John Domino

Sam Houston State University

The Woodlands, Texas, United States of America

Research Expertise

constitutional law
civil rights & liberties
judicial politics
Texas legal history
public policy
American politics
informational privacy
court administration
dog law
privacy law

About

John C. Domino is Professor of Political Science and Legal Studies at Sam Houston State University, where he teaches constitutional law, civil rights and liberties, judicial politics, legal history, and American and Texas politics. Domino is an active freelance writer, content creator, and court administration consultant, creating content ranging from full length books, journal articles, white papers, and media articles. He is also a public speaker and quest on various podcasts. Author of full-length, peer-reviewed books: * Civil Rights & Liberties in the 21st Century (four editions). * Texas Supreme Court Justice Bob Gammage: A Jurisprudence of Rights and Liberties. * The Right to Privacy in Texas: From Common Law Origins to 21st Century Protections. His journal articles on Texas judicial politics and legal history have appeared in such journals as Justice Systems Journal, South Texas Law Review, the British Journal of American Legal Studies, and the Journal of the Texas Supreme Court Historical Society. He is one of the leading experts in state privacy law and Texas legal history. Domino received his PhD in political science/public law from Miami University. He lives in The Woodlands, Texas with his two German Shepherd dogs

Publications

Civil Rights and Liberties in the 21st Century

Apr 19, 2018

Domino, J. C. (2018). Civil Rights and Liberties in the 21st Century. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315623627

Texas Supreme Court Justice Bob Gammage: A Jurisprudence of Rights and Liberties by John C. Domino

Journal of Southern History / Jan 01, 2021

Wilson, S. H. (2021). Texas Supreme Court Justice Bob Gammage: A Jurisprudence of Rights and Liberties by John C. Domino. Journal of Southern History, 87(2), 368–370. https://doi.org/10.1353/soh.2021.0080

The Adoption of Court Technology in the Texas Trial Courts

Justice System Journal / Sep 01, 1997

Domino, J. C. (1997). The Adoption of Court Technology in the Texas Trial Courts. Justice System Journal, 19(3), 245–266. https://doi.org/10.1080/23277556.1997.10871263

The Origins and Development of Judicial Recusal in Texas

British Journal of American Legal Studies / May 01, 2016

Domino, J. C. (2016). The Origins and Development of Judicial Recusal in Texas. British Journal of American Legal Studies, 5(1), 1–28. https://doi.org/10.1515/bjals-2016-0005

[Illustration]

The Militia and the Right to Arms, or, How the Second Amendment Fell Silent / Jan 20, 2003

[Illustration]. (2003). In The Militia and the Right to Arms, or, How the Second Amendment Fell Silent (pp. xii–xii). Duke University Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11hpm4w.4

A Warren Court of Our Own: The Exum Court and the Expansion of Individual Rights in North Carolina by Mark A. Davis

Journal of Southern History / Jan 01, 2021

Domino, J. C. (2021). A Warren Court of Our Own: The Exum Court and the Expansion of Individual Rights in North Carolina by Mark A. Davis. Journal of Southern History, 87(1), 151–152. https://doi.org/10.1353/soh.2021.0032

Education

Miami University

PhD, Political Science/Public law

Oxford, Ohio, United States of America

Eastern Kentucky University

Masters of Political Science

Richmond, Kentucky, United States of America

Florida Atlantic University

BA, Political Science

Boca Raton, Florida, United States of America

Experience

Sam Houston State University

Professor

Writer

Join John on NotedSource!
Join Now

At NotedSource, we believe that professors, post-docs, scientists and other researchers have deep, untapped knowledge and expertise that can be leveraged to drive innovation within companies. NotedSource is committed to bridging the gap between academia and industry by providing a platform for collaboration with industry and networking with other researchers.

For industry, NotedSource identifies the right academic experts in 24 hours to help organizations build and grow. With a platform of thousands of knowledgeable PhDs, scientists, and industry experts, NotedSource makes connecting and collaborating easy.

For academic researchers such as professors, post-docs, and Ph.D.s, NotedSource provides tools to discover and connect to your colleagues with messaging and news feeds, in addition to the opportunity to be paid for your collaboration with vetted partners.

Expert Institutions
NotedSource has experts from Stanford University
Expert institutions using NotedSource include Oxfort University
Experts from McGill have used NotedSource to share their expertise
University of Chicago experts have used NotedSource
MIT researchers have used NotedSource
Proudly trusted by
Microsoft uses NotedSource for academic partnerships
Johnson & Johnson academic research projects on NotedSource
ProQuest (Clarivate) uses NotedSource as their industry academia platform
Slamom consulting engages academics for research collaboration on NotedSource
Omnicom and OMG find academics on notedsource
Unilever research project have used NotedSource to engage academic experts

Connect with researchers and scientists like John Domino on NotedSource to help your company with innovation, research, R&D, L&D, and more.