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Henry M. Phillips Prize
 * 2013 Laurence H. Tribe."In recognition of his contributions to understanding the United States Constitution and the role of the Supreme Court in its interpretation."
 * 2011 Jeremy James Waldron. “In recognition his intellectual leadership in political theory and legal philosophy."
 * 2009 Martha Craven Nussbaum. “In recognition of her intellectual leadership in philosophy, law and religion."
 * 2007 Cass R. Sunstein. "In recognition of his intellectual leadership in Constitutional Law and Political Science."
 * 2005 Frank I. Michelman. "In recognition of his intellectual leadership in Constitutional Law and Property Law, including in particular his profound research and writing demonstrating the interplay between our own constitutional culture and that of other democratic countries similarly engaged in the pursuit of equal opportunity for all."


 * 2002 Bruce A. Ackerman. "In recognition of his intellectual leadership in Constitutional Law, History, and Political Theory, including in particular his profound research and writing demonstrating the interplay between enduring values and continuing transformations that reflect the will of The People in our Constitutional system."


 * 2000 Louis Henkin. "In recognition of his lifetime of scholarly research and writing to demonstrate that international human rights are more than noble aspirations to be enforced in the court of public opinion and are definable legal rights to be enforced in national and international tribunals."


 * 1997 Joel Feinberg for The Moral Limits of the Criminal Law.


 * 1994 Ronald Myles Dworkin for Law's Empire and his other jurisprudential writings over the past quarter century.


 * 1985 Samuel Edmund Thorne for his annotated translation of Bracton's De Legibus Angliae.


 * 1980 Willard Hurst for Law and Social Order in the United States.


 * 1976 Wolfgang Friedmann for Legal Theory and Law in a Changing Society. Harry W. Jones for "The Efficacy of Law" and "An Invitation to Jurisprudence," in Columbia Law Review.


 * 1974 John Rawls for A Theory of Justice.


 * 1962 Karl N. Llewellyn for The Common Law Tradition: Deciding Appeals.


 * 1960 Roscoe Pound for contributions to the science and philosophy of jurisprudence culminating in his five-volume work entitled Jurisprudence.


 * 1957 Catherine Drinker Bowen for The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke, 1552-1634.


 * 1955 Edmond Cahn for The Sense of Injustice: A Contemporary Reintroduction and his participation in, and organization of, the symposium on "Supreme Court and Supreme Law."


 * 1950 Philip C. Jessup for Modern Law of Nations.


 * 1942 Edward S. Corwin for The President: Office and Powers and his articles on constitutional law.


 * 1935 Lon L. Fuller for American Legal Realism.
 * 1921 Quincy Wright for "The Control of the Foreign Relations of the United States; The Relative Rights, Duties and Responsibilities of the President, of the Senate and the House, and of the Judiciary, in Theory and Practice."
 * 1912 Charles H. Burr for "The Treaty-making power of the United States and the methods of its enforcements as affecting the police powers of the state."
 * 1900 W.G. Hastings for "The Development of law as Illustrated by decisions relating to the police power of the state."
 * 1895 George H. Smith for "The Theory of the State."