important decisions to life—and with a focus on the cases of greatest interest and relevance to your audience—Tyler makes the Court and its processes more accessible, while tracing the likely impact of specific decisions—on American society, business and the economy, and on the individual lives of American citizens.
Finding Common Ground Even When We Disagree
At a time when social and political conflict have made us more polarized than ever before, Amanda Tyler shares stories of how our constitutional system was born out of compromise and how at critical moments in United States history, civil discourse has taken center stage. She also shares timeless principles she learned from Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for whom she clerked and with whom she wrote a book. Although Justice Ginsburg never wavered in her pursuit of justice and equality, she also believed strongly in the principles of civil discourse and respectful debate. As Tyler shares through stories and lessons learned, Justice Ginsburg’s long-standing, deep friendship with conservative Justice Antonin Scalia proved a lesson for us all in taking seriously the views of those with whom you disagree and approaching conflict with humility, all the while finding common ground.
Habeas Corpus & Emergency Powers
Having authored two books on habeas corpus in wartime and lectured widely while serving as a go-to expert for government agencies and the press on presidential emergency powers, Amanda Tyler can dissect recent events involving claimed emergency presidential powers against the backdrop of historical experience. Tyler shares stories of past periods of constitutional stress in the United States, while offering insights gleaned from history that bear on how to think about the separation of powers in the United States government today.
World War II & the Woman Who Closed the Japanese American Detention Camps
At a time when the country is yearning for constitutional heroes, Amanda Tyler shares the story of the young woman who filed the only direct challenge to the United States government’s mass detention of over one hundred thousand Japanese Americans during World War II. Supported by a lawyer who encountered threats to his life and took on the case when no other lawyer would, the woman at the heart of the case of Ex parte Endo was the only Japanese American litigant to win a case before the U.S. Supreme Court during the War. Tyler will share the inspiring story of how Mitsuye Endo selflessly turned down release from the camps in order to keep her case alive, spending almost two extra years behind barbed wire for the benefit of all Japanese Americans. As Tyler explains, Endo’s eventual victory before the high court led directly to the closing of the camps, leading many survivors of the camps to call her “the woman who set us free.”