Jack Balkin’s Constitutional Redemption and Sandy Levinson’s Constitutional Faith understand the problem of constitutional evil quite differently than Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil. Balkin and Levinson regard constitutional redemption and faith as rooted in the possibility that Americans will eventually defeat evil. Constitutional Evil takes the far more pessimistic view that evil will never be defeated. Constitutional faith and redemption in our permanently fallen state is rooted in the possibility that Americans will find ways of living with each other peaceably knowing that the price of union is the continual obligation to make what the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison described as “a convenant with death, and a...
You might think that at a conference devoted to constitutional fidelity, the first question to addre...
The concepts of good faith and bad faith play a central role in many areas of private law and intern...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
Jack Balkin’s Constitutional Redemption and Sandy Levinson’s Constitutional Faith understand the pro...
The original title of Constitutional Redemption—which my publisher prevailed on me not to use—was “A...
How many constitutions have we? Part of what we hope for from constitutional law is that we be unit...
Sanford Levinson. Constitutional Faith. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988. Pp. xii, ...
In the closing pages of Constitutional Faith Sanford Levinson asks himself whether he would have sig...
Sanford Levinson\u27s 1988 book, Constitutional Faith, described the U.S. Constitution as America\u2...
Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil concerns what is entailed by pledging allegiance t...
I begin with a disclaimer: I am not a constitutional theorist. I haven’t even played one on TV. But ...
The most arresting aspect of Jack Balkin\u27s thought-provoking paper about the consequences of fide...
This essay reviews Constitutional Redemption: Political Faith in an Unjust World by Jack Balkin (201...
Preserving constitutional legitimacy by holding that constitutional text can be “redeemed” from inco...
Analyzes the two divided loyalties that Levinson faces in Divided Loyalties: The Problem of \u27Dua...
You might think that at a conference devoted to constitutional fidelity, the first question to addre...
The concepts of good faith and bad faith play a central role in many areas of private law and intern...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
Jack Balkin’s Constitutional Redemption and Sandy Levinson’s Constitutional Faith understand the pro...
The original title of Constitutional Redemption—which my publisher prevailed on me not to use—was “A...
How many constitutions have we? Part of what we hope for from constitutional law is that we be unit...
Sanford Levinson. Constitutional Faith. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988. Pp. xii, ...
In the closing pages of Constitutional Faith Sanford Levinson asks himself whether he would have sig...
Sanford Levinson\u27s 1988 book, Constitutional Faith, described the U.S. Constitution as America\u2...
Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil concerns what is entailed by pledging allegiance t...
I begin with a disclaimer: I am not a constitutional theorist. I haven’t even played one on TV. But ...
The most arresting aspect of Jack Balkin\u27s thought-provoking paper about the consequences of fide...
This essay reviews Constitutional Redemption: Political Faith in an Unjust World by Jack Balkin (201...
Preserving constitutional legitimacy by holding that constitutional text can be “redeemed” from inco...
Analyzes the two divided loyalties that Levinson faces in Divided Loyalties: The Problem of \u27Dua...
You might think that at a conference devoted to constitutional fidelity, the first question to addre...
The concepts of good faith and bad faith play a central role in many areas of private law and intern...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...