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Faculty and Fellow Profiles

Mark  Storslee

Mark Storslee

JD Stanford; PhD University of Virginia; Assistant Professor of Law, Pennsylvania State University

Areas of Expertise

Christian Legal Theory; Religious Freedom

Curriculum Vitae

Mark Storslee is an Assistant Professor at Penn State Law. His research focuses on the First Amendment, especially religion and speech. He has published in the University of Chicago Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, The Review of Politics, and Political Theology among other journals. He is also a co-editor of Comparative Religious Ethics: Critical Concepts in Religious Studies (Routledge, 2014). Mark holds a law degree from Stanford Law School and a PhD in Religious Studies from the University of Virginia. After law school, he clerked for Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and served as executive director of the Constitutional Law Center at Stanford Law School. He will be clerking for Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch during the 2021-2022 Supreme Court term. In 2020, Storslee was awarded the Harold Berman Award for Excellence in Scholarship by the Law and Religion Section of the Association of American Law Schools.