Kathleen Sullivan presents "Free Speech, Federalism and the
Political Valence of Constitutional Law."
Kathleen M. Sullivan is partner and chair of the national
appellate practice at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, the
nation's largest law firm devoted solely to business litigation, as
well as Stanley Morrison Professor of Law at Stanford, where she
served as Dean from 1999 to 2004. The first woman dean of any
school at Stanford, she is also the first woman named partner at
any American Lawyer 100 firm. Widely recognized as one of the
nation's most prominent constitutional scholars and appellate
litigators, Ms. Sullivan has been named by The National Law
Journal as one of the 100 Most Influential Lawyers in
America.
As a professor of law at Harvard and Stanford Law Schools for
over 25 years, Ms. Sullivan has taught constitutional law to
thousands of law students, served as co-author with the late Gerald
Gunther of the nation's leading casebook onConstitutional Law, and
published law review articles on a wide range of constitutional
topics, including federalism, separation of powers, freedom of
speech, freedom of religion and the jurisprudence of the Supreme
Court. She has also provided pro bono representation in
a variety of case involving civil rights and civil liberties,
including the right of privacy.
Now based in Quinn Emanuel's New York office, Ms. Sullivan
handles appeals and motions in a wide range of business litigation
matters. She has argued six cases in the US Supreme Court, winning
victories for such clients as Wyeth, Inc. involving federal
preemption of design defect suits under the Vaccine Act, Shell Oil
in a case involving "arranger" liability under the Superfund
statute, and California wineries in a case involving the ability to
ship wine directly to consumers across state lines.She also has
argued numerous cases in the US Courts of Appeals, including the
First, Second, Third, Fifth, Seventh, Ninth and Federal Circuits;
and various cases in state appellate courts, including a historic
victory in the New York Court of Appeals for the right of New York
Governor David Paterson to appoint a lieutenant governor to fill a
vacancy in that office
Ms. Sullivan holds a B.A. from Cornell University, where she was
a Telluride Scholar, an M.A. from Oxford University, which she
attended as a Marshall Scholar, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School,
where she won the Ames Moot Court competition. She is an elected
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an elected
Member of the American Philosophical Society, founded by Benjamin
Franklin and based in Philadelphia