Introduction

Thomas Berg teaches constitutional law, religious liberty, intellectual property courses, and the religious liberty appellate clinic. In the clinic he supervises students in writing and filing briefs in major religious liberty cases, drawing on his experience drafting more than 80 briefs on issues of religious liberty and free speech in the Supreme Court and lower courts.

Berg combines advocacy with scholarship as one of the nation's leading experts on religious liberty and law and religion. He is the author of six books, including a leading casebook, Religion and the Constitution (with Michael McConnell and Christopher Lund, Aspen Publishing); The State and Religion in a Nutshell (West); and most recently, Religious Liberty in a Polarized Age (Eerdmans Publishing), which has won national book awards from Notre Dame Law School, the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and Christianity Today magazine. He has written 80 book chapters and journal articles and dozens of op-eds and shorter pieces on religious freedom, constitutional law, and the role of religion in law, politics and society. His work has been cited multiple times by the U.S. Supreme Court and federal courts of appeals.

His other chief scholarly interest is in the relation of intellectual property rights, technology, social justice, and human development. He is co-author of Patents on Life: Religious, Moral, and Social Justice Aspects of Biotechnology and Intellectual Property (Cambridge U. Press 2019, with Roman Cholij and Simon Ravenscroft), and he has been a leader in writing and encouraging others' writing on the relationship between global intellectual property and religious thought. He co-chairs the law school’s Working Group on Law and Technology and serves on the steering committee of the University of St. Thomas’s Institute for AI for the Common Good.

Berg grew up in Chicago and received a B.S. in journalism from Northwestern University, an M.A. in philosophy and politics from Oxford University, and both an M.A. in religious studies and a J.D. from the University of Chicago. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. While in law school, Berg served as executive editor of the law review, won the Beale and Bustin prizes for legal scholarship and writing, and served as musical director for three law-student musical comedy shows. After clerking for Judge Alvin Rubin of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, Berg practiced law in Chicago with Mayer, Brown and Platt doing general commercial litigation, appellate litigation, and nonprofit institutions' legal work.

Berg has served as St. Thomas School of Law's Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and as co-director of the Murphy Institute for Catholic Thought, Law, and Public Policy. He has also received awards for his religious liberty scholarship and advocacy from the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota, the DePaul University College of Law, the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, and the Christian Legal Society.

Berg has also been a visiting professor at the University of Aix (France), Peter Pazmany University (Hungary), and the University of Siena (Italy). He has made dozens of presentations to academic, professional, religious, and community groups and has testified before Congress and state legislatures multiple times. He contributes regularly to the SCOTUS Blog, the Mirror of Justice blog on Catholic thought and law, and the Whole Life Democrat blog. He is past chair of the Law and Religion Section of the Association of American Law Schools and of the national board of Democrats for Life of America. He collaborates on musical plays with his wife Maureen a lawyer and playwright, and performs in the Twin Cities Gilbert & Sullivan light opera company.

Read Berg's scholarship on SSRN

Links

Academic Areas and Departments

School of Law

Education

University of Chicago Law School
JD
Religion
MA, University of Chicago
Philosophy and Politics
MA, Oxford University (Rhodes Scholar)
Northwestern University
BS