Professor Schauer\u27s essay on constitutional positivism purports to clarify the terms of debate between positivism and natural law. By its end, however, it has become clear that he has been concerned all along with quite different matters. He wonders whether debates between positivism and natural law, formalism and antiformalism, or judicial activism and judicial restraint can ever be settled in the abstract because the political and moral consequences of these stances, programs, and theories change radically over time. Some applaud the natural law innovations of the Warren Court while criticizing those of the Lochner Court; others celebrate Justice Holmes\u27 positivism while simultaneously denouncing that of Chief Justice Rehnquist. F...
In his typically clear statement of a provocative thesis, Fred Schauer, along with his co-author, Vi...
Models using judicial ideology to explain Supreme Court decision-making remain controver-sial due to...
Talk about judicial politics is ubiquitous in the press and academia today. Discussions of this topi...
Professor Schauer\u27s essay on constitutional positivism purports to clarify the terms of debate be...
I share with Fred Schauer the relatively unpopular belief that the positivist insistence that we kee...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Professor Jeffrey Rosen is the leading champion of judicial modesty among legal academics and public...
In the wake of the Reagan administration\u27s numerous judicial appointments, it is the rare observe...
For a long time philosophy has been unique among the humanities for seeking closer alliance with the...
The apex of American legal thought is embodied in two types of writings: the federal appellate opini...
Until the beginning of the 20th century, once the realist approach to law and society was emerging a...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
In our Spring 1987 issue, Professor Jaffa authored an essay in which he posited that the fundamental...
William H. Rehnquist\u27s essay, The Notion of a Living Constitution, was delivered as the Will E. O...
I propose to defend and explore three claims in this Essay. First, there is very little actual “law”...
In his typically clear statement of a provocative thesis, Fred Schauer, along with his co-author, Vi...
Models using judicial ideology to explain Supreme Court decision-making remain controver-sial due to...
Talk about judicial politics is ubiquitous in the press and academia today. Discussions of this topi...
Professor Schauer\u27s essay on constitutional positivism purports to clarify the terms of debate be...
I share with Fred Schauer the relatively unpopular belief that the positivist insistence that we kee...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Professor Jeffrey Rosen is the leading champion of judicial modesty among legal academics and public...
In the wake of the Reagan administration\u27s numerous judicial appointments, it is the rare observe...
For a long time philosophy has been unique among the humanities for seeking closer alliance with the...
The apex of American legal thought is embodied in two types of writings: the federal appellate opini...
Until the beginning of the 20th century, once the realist approach to law and society was emerging a...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
In our Spring 1987 issue, Professor Jaffa authored an essay in which he posited that the fundamental...
William H. Rehnquist\u27s essay, The Notion of a Living Constitution, was delivered as the Will E. O...
I propose to defend and explore three claims in this Essay. First, there is very little actual “law”...
In his typically clear statement of a provocative thesis, Fred Schauer, along with his co-author, Vi...
Models using judicial ideology to explain Supreme Court decision-making remain controver-sial due to...
Talk about judicial politics is ubiquitous in the press and academia today. Discussions of this topi...