The Texas Law faculty is a diverse collection of thinkers and scholars with one thing in common—they all love to teach.
World-class minds
Learn from the best.
Our professors are on the leading edge of the most important debates in American law. They write scholarship that everyone talks about. They write the books you’ll be learning from. They will be your teachers, your mentors, and your guides through the law school curriculum.
Making Constitutional Law: On the Front Lines
All of our faculty members possess an unwavering dedication to their students and their scholarship. These three are shaping the future of law and the courts in substantive ways and their love for teaching transforms the ordinary classroom into an inspired place where ideas flourish.
Tara Grove
A renowned expert on constitutional law and an authority on textualism as an interpretive philosophy, Prof. Grove has published scholarship on those subjects in some of the leading law journals in the country. In 2021, she was among a select group named to the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States, a bipartisan committee charged with examining proposals to reform the Court.
Lawrence Sager
Lawrence Sager is one of the nation’s preeminent constitutional theorists and scholars. He has written and co-written dozens of articles, many of them now classics in the canon of legal scholarship and our understanding of the founding document. His expertise also encompasses philosophy, and he helps lead our Law & Philosophy Program.
Richard Albert
With a focus on constitution-making and constitutional design, Richard Albert is one of the premier scholars of comparative constitutional law. He is a prolific author, editor, speaker, and an advisor to governments and parliaments on constitutional reform. He recently served on the 15-person Constitutional Reform Committee advising the Government of Jamaica on writing and enacting its new constitution.
Featured Faculty Profiles and Stories
Faculty in the Media
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Austin American-Statesman
Austin churches, schools react to Trump administration cutting immigration raid protections
Professor Elissa Steglich weighs in on a new Homeland Security directive allowing immigration raids to happen in churches, explaining that schools and places of worship have been excluded from raids since at least 1993. -
Houston Chronicle
Professor Heather Way speaks on the practice of landlords adding hidden fees to tenants’ housing costs and how these added charges can affect even those enrolled in affordable housing programs. -
NRDC
Are Our Public Lands on the Chopping Block Again?
Professor Melinda Taylor discusses the aspect of Project 2025 that, if implemented, would encourage offering public lands to private developers.
Faculty Experts for the Media
Looking for a Texas Law faculty expert to provide commentary or background on a legal issue in the news?