Kevin Saunders
Professor of Law & The Charles Clarke Chair in Constitutional Law Michigan State University
Biography
Industry Expertise
Areas of Expertise
Accomplishments
2001 Regents' Award for Superior Accomplishment in Research and Creative Activity
Award given by University of Oklahoma
Education
University of Michigan
J.D.
1984
University of Miami
Ph.D.
1978
University of Michigan;
M.A.
1976
University of Michigan;
M.S.
1970
Franklin and Marshall College
A.B.
1968
Affiliations
- Order of the Coif
 
News
1st and 2nd Amendments clash in ‘Docs v. Glocks’
Spartan News Room
2017-02-27
Kevin Saunders, a professor of law and the Charles Clarke Chair in Constitutional Law at Michigan State University, said that the Firearms Owners’ Privacy Act violated the First Amendment because doctors talking to their patients about firearms clearly didn’t fit the exceptions.
“The First Amendment, with certain exceptions, gives you freedom to say what you want to say,” Saunders said...
Trump wants flag burners punished. Political correctness run amok?
The Christian Science Monitor
2016-11-29
But even if flag-burning became illegal, stripping citizenship as a punishment for a criminal act, as suggested in Trump's tweet on Tuesday, would also be unconstitutional, explains Kevin Saunders, professor of law and Charles Clarke Chair of Constitutional Law at Michigan State University in East Lansing.
"The 14th Amendment says that all those born here or naturalized are citizens. Simple violation of a law by a citizen cannot lead to the loss of that citizenship," Dr. Saunders tells the Monitor in an email. "Citizenship may be renounced and may be lost through treason but not for this sort of what amounts to political speech."...
Journal Articles
Virtual worlds-real courts
Villanova Law Review2007
The intent is that, if the dispute arose in a virtual world with courts, the case has to be resolved there; but if there are no courts in that world, jurisdiction is available in a real world court. In application, everything worked well for a while. Everyone had some court to which...
A disconnect between law and neuroscience: Modern brain science, media influences, and juvenile justice
Utah Law Review2005
Constitutional law is often a matter of analyzing history and underlying legal principles or philosophical concepts such as equality and human dignity, but there are instances in which facts play a strong to dispositive role. If government infringes on a fundamental right, its...
The need for a two (or more) tiered first amendment to provide for the protection of children
Chicago-Kent Law Review2004
Spillover violations have been found in the attempts to limit youth access to sexually indecent material on the Internet. Both the Communications Decency Act ("CDA") 5 and the  Child Online Protection Act ("COPA") 6 were aimed at legitimate goals but unconstitutionally




