Anne Proffitt Dupre J. Alton Hosch Professor of Law
B.A., University of Rhode Island
J.D., University of Georgia
Courses Offered:
Contracts
Education Law
Children and the Law
Professional Biographical Information:
Anne
Proffitt Dupre joined the University of Georgia School of Law faculty
in 1994 and teaches education law, children and the law and contracts.
In 2004, she became the fourth woman in Georgia Law history to be
appointed to an endowed position. She currently occupies a J. Alton
Hosch Professorship.
Nationally recognized as an expert in education law and policy, her
scholarship includes: "The Story of Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier: Student Press and the School Censor" in Education Law Stories (forthcoming, Foundation Press); "The Spirit of Serrano: Past, Present, and
Future" in the Journal of Education Finance; the casebook Children and the Law (2d ed. LexisNexis); "School Finance Litigation: Who's Winning the War" in the Vanderbilt Law Review; "Education Transformation: The Lesson from Argentina" in the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law; "A Study in Double Standards, Discipline and the Disabled Student" in the Washington Law Review; "Disability, Deference, and the Integrity of the Academic Enterprise" in the Georgia Law Review; and "Should Students Have Constitutional Rights? Keeping Order in the Public Schools" in the George Washington University Law Review. Dupre is currently writing a book titled School Speech for Harvard University Press.
Dupre is a Senior Fellow for the UGA
Institute of Higher Education. As part of her position with the
institute, Dupre is the co-director of the Education Law Consortium,
which she founded with Dr. John Dayton of the UGA College of Education. The consortium
sponsors the National Student Education Law Conference where students from
across the country compete to present papers to professors from UGA and other universities. The winning papers
are published in the Education Law Forum, a web-based journal of
law and education policy (the first of its kind).
Dupre's
scholarship on education law generates many speaking opportunities both
in the United States and throughout the world, and she has delivered
papers and speeches on such issues as civility and academic freedom,
student misconduct and school discipline, family and educational
privacy, the First Amendment and public schools, and Title IX and sexual
harassment.
As an International
Fellow of the university, Dupre extended her research to Argentina,
where she visited and studied the Argentine federal education law (see
Transforming Education: The Lesson from Argentina, 34 Vand. J. Transnat'l L.
1 (2001)). She has been an active participant in the UGA Management
Training Institute with Jilin University, a university in northern
China. She was part of the U.S. State Department Speaker Program at the
University of Zagreb in Croatia, where she conducted a seminar on
Ethics in Higher Education.
Dupre received the Blue Key Young Alumnus Award
presented by UGA's Blue Key chapter in 2000. She has been honored by
law students with the Faculty Book Award for Excellence in Teaching and
the John C. O'Byrne Award for Significant Contributions Furthering
Faculty-Student Relations. She has received several campus-wide honors,
including the UGA Teaching Academy, UGA International Fellow and the
UGA Lilly Teaching Fellowship. In May 2007, she was selected to be a UGA Senior Teaching Fellow.
Dupre served as judicial law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Harry A. Blackmun following her clerkship with Judge J.L.
Edmondson of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. She practiced
law with the Washington, D.C., firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts &
Trowbridge before joining the law faculty.
Dupre earned a bachelor's degree from the University of
Rhode Island and a law degree from UGA, where she graduated first in
her class and served as editor in chief of the Georgia Law Review.
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