Jeremiah Chin

  • Assistant Professor of Law

Contact

Phone: (206) 616-4481
Email: jerchin@uw.edu

Recent Courses

Course Number Course Name
LAW A 507 Constitutional Law I: Constitutional Structures of Government
LAW A 592 Constitutional Law II
LAW E 572 Race And The Law

Peer Reviewed Journals & Law Reviews


Books or Treatises


Book Chapters


Other Publications


  • Silencing Children’s Rights (Professor Chin)
    Jul 10, 2025 | Source: Verfassungsblog

    "Instead of addressing the plurality of views around sexual orientation and gender, the Court indirectly, but unsubtly, installs a traditional values framework that imposes norms of heterosexuality, religious fundamentalism and parental micromanagement of curriculum."

  • Newsweek asked Professor Chin about the possibility of a third presidential term.
    Apr 25, 2025 | Source: Newsweek

    "A Trump third term would look unlike any version of the United States under the Constitution as we know it," professor Chin told Newsweek.

  • What a third Donald Trump term could look like (Professor Chin quoted)
    Apr 05, 2025 | Source: Newsweek

    The previously undebatable topic on whether President Donald Trump can seek a third term in office is gaining increasing prevalence, mainly due to the Republican himself. Jeremiah Chin, assistant professor of law at the UW, is interviewed.

  • Constitutional law expert on Trump administration (Professor Chin interviewed)
    Mar 18, 2025 | Source: KOMO

    In the last few months, some of President Tump's executive orders and initiatives have been blocked or delayed by federal judges. Today, a judge blocked DOGE from making cuts to USAID, and now Supreme Court Justice John Roberts is responding directly to Trump's call for a federal judge to be impeached. Jeremiah Chin, assistant professor of law at the UW, is interviewed.

  • UW School of Law hosts ‘Presidential Power’ lecture
    Oct 25, 2024 | Source: The Daily

    The UW School of Law hosted a lecture Oct. 22 explaining “Presidential Power,” connecting it to the upcoming 2024 United States presidential election. This lecture focused on the power and authority that presidents have in the U.S., how power is balanced throughout the government, and how this affects U.S. citizens.