Publication Record. I have published widely and regularly throughout
my academic career.
I have over 65 articles in peer-reviewed journals, (legal) professional journals, student-edited print journals, and student-edited online journals. (Here too, I am in the process of co-drafting another such article.) Some of my articles have appeared in exclusive journals. E.g., American Journal of Legal History (2021 & 2010) (peer review), Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy (2017 & 2010), Northwestern University Law Review (2012, and an online reply on Colloquy), Texas Law Review (2005 & 2005—an opening article and a reply), and University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law (2019).
I have submitted over 40 amicus briefs,
motions, and declarations. My amicus filings have been filed in state and
federal, trial and appellate, courts, including the United States Supreme
Court, as well as an appellate brief before the [UK] Independent Betting Adjudication
Service.
Additionally, I have authored or co-authored eleven treatise entries. I have
co-authored two book chapters.
I frequently write articles on news, politics,
and law (for the layperson) for print journals and online magazines, and
policy-makers’ venues. E.g., American Spectator (2024 & 2022, and a letter), The
Atlantic, Copenhagen Post, Jurist (2024, 2020, 2012), Just
Security, Lawfare (2023, 2022, 2020, 2019, 2019, 2018), and Newsweek. My
opinion editorials have appeared in domestic newspapers, e.g., New
York Times (2022 & 2017), Wall Street
Journal, and foreign
newspapers, e.g., Belfast News Letter (UK)
(2025 & 2025), Irish
Independent (and
a letter), Irish Times (and six letters), The Times (and
a letter) (Irish edn & UK edn), and Sunday Times (Irish
edn & UK edn). Likewise, my many letters have appeared in domestic and foreign newspapers of record and other venues, and my letters are cited in other
publications.[1] I also
blog a good deal—on Balkinization, New Reform Club, Originalism
Blog, and Volokh Conspiracy, and my blog posts are discussed and cited.[2] I have
published fiction and nonfiction in literary reviews and magazines focused on
wider cultural issues. E.g., Claremont
Review of Books
(and a letter), Dorchester Review (Canada),
Eriugena
Review (Ireland), Gadfly:
Culture That Matters (US), Galway
Review (Ireland), New English Review (US), and Quadrant (Australia). Currently, I have several other
articles and opinion pieces under review at journals, literary venues,
newspapers, etc.
In short, on average, I have published three academic
and professional articles per year (that is, since my first academic publication),
with additional output in the form of amicus briefs, treatise entries, book
chapters, magazine articles, opinion editorials, letters, blogging, and
contributions to literary reviews. I have managed to publish at this rate not
withstanding that I regularly teach over 300 students, and on some occasions
over 400 students, each and every academic semester—without the benefit of
teaching assistants, graduate students, and other similar supports.
I speak at academic conferences, and I give guest lectures. I am frequently interviewed by and appear on Irish and US podcasts, radio, and television,[3] as well as in print and on line in Irish,[4] UK,[5] and US[6] news magazines, newspapers, and other similar venues, including undergraduate venues.[7] Usually, I speak to the news and legal news of the day, but sometimes, the interviews are more personal profiles, and I am asked to discuss my own background and publications. See, e.g., Yitzchok Frankfurter, Going Mainstream, 720 Ami Magazine 180–203 (May 28, 2025); Armin Rosen, The Outsider Legal Genius, Tablet Magazine (Mar. 22, 2024).
[1] See, e.g., Dragoș Șamșudean, Conspiracy Theories and Faith in Romania: What the Orthodox Bloggers Say?, 68(2) Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Studia Europaea 175, 184 n.55 (2023) (Romania-based journal) (peer review) (citing Tillman’s 2014 letter to the editor in History Today); Kim Pieters, Attitudes ten opzichte van welzijnsaspecten bij slachten / Attitudes Towards Aspects of Well-Being at Slaughter 32, 84 (Bachelor’s thesis in biotechnology, Odisee University of Applied Sciences, Belgium, 2016) (Flemish-language thesis) (citing Tillman’s 2015 letter to the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) on non-stun slaughter).
[2] Compare, e.g., Seth Barrett Tillman, The Two Discourses: How Non-Originalists Popularize Originalism and What that Means, New Reform Club (Mar. 28, 2016, 9:22 AM), with Jack M. Balkin, Memory and Authority: The Uses of History in Constitutional Interpretation 270, 304 n.59, 352 n.34 (Yale University Press 2024) (citing Tillman’s The Two Discourses), and Michael Ramsey, Seth Barrett Tillman on Originalism, Nonoriginalism and Senate Confirmation, Originalism Blog (Mar. 29, 2016, 6:16 AM) (“The whole [Tillman] post [on New Reform Club] is just brutally awesome . . . .”).
[3] See, e.g., Sharon
Ní Bheoláin and Bryan Dobson, Segment, Trump Fires Sally Yates, RTÉ News: Six One
(Jan. 31, 2017, 6:00 PM) (Irish state-television interview) (at 25:15–30:55).
[4] See, e.g., Seth
Barrett Tillman & Daniel Epstein-O’Dowd, A Path Forward from the Dáil Speaking-Rights
Controversy, Gript Media (Ireland) (Apr. 13, 2025).
[5] See, e.g., Laura Roddy, Donald Trump has friend in court as Maynooth professor
disputes case, Sunday Times (UK) (Mar. 24, 2024, 12:00
AM).
[6] Seth Barrett
Tillman, On Geoffrey
Stone, National Review Online: The Corner (Aug. 30,
2013, 1:36 PM).
[7] See, e.g., Maclain
Conlin, Due Process and New York v. Trump: A Conversation with Professor Seth Barrett
Tillman, Clemson Law Review Interview (Oct. 29,
2025); cf., .e.g., Seth Barrett Tillman, Letter to the Editor, “Occupy the
Syllabus” fails to note complexity of adding diversity to syllabi, The
Daily Californian, Feb. 10, 2015, at 5 (Berkeley student newspaper).
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Seth Barrett Tillman, ‘Extract from a Recent Application,’ New Reform Club (Dec. 5, 2025, 5:56 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2025/12/extract-from-recent-application.html>;
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