David P Currie, The Constitution in Congress: The Federalist Period, 1789-1801. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997. Pp. xv, 327. $32.50. The history of constitutional interpretation is often seen as synonymous with the history of the Supreme Court. The casebooks through which law students are introduced to constitutional law, for example, generally begin with the 1803 decision of Marbury v. Madison and the theory of judicial review. These books implicitly present the period between the ratification of the Constitution and Marbury as a vast wasteland in which no constitutional interpretation of any significance took place. As applied to the Supreme Court, this characterization is fairly accurate. Apart from Chisholm v. Georgia, which...
This dissertation calls on the public law field to expand its focus beyond courts, especially the Su...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally eff...
Over the past twenty years, constitutional law has taken a decidedly historical turn, both in academ...
This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the interpretation of a constitution, most s...
A Review of The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century, 1888-1986 by David P. Curri
Methods of Interpretation: How the Supreme Court Reads the Constitution examines the various methodo...
In recent years one often hears lawyers say that the Constitution is gone; or one hears them echo t...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
Part I presents the thesis that the Supreme Court frequently undertakes a multiplicity of history-ba...
Review of David P. Currie, The Constitution in Congress: The Jeffersonians, 1801-1829 (Univ. of Chic...
The United States may be the prime example of constitutionalization of the legal order. It was the f...
This Article embarks on a reconstruction of constitutionalism in the early American Republic through...
During my freshman seminar on the Supreme Court and the Constitution, I was fascinated by the case M...
This dissertation calls on the public law field to expand its focus beyond courts, especially the Su...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally eff...
Over the past twenty years, constitutional law has taken a decidedly historical turn, both in academ...
This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the interpretation of a constitution, most s...
A Review of The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century, 1888-1986 by David P. Curri
Methods of Interpretation: How the Supreme Court Reads the Constitution examines the various methodo...
In recent years one often hears lawyers say that the Constitution is gone; or one hears them echo t...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
Part I presents the thesis that the Supreme Court frequently undertakes a multiplicity of history-ba...
Review of David P. Currie, The Constitution in Congress: The Jeffersonians, 1801-1829 (Univ. of Chic...
The United States may be the prime example of constitutionalization of the legal order. It was the f...
This Article embarks on a reconstruction of constitutionalism in the early American Republic through...
During my freshman seminar on the Supreme Court and the Constitution, I was fascinated by the case M...
This dissertation calls on the public law field to expand its focus beyond courts, especially the Su...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally eff...