This essay argues that current Equal Protection doctrine fails to recognize an important conceptual distinction between two types of discrimination. Current doctrine is inadequate, according to the author, because it treats all discrimination cases as if they were instances of only one of these types. As a result, the Supreme Court mistreats discrimination cases of the forgotten variety. The author draws a distinction between proxy and non-proxy discrimination. Proxy discrimination uses the classification in the law as a means to reach a set of persons with a different, correlated trait. Non-proxy discrimination, by contrast, aims at the set defined by the classification itself. Because each has a distinct aim, each requires an examination ...
In this article, Professor Darren Hutchinson contributes to the debate over the meaning of the Fourt...
This Article considers the equal protection “class-of-one” doctrine in light of recent developments,...
Scholars and judges have long assumed that the Equal Protection Clause is concerned only with state ...
This essay argues that current Equal Protection doctrine fails to recognize an important conceptual ...
In this essay, I argue that the problems with how courts apply Equal Protection principles to classi...
This Article advocates differentiating between two distinct categories of equal protection cases. Th...
This Essay is the third in a series of pieces exploring elements of the Court’s past and present equ...
As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identity based jurisprudence, meaning that...
This Essay asks why sex equality is outside the constitutional canon. While race discrimination is a...
Identity is incredibly complex when we recognize the spectrums of race, gender, and sexuality. While...
In Two Concepts of Discrimination, Professor Hellman lucidly and systematically explains the differe...
In order to preserve a broad field of play for legislative and administrative action, courts do not ...
This symposium essay disputes the conventional wisdom that “special treatment” mandates are exceptio...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
The essay begins with a discussion of which groups deserve the protection of employment discriminati...
In this article, Professor Darren Hutchinson contributes to the debate over the meaning of the Fourt...
This Article considers the equal protection “class-of-one” doctrine in light of recent developments,...
Scholars and judges have long assumed that the Equal Protection Clause is concerned only with state ...
This essay argues that current Equal Protection doctrine fails to recognize an important conceptual ...
In this essay, I argue that the problems with how courts apply Equal Protection principles to classi...
This Article advocates differentiating between two distinct categories of equal protection cases. Th...
This Essay is the third in a series of pieces exploring elements of the Court’s past and present equ...
As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identity based jurisprudence, meaning that...
This Essay asks why sex equality is outside the constitutional canon. While race discrimination is a...
Identity is incredibly complex when we recognize the spectrums of race, gender, and sexuality. While...
In Two Concepts of Discrimination, Professor Hellman lucidly and systematically explains the differe...
In order to preserve a broad field of play for legislative and administrative action, courts do not ...
This symposium essay disputes the conventional wisdom that “special treatment” mandates are exceptio...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
The essay begins with a discussion of which groups deserve the protection of employment discriminati...
In this article, Professor Darren Hutchinson contributes to the debate over the meaning of the Fourt...
This Article considers the equal protection “class-of-one” doctrine in light of recent developments,...
Scholars and judges have long assumed that the Equal Protection Clause is concerned only with state ...