Professor Foley is a founding member of the FIU College of Law. She teaches constitutional law, civil procedure, and health care law. Professor Foley is the author of Liberty for All: Reclaiming Individual Privacy in a New Era of Public Morality (Yale University Press 2006), The Law of Life and Death (Harvard University Press 2011), and The Tea Party: Three Principles (Cambridge University Press 2012). She is a frequent media commentator and op-ed writer, and her opinions have been aired by The Wall Street Journal, Fox News, New York Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald, National Law Journal, National Public Radio, SCOTUSblog.com, Jurist, CNN, and the BBC, among others. Professor Foley has testified before Congress several times on important issues of constitutional law, including congressional standing to sue the President, the scope of the President’s duty to faithfully execute the law, and the constitutionality of executive orders on immigration.
Professor Foley is Of Counsel in the Washington, D.C. office of BakerHostetler, LLP, where she practices constitutional litigation. She presently serves on the Florida Advisory Committee of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, on the Editorial Board of the Cato Supreme Court Review, and on the Research Advisory Board of the James Madison Institute. She has served as a member of the Committee on Embryonic Stem Cell Guidelines of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and in 2011 was a Fulbright Scholar at the College of Law of the National University of Ireland, Galway. From 2011-2013, Foley held the Institute for Justice Chair in Constitutional Litigation, during which time she served as Executive Director of the Florida Chapter of the Institute for Justice, litigating constitutional cases relating to economic liberty. She has authored or co-authored several amicus briefs before the U.S. Supreme Court, including the Institute for Justice’s brief on Obamacare. In 2012, Professor Foley was selected to give a talk at FIU’s inaugural TEDx event, on the topic “When Are You Really Dead?”
Prior to joining FIU, Professor Foley was a Professor of Law at Michigan State University College of Law and an Adjunct Professor at the MSU College of Human Medicine. Prior to becoming a law teacher, Foley served as a law clerk to the Honorable Carolyn Dineen King of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and spent several years on Capitol Hill as a health policy advisor, serving as Senior Legislative Aide to U.S. Congressman (now U.S. Senator) Ron Wyden (D-OR), Legislative Aide for the D.C. office of the Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York, and a Legislative Aide for U.S. Congressman Michael Andrews (D-TX).
Professor Foley graduated summa cum laude from the University of Tennessee College of Law, where she was an Articles Editor of the Tennessee Law Review, inducted into Order of the Coif, and valedictorian of her class. She has a B.A. in History from Emory University and an LL.M. from Harvard Law School.
An energetic and innovative classroom teacher, Professor Foley was selected in 2012 as First Runner-Up for FIU’s “Worlds Ahead” Faculty Award. She received the “Professor of the Year” award from the College of Law for the 2009-2010 academic year. She is admitted to practice law in Florida, Texas, and before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Set up email alerts to be notified when this author's
articles are cited by new articles added to HeinOnline here (use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses):
Professor Foley is a founding member of the FIU College of Law. She teaches constitutional law, civil procedure, and health care law. Professor Foley is the author of Liberty for All: Reclaiming Individual Privacy in a New Era of Public Morality (Yale University Press 2006), The Law of Life and Death (Harvard University Press 2011), and The Tea Party: Three Principles (Cambridge University Press 2012). She is a frequent media commentator and op-ed writer, and her opinions have been aired by The Wall Street Journal, Fox News, New York Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald, National Law Journal, National Public Radio, SCOTUSblog.com, Jurist, CNN, and the BBC, among others. Professor Foley has testified before Congress several times on important issues of constitutional law, including congressional standing to sue the President, the scope of the President’s duty to faithfully execute the law, and the constitutionality of executive orders on immigration.
Professor Foley is Of Counsel in the Washington, D.C. office of BakerHostetler, LLP, where she practices constitutional litigation. She presently serves on the Florida Advisory Committee of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, on the Editorial Board of the Cato Supreme Court Review, and on the Research Advisory Board of the James Madison Institute. She has served as a member of the Committee on Embryonic Stem Cell Guidelines of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, and in 2011 was a Fulbright Scholar at the College of Law of the National University of Ireland, Galway. From 2011-2013, Foley held the Institute for Justice Chair in Constitutional Litigation, during which time she served as Executive Director of the Florida Chapter of the Institute for Justice, litigating constitutional cases relating to economic liberty. She has authored or co-authored several amicus briefs before the U.S. Supreme Court, including the Institute for Justice’s brief on Obamacare. In 2012, Professor Foley was selected to give a talk at FIU’s inaugural TEDx event, on the topic “When Are You Really Dead?”
Prior to joining FIU, Professor Foley was a Professor of Law at Michigan State University College of Law and an Adjunct Professor at the MSU College of Human Medicine. Prior to becoming a law teacher, Foley served as a law clerk to the Honorable Carolyn Dineen King of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and spent several years on Capitol Hill as a health policy advisor, serving as Senior Legislative Aide to U.S. Congressman (now U.S. Senator) Ron Wyden (D-OR), Legislative Aide for the D.C. office of the Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York, and a Legislative Aide for U.S. Congressman Michael Andrews (D-TX).
Professor Foley graduated summa cum laude from the University of Tennessee College of Law, where she was an Articles Editor of the Tennessee Law Review, inducted into Order of the Coif, and valedictorian of her class. She has a B.A. in History from Emory University and an LL.M. from Harvard Law School.
An energetic and innovative classroom teacher, Professor Foley was selected in 2012 as First Runner-Up for FIU’s “Worlds Ahead” Faculty Award. She received the “Professor of the Year” award from the College of Law for the 2009-2010 academic year. She is admitted to practice law in Florida, Texas, and before the U.S. Supreme Court.
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder. Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects. View the PathFinder Subjects most frequently assigned to this author's article here.
#
Cited by Articles (0-5 Years)
32
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline within the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline beyond the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
Cited by Cases (0-5 Years)
2
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase within the past five years only.
Cited by Cases (5+ Years)
3
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase beyond the past five years only.
Accessed (Past 12 Months)
70
This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been accessed by HeinOnline users within a rolling 12 month period. In order for an author's article to count as accessed, the article must be clicked from either search results or by browsing to the article, or retrieved using the citation navigator.
ScholarRank
9,869
ScholarRank is an overall ranking based on the calculation of five HeinOnline ScholarCheck metrics. The Z-score for each of the five metrics is taken and then averaged; the final average is entered into standard competition ranking to produce the overall ScholarRank for each author. Further information on HeinOnline's ScholarRank may be found in our Knowledge Base.
Average Citations per Article
13.87
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of articles written, to calculate the average number of citations per article.
Average Citations per Document
12.24
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of documents written, to calculate the average number of citations per document.
Self-Citations
3
This metric counts the cumulative number of an author's self-citations. This metric is not currently factored into the overall ScholarCheck ranking analysis.
H-Index
7.00
The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and citation impact of the publications of an author. The index is based on the set of the author's most cited papers and the number of citations that they have received in other publications. Further information on an h-index can be found here.
17 results searching for (creator_facet:"Foley, Elizabeth Price" OR creator_facet:"Foley, Elizabeth" OR creator_facet:"Foley, Elizabeth P." OR creator_facet:"Price, Elizabeth C.") in1
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder.
Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects.
Does something look off to you? We welcome any and all feedback to strengthen PathFinder's power and accuracy. If you'd like to suggest a change to PathFinder's assessment of this document, please send us a message below.
(We'll use this information to contact you, if you would like a HeinOnline representative to respond to your input.)