Experts

Barbara A. Perry

Fast Facts

  • Co-chair, Presidential Oral History Program 
  • Former Judicial Fellow at the U.S. Supreme Court
  • Researcher for Chief Justice William Rehnquist
  • Expertise on Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Mitch McConnell, John F. Kennedy, Jacqueline Kennedy, Edward KennedyRose Kennedy, Franklin Roosevelt, First Ladies

Areas Of Expertise

  • Domestic Affairs
  • Law and Justice
  • Social Issues
  • Elections
  • Founding and Shaping of the Nation
  • Leadership
  • Political Parties and Movements
  • Politics
  • The Presidency
  • Supreme Court

Barbara A. Perry is the J. Wilson Newman Professor of Governance at the Miller Center, where she co-directs the Presidential Oral History Program. She has authored or edited 17 books on presidents, First Ladies, the Kennedy family, the Supreme Court, and civil rights and civil liberties. Perry has conducted more than 140 interviews for the George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama Presidential Oral History Projects; participated in the Bill Clinton interviews; directs the Edward Kennedy Oral History Project; and co-directs the Hillary Rodham Clinton Oral History Project. She served as a U.S. Supreme Court fellow and has worked for both Republican and Democratic members of the Senate.

Her books include 43: Inside the Presidency of George W. Bush (edited with Michael Nelson and Russell Riley)42: Inside the Presidency of Bill Clinton (edited with Nelson and Riley); 41: Inside the Presidency of George H.W. Bush (edited with Nelson); Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch; Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier; Edward Kennedy: An Oral History, and The Priestly Tribe: The Supreme Court's Image in the American Mind.

A native of Louisville, Kentucky, Perry earned a PhD in government from the University of Virginia; an MA degree in politics, philosophy, and economics from Oxford University; and a BA degree in political science, with highest honors, from the University of Louisville.

Perry is a frequent media commentator for national and international news sources. She is prepared to discuss American presidents, especially FDR through Obama, with particular expertise on JFK and the Kennedy family. Perry has taught all aspects of American government/politics and can respond to media questions on most topics related to presidential campaigns and elections, public policy, and presidential communications. In addition to the American presidency (including First Ladies), her research, writing, and commentary have covered the U.S. Supreme Court, particularly presidential appointments, as well as civil rights and civil liberties. 

Perry has been a commentator for such outlets as CBS, PBS, CNN, C-SPAN, MSNBC, NPR, PRI, Fox News, BBC, Canadian Broadcasting Corp., Swiss TV, HuffPost LiveThe Morning RundownThe Andrea Mitchell ReportThe NewsHour1A, The Diane Rehm Show, The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Sunday Times of London, USA TodayBloomberg NewsPOLITICO, the Daily Beast, and the Associated Press. She regularly contributes to UVA’s blog, Thoughts from the Lawn.

Perry serves on the board of directors of the White House Historical Association, the board of trustees of the Supreme Court Historical Society, the advisory board of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library Foundation, and the board of the Friends of the John F. Kennedy National Historic Site (JFK’s birthplace in Brookline, MA).

Previously, Perry was the Carter Glass Professor of Government and founding director of the Center for Civic Renewal at Sweet Briar College in Virginia. In 1994-95, she received the Justice Tom C. Clark Award as the outstanding Supreme Court Fellow that year. In addition to providing research for Chief Justice William Rehnquist’s speeches, she briefed more than 3,000 visitors to the court from 70 different countries. She was the Senior Fellow for Civics Education at the University of Louisville’s McConnell Center in 2006-07, where she is currently a Non-Resident Fellow. From 1996 through 2008, she taught in the Supreme Court Summer Institute, co-sponsored by the Supreme Court Historical Society and Street Law. In 2012, Perry received the Virginia Social Science Association’s Scholar Award in Political Science. The Sons of the American Revolution, Virginia Society, awarded her their 2013 Silver Good Citizenship Medal for “her outstanding achievements in the study, writing, and teaching of American history.” The University of Louisville’s College of Arts and Sciences named her the 2014 Alumna Fellow of the Year.

Perry recently lectured to members of the British Parliament on JFK and civil rights. She has participated in the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of International Information Programs and teaches graduate courses for the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History on presidential leadership, the Kennedy era, and the Kennedy presidency. From 2010-14, she served as an adjunct faculty member at the Federal Executive Institute in Charlottesville, providing seminars to senior federal executives on the Kennedy presidency, the U.S. Supreme Court, and leadership.

Barbara A. Perry News Feed

But if there was criminal wrongdoing and no charges were brought, future presidents might be emboldened to break the law. “I would make the argument that for the rule of law, for our democratic republic, for our Constitution, that we cannot have presidents attempting to overturn elections,” Barbara Perry, director of presidential studies at the University of Virginia's Miller Center, told Spectrum News. “The Constitution is lost if that happens.”
Barbara Perry Spectrum News NY1
Barbara Perry, Director of Presidential Studies with UVA’s Miller Center, says Justice Stephen Breyer's retirement is a great loss to the country. "I'm hoping that the Miller Center here at the University of Virginia will have an opportunity to work with him going forward. So, he's a loss, a great loss to the country in terms of his experience and background,” she said.
Barbara Perry CBS19
Historically, SCOTUS justices have taken three approaches to religion in the public square: strict separation of church and state, neutrality toward religion, or accommodation of religion.
Barbara Perry CNN.com
Today in the Miller Center’s weekly Ukraine “War Room” discussion, we talked about how the Biden administration might pivot from painting Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine as autocracy versus democracy. Instead, the U.S. could portray the war as the illegal violation of a sovereign nation’s territory. From the perspective of effective foreign policy and international law norms, this suggestion makes good sense. It also reflects the diminution of American democracy on the world stage. Just this week alone, I have fielded questions about the January 6th Committee’s revelations and the Supreme Court’s recent decisions from England, Australia, Canada, and the Middle East. It seems obvious that when a male Middle Eastern journalist is concerned about the reduction of women’s rights in the United States, America has reached a regrettable point of regression.
Barbara Perry Miller Center Russia-Ukraine blog
Dr. Barbara Perry, University of Virginia Miller Center Director of Presidential Studies, says Roe v. Wade is just the beginning. Now there is no precedence for the right to contraceptives or same-sex marriage.
Barbara Perry CBS19
"They both switched, in a way," says Barbara Perry, a presidential scholar and Supreme Court expert at the University of Virginia's Miller Center. For Biden, it was "an evolution," she says. A devout Catholic who lost a baby in a car accident, Biden was personally opposed to abortion, a view that was partly reflected in his voting record. But since then, with changing times and views towards women (not to mention being married to Jill Biden, the first first lady to hold a professional job outside the White House), Biden has become a strong supporter of abortion rights, Perry notes. For Trump, Perry says, the evolution was transactional.
Barbara Perry US News & World Report