Indiana
University, Bloomington
Professor Shreve has been an active scholar, teacher, and public servant. A graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Professor Shreve received his first law degree from Harvard University in 1968. He began his legal career on the staff of Massachusetts Attorney General Elliot Richardson. Thereafter, he served as law clerk to United States District Judge Sarah T. Hughes and as a legal services attorney in the Boston Legal Assistance Project. Professor Shreve then returned to Harvard Law School to teach half time and to obtain a Masters degree in law in 1975. He taught on the faculties of Vermont, George Washington and New York Law Schools before arriving at Indiana University, Bloomington in 1987.
While at Indiana, Professor Shreve has been named the Ira C. Batman Faculty Fellow and the Charles L. Whistler Faculty Fellow. Professor Shreve was also the 1994 recipient of the Leon H. Wallace Teaching Award and was the co-recipient of the Gavel Award voted by the Class of 1995. In 1995, he was awarded the Richard S. Melvin Professorship.
Professor Shreve's scholarship has appeared in the George
Washington, Harvard, Michigan, Northwestern, Ohio State, Southern
California, Vanderbilt and Texas Law Reviews, and in
the Indiana Law Journal. He is co-author of the treatise
Understanding Civil Procedure and has published an
anthology of studies in conflict of laws. Professor Shreve was
the Reporter of the Local Rules Advisory Committee for the United
States District Court, Southern District of Indiana. He has served
on the Civil Procedure, Conflict of Laws and Federal Courts Executive
Committees of the Association of American Law Schools. Professor
Shreve is a member of the Editorial Board of the American Journal
of Comparative Law. In 1989, he was elected to the American
Law Institute.
Office: (812) 855-4230; Fax: (812) 855-0555; E-mail: shreve@indiana.edu