Paul M. Collins, Jr.

Professor of Legal Studies and Political Science / Director of Legal Studies University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Amherst MA

Paul Collins' research focuses on bias and inequality in the legal system, the selection and work of judges and social movement litigation.

Contact

Expertise

Bias in Judicial Appointments
Judicial Appointments
Public Law
Inequality in the Legal System
American Politics
Judicial Ethics
Judicial Elections
Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings

Biography

Paul M. Collins investigates the factors that shape the selection and decision-making process of U.S. Supreme Court justices and interest group litigation.

His research and commentary have appeared in a host of popular media outlets, including CNN, the National Law Journal, National Public Radio, The New York Times, New Yorker, San Francisco Chronicle, Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post. He has also authored articles in SCOTUSblog, Slate, The Conversation, The New York Daily News and the Washington Post.

Collins has been awarded twice with the C. Herman Pritchett Award from the Law and Courts Section of the American Political Science Association. The awards recognized Collins’ 2023 book “Supreme Bias: Gender and Race in U.S. Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings” and his 2019 book, “Friends of the Supreme Court: Interest Groups and Judicial Decision Making.”

Social Media

Video

Education

Binghamton University (SUNY)

Ph.D.

Political Science

Binghamton University (SUNY)

M.A.

Political Science

University of Scranton.

B.S.

Political Science

Select Recent Media Coverage

What would an impeachment of a U.S. Supreme Court Justice look

KNX News Podcast  online

2024-05-23

Paul Collins, professor of legal studies at UMass Amherst, discusses what impeaching a Supreme Court justice might look like. “You need to have a majority in the House of Representatives move for impeachment and then that would get transferred to the Senate, and it would take two-thirds of the Senate to actually remove a judge or a Supreme Court Justice from office,” he explains.

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Supreme Court Justice Asks If City Can Kill Homeless People

Newsweek  online

2024-04-22

Paul Collins comments about a case before the U.S. Supreme Court challenging whether homeless people have a right to sleep outside. Collins says it is likely that the Court will split down ideological lines and uphold the policy in place in the case against the city of Grants Pass, Oregon.

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Why Trump criminal trial is about more than hush money

The Christian Science Monitor  online

2024-04-15

Paul Collins comments on the New York criminal trial of former president Donald Trump. “It’s a complex case and I think there hasn’t been enough attention on just how complex it’s going to be for the prosecution to prove,” he says.

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Select Publications

Donald Trump picks his targets carefully and seeks to undermine their legitimacy. AP Photo/Alex Brandon Trump pushes the limits of every restriction he faces

The Conversation

Paul M. Collins, Jr.

2023-04-10

Paul Collins, professor of legal studies and political science at UMass Amherst, writes that former President Donald Trump’s social media posts attacking the daughter of the judge presiding over his criminal trial in New York state are “just the latest in his long effort to undermine the rule of law.”

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Supreme Bias Gender and Race in U.S. Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings (Book)

Stanford University Press

Christina L. Boyd, Paul M. Collins, Jr., and Lori A. Ringhand

2023-10-17

Paul M. Collins, Jr., and co-authors present for the first time a comprehensive analysis of the dynamics of race and gender at the Supreme Court confirmation hearings held before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Drawing on their deep knowledge of the confirmation hearings, as well as rich new qualitative and quantitative evidence, the authors highlight how the women and people of color who have sat before the Committee have faced a significantly different confirmation process than their white male colleagues.

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Trump’s latest personal attacks on judges could further weaken people’s declining trust in American rule of law

The Conversation

Paul M. Collins, Jr. and Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha

2023-04-06

When former President Donald Trump was arraigned in a Manhattan criminal court on April 4, 2023, Judge Juan Merchan warned him to “refrain” from making social media posts that could incite violence or “jeopardize the rule of law.”

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