Legislative supremacy has long been a shibboleth in discourse about statutory interpretation. So much so that it has almost become trite. Although we invoke legislative supremacy with the routineness of intellectual boilerplate-indeed, perhaps because of this routineness-we have come to treat the precept uncritically. Characteristic of the traditional neglect of this precept is its treatment in the classic legal process materials compiled by Professors Henry Hart and Albert Sacks in the 1950s. Although Hart and Sacks broadly recognized the lawmaking supremacy of the legislature, they marginalized that concession by presuming that legislators act as reasonable persons (i.e., like judges), and by emphasizing that the nature of lawmaking is a ...
A long tradition in legal theory views the judicial role as centrally including the duty to make the...
The object of this Article is to provide a description of the legislative process and, based upon th...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Legislative supremacy has long been a shibboleth in discourse about statutory interpretation. So muc...
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
Statutory interpretation is at the cutting edge of legal scholarship and, now, legislative activity....
Some members of the High Court have recently challenged the longstanding, fundamental principle that...
Legislative history is the ultimate bugaboo of the textualists-those judges and scholars who assert ...
Judicial invocation of legislative history to interpret federal statutes has grown like weeds in a v...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
Law making in our time depends on legislation, and our primary reliance on statutory law is being in...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
The usefulness of legislative history has been brought into question concerning how judges interpret...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Academic ferment concerning interpretatIon has clearly reached the heady brew stage. And, with p...
A long tradition in legal theory views the judicial role as centrally including the duty to make the...
The object of this Article is to provide a description of the legislative process and, based upon th...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Legislative supremacy has long been a shibboleth in discourse about statutory interpretation. So muc...
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
Statutory interpretation is at the cutting edge of legal scholarship and, now, legislative activity....
Some members of the High Court have recently challenged the longstanding, fundamental principle that...
Legislative history is the ultimate bugaboo of the textualists-those judges and scholars who assert ...
Judicial invocation of legislative history to interpret federal statutes has grown like weeds in a v...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
Law making in our time depends on legislation, and our primary reliance on statutory law is being in...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
The usefulness of legislative history has been brought into question concerning how judges interpret...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Academic ferment concerning interpretatIon has clearly reached the heady brew stage. And, with p...
A long tradition in legal theory views the judicial role as centrally including the duty to make the...
The object of this Article is to provide a description of the legislative process and, based upon th...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...