Paul A. Lombardo
Paul A. Lombardo is an American legal historian known for his work on the legacy of eugenics and sterilization in the United States. Lombardo’s foundational research corrected the historical record of the 1927 U.S. Supreme Court case of Buck v. Bell. He found Carrie Buck’s school grades and the grades of her child Vivian. He was the last person to interview her, and he discovered the pictures of all three generations of the Buck family. In 2002, he sponsored and paid for a memorial plaque that was installed in Buck’s hometown of Charlottesville, Virginia.
Education
Lombardo received his A.B. from Rockhurst College, his M.A. from Loyola University of Chicago and both his Ph.D. and J.D. from the University of Virginia.Career
He joined the faculty at Georgia State University College of Law in 2006, where he is currently a Regents Professor and the Bobby Lee Cook Professor of Law.He is coeditor of Fletcher's Clinical Ethics, 3rd edition. His book Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court and Buck v. Bell was recognized at the 2009 Library of Virginia Literary Awards; it also earned him designation as a 2009 Georgia Author of the Year. It has just been reissued in a new, updated edition. Lombardo also published an edited volume: A Century of Eugenics in America: From the Indiana Experiment to the Human Genome Era.
Lombardo is an elected member of the American Law Institute, a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation, and has been a consultant for the institutes of the National Institutes of Health. He served as a committee member for the Institute of Medicine as well as the National Human Research Protection Advisory Committee.
From 2011 to 2016, Lombardo served as a senior advisor to the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues. He worked on three Commission reports: Ethically Impossible: STD Research in Guatemala: 1946-1948, Moral Science: Protecting Participants in Human Subjects Research and Privacy and Progress in Whole Genome Sequencing.
He testified as an expert witness in Lowe v. Atlas, a landmark federal genetic discrimination case, and his work was recently cited in a U.S. Supreme Court opinion,, The Lynchburg Story, Race: the Power of an Illusion Part I, The Difference Between Us and The Golden Door. He was a featured commentator and historical consultant on the PBS program American Experience NPR's Hidden Brain, and WNYC's RadioLab.