The suggestion that we might today learn something about the judicial process in such a staid area of private law may seem surprising. After all, has not the Federal Trade Commission repealed the holder in due course rule thus tossing negotiable instruments into the dust bin? Have not the remaining technical questions been answered by the detail and rigid precision of the Uniform Commercial Code so lamented by Professor Gilmore? Surely, the attentive observer of the role of the courts might conclude that there is nothing left for the judicial policy maker in the field of bills and notes. The thesis of this Article is that any such suppositions of passivity are wrong. The opinions written today show that, as in Judge Abbott\u27s or Justi...
Overlap and conflict are inevitable in any legal system in which a federal government and state gove...
This Article attempts a reconceptualization of developments in Commerce Clause jurisprudence between...
In the American constitutional system the sovereign has the power to enact “regulations which are ne...
The suggestion that we might today learn something about the judicial process in such a staid area o...
The thesis of this Article is that the Court of Federal Claims and the Court of Appeals for the Fede...
In this Article, I argue that the alleged incoherence and unpredictability of the dormant Commerce C...
There is no theme more familiar to constitutional law than the clash between federal power and state...
This Article begins by providing a brief account of the corporatization of procedure through judicia...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Lawmaking by federal courts has been a matter of controversy since the early days of the Republic. I...
This study examines judicial behavior under the dormant Commerce Clause doctrine by drawing on an or...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure has attracted a bevy of c...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
article published in law reviewIn Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, the Supreme ...
Overlap and conflict are inevitable in any legal system in which a federal government and state gove...
This Article attempts a reconceptualization of developments in Commerce Clause jurisprudence between...
In the American constitutional system the sovereign has the power to enact “regulations which are ne...
The suggestion that we might today learn something about the judicial process in such a staid area o...
The thesis of this Article is that the Court of Federal Claims and the Court of Appeals for the Fede...
In this Article, I argue that the alleged incoherence and unpredictability of the dormant Commerce C...
There is no theme more familiar to constitutional law than the clash between federal power and state...
This Article begins by providing a brief account of the corporatization of procedure through judicia...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Lawmaking by federal courts has been a matter of controversy since the early days of the Republic. I...
This study examines judicial behavior under the dormant Commerce Clause doctrine by drawing on an or...
The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure has attracted a bevy of c...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
article published in law reviewIn Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, the Supreme ...
Overlap and conflict are inevitable in any legal system in which a federal government and state gove...
This Article attempts a reconceptualization of developments in Commerce Clause jurisprudence between...
In the American constitutional system the sovereign has the power to enact “regulations which are ne...