Tony A. Freyer
University Research Professor Ph.D. Indiana University, 1975

tfreyer@law.ua.edu
Fall 2008 Office Hours: Wed. 12:30 -1:45 p.m.
U.S. legal and constitutional
Professor
Freyer received an A.B. in 1970 from San Diego
State University and an M.A. in 1972 and a Ph.D. in history in
1975 from Indiana
University. He taught at the University of Arkansas at Little
Rock from 1976 to 1981, when he joined the University of Alabama
faculty. In 1985 he became an associate professor of history
and law in the history department and in the School of Law; in
1986 he was promoted to professor of history and law and in
1990 was named University Research Professor. In 1992 he
received the University's Burnum Distinguished Faculty Award.
His publications include
Forums of Order (1979),
Harmony and Dissonance: The
Swift and Erie Cases in American Federalism
(1981), The Little Rock
Crisis
(1984),
Justice Hugo L. Black and the
Dilemma of American Liberalism (1990),
Hugo L. Black and Modern
America (1990),
Regulating Big Business:
Antitrust in Great Britain and America, 1880-1990
(1992), Producers versus
Capitalists: Constitutional Conflict in Antebellum America
(1994), Democracy and
Judicial Independence: A History of Alabama's Federal Courts
(1995),
Little Rock on Trial Cooper v. Aaron and School
Desegregation (2007), and some 30 articles in such journals as
the
Wisconsin Law Review, Iowa Law
Review, Vanderbilt Law Review,
World Competition Law and
Economic Review, Arizona Journal of International and
Comparative Law, and
Business History Review.
Professor Freyer was a Harvard-Newcomen Postdoctoral Fellow at
the
Harvard Business School
in 1975-76 and a research fellow at the Charles Warren Center
at Harvard in 1981-82. He has been a Senior Fulbright Scholar
at the London School of Economics and Political Science (1986)
and in Australia (1993). In Spring, 2000 he holds the Fulbright
Distinguished Chair in American Studies at the University of
Warsaw, Poland. He is a member of the editorial boards of the
Business History Review, published by the Harvard Business
School. He teaches legal history and coordinated the School of Law's
Justice Hugo Black Centennial Celebration (1983-86). During
1995-96 he held an Abe Fellowship from the Social Science
Research Council to study antitrust in Japan. His work entitled Little Rock on Trial
Cooper v. Aaron and School Desegregation (University Press of Kansas, 2007),
received the Arkansas Historical Association's J. R. Ragsdale Award for the Best
Book on Arkansas History for 2007.
On May 22, 2008 I delivered, with Justice David Souter's
introduction, a lecture at the U.S. Supreme Court entitled "Swift v. Tyson:
the Trials of An Ephemeral Landmark Case." In 2008, Pearson Longman
published a second, enlarge edition of his book, Justice Hugo
L. Black and the Dilemma of Amercian Liberalism. His book Harmony &
Dissonance: The Swift & Erie Cases in American Federalism
(New York University Press, 1981) will be honored at a ceremony in New York City
on September 20, 2008 commemorating the 70th Anniversary of Erie Railroad v.
Tompkins (1938), sponsored by the Luzerne County Bar Association (PA), the Bar
of the City of New York, the New York Bar Association, the American Bar
Association, The Pennsylvania Bar Association, and the Honourable Society of the
Middle Temple Inn of Court.
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