Vincent Martin Bonventre
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University of Virginia (MA, PhD)
Brooklyn Law School (JD)
Vincent Martin Bonventre | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1948 (age 77–78) |
| Education | Union College (BS) University of Virginia (MA, PhD) Brooklyn Law School (JD) |
| Known for | Constitutional law |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Law, government |
| Institutions | Albany Law School |
Vincent Martin Bonventre is an American legal scholar.
Bonventre received his B.S. from Union College in 1972 where he studied electrical engineering and chemistry.
Bonventre received a Juris Doctor in 1976 from Brooklyn Law School where he was active in the Moot Court Honor Society and the International Law Society. He received the Phi Alpha Delta International Legal Fraternity scholarship and won American Jurisprudence Awards, including one for Criminal Procedure, which has since been an area of his concentration.
He attended graduate school at the University of Virginia, earning a Master of Arts in public administration in 1981 and a Ph.D. in government in 2003, studying under Henry J. Abraham and David M. O'Brien. His doctoral dissertation focused on discerning the ideological views of judges based on their voting patterns, a theme that would continue throughout his later scholarship.[1] While a PhD student, he was appointed Acting Assistant Professor of Government and taught courses in constitutional law and history.