Professor Roderick M. Hills, Jr. enjoys a well-deserved reputation for brilliance and generosity, and both traits are prominently displayed in his recent review of my book, The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction, in the pages of the Northwestern University Law Review. Hills\u27s review essay bristles with interesting, important, and imaginative insights across a broad range of issues. He blends these brilliant insights with a very generous attitude towards the book and its author. In particular, his detailed account of the book\u27s central argument is as sympathetic and charitable as I could have ever hoped for. For that generosity, I am truly grateful. Hills\u27s essay is also very generous towards the Supreme Court. But I wonder...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
The Intelligible Constitution by Joseph Goldstein. Oxford University Press. 1992. The subtitle of Pr...
Book review: The Court and the Constitution. By Archibald Cox. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 1987. Pp. 4...
Professor Roderick M. Hills, Jr. enjoys a well-deserved reputation for brilliance and generosity, an...
The three books reviewed in this essay are recent contributions to the growing literature of constit...
I propose to defend and explore three claims in this Essay. First, there is very little actual “law”...
A remarkable effort is afoot to justify American constitutional law at the end of the twentieth cent...
The Bill of Rights: Creationand Reconstruction ( The Bill of Rights )\u27 is a professionally reward...
A remarkable effort is afoot to justify American constitutional law at the end of the twentieth cent...
This brief Essay considers and gently rejects Professor Rick Kay’s faith in originalism as a constra...
Cass Sunstein\u27s book, The Partial Constitution, brings together a number of his constitutional la...
This Article examines the subject of economic rights under the Constitution and the role that the Ju...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
In this Book Review, Professor Fleming examines Professor Tushnet\u27s arguments against judicial su...
This paper examines several different theories surrounding judicial review and finds many of these t...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
The Intelligible Constitution by Joseph Goldstein. Oxford University Press. 1992. The subtitle of Pr...
Book review: The Court and the Constitution. By Archibald Cox. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 1987. Pp. 4...
Professor Roderick M. Hills, Jr. enjoys a well-deserved reputation for brilliance and generosity, an...
The three books reviewed in this essay are recent contributions to the growing literature of constit...
I propose to defend and explore three claims in this Essay. First, there is very little actual “law”...
A remarkable effort is afoot to justify American constitutional law at the end of the twentieth cent...
The Bill of Rights: Creationand Reconstruction ( The Bill of Rights )\u27 is a professionally reward...
A remarkable effort is afoot to justify American constitutional law at the end of the twentieth cent...
This brief Essay considers and gently rejects Professor Rick Kay’s faith in originalism as a constra...
Cass Sunstein\u27s book, The Partial Constitution, brings together a number of his constitutional la...
This Article examines the subject of economic rights under the Constitution and the role that the Ju...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
In this Book Review, Professor Fleming examines Professor Tushnet\u27s arguments against judicial su...
This paper examines several different theories surrounding judicial review and finds many of these t...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
The Intelligible Constitution by Joseph Goldstein. Oxford University Press. 1992. The subtitle of Pr...
Book review: The Court and the Constitution. By Archibald Cox. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 1987. Pp. 4...