${analytics}
${analytics}Charles Adside III is a licensed Michigan attorney and constitutional law scholar. He teaches courses on the American Presidency and U.S. Constitutional Law.
In 2006, he graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor with a Bachelor of Arts, concentrating in political science
Five years later, Adside received his juris doctorate from the Michigan State University College of Law. There, he was a teaching and research assistant for a constitutional law professor. He was awarded the Most Distinguished Student Award in 2008 and 2010, becoming the only student to receive that award twice. Currently, he is an Adjunct Professor for the Research, Writing, & Advocacy Department at the MSU College of Law.
Adside is published nine times on an array of topics, ranging from electronic communication to higher education reform and executive power. In fact, his article, “The Innocent Villain” is cited in a petition for a Writ for Certiorari to the United States Supreme Court in Commonwealth v. Carter.
For 6 years, Adside served as legal counsel for the Michigan Great Lakes Second Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, Church of God in Christ, Inc. That organization represents over 15 churches in the state.
Publications:
Adside, Charles III. “The Establishment Clause Forbids Coercion Not Cooperation Between Church and State: How the Direct Coercion Test Should Replace the Lemon Test.” 95 N.D. L. Rev. 533 (2020).