Stuart Alan Banner (born November 20, 1963) is an American legal historian and the Norman Abrams Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law. Banner also directs UCLA’s Supreme Court Clinic, which offers students the opportunity to work on real cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Books in order of publication:
Anglo-American Securities Regulation: Cultural and Political Roots, 1690-1860 (Cambridge University Press, 1998).
The Death Penalty: An American History (Harvard University Press, 2002).
Legal Systems in Conflict: Property and Sovereignty in Missouri, 1750-1860 (University of Oklahoma Press, 2000).
How the Indians Lost Their Land: Law and Power on the Frontier (Harvard University Press, 2005).
Possessing the Pacific: Land, Settlers, and Indigenous People from Australia to Alaska (Harvard University Press, 2007).
Who Owns the Sky? The Struggle to Control Airspace from the Wright Brothers On (Harvard University Press, 2008).
American Property: A History of How, Why, and What We Own (Harvard University Press, 2011).
The Baseball Trust: A History of Baseball’s Antitrust Exemption (Oxford University Press, 2013).
Speculation: A History of the Fine Line between Gambling and Investing (Oxford University Press, 2016).
The Decline of Natural Law: How American Lawyers Once Used Natural Law and Why They Stopped (Oxford University Press, 2021).
The Most Powerful Court in the Word: A History of the Supreme Court of the United States (Oxford University Press, 2024)