This Essay challenges the view that although the actual and everyday Constitution may be riddled with real injustices, progressives should maintain faith in an idealized document and should see the shared language of constitutionalism as the privileged instrument for redeeming political life. Instead, it argues that faith should reside in an ideal of effective and equal freedom alone. Indeed, such a commitment may at key moments require pursuing constitutional rupture and rejection. The Essay highlights this point by reinterpreting two central decisions from the Civil War and Reconstruction eras: The Prize Cases (1863) and Ex parte Milligan (1866). These cases underscore how during a period of social transformation constitutional discourses...
This essay is part of a symposium issue dedicated to Constitutional Rights: Intersections, Synergie...
Modern constitutional law can best be understood as the product of conflicting populist and progress...
This essay is an attempt to analyze, for the non-American reader especially, some of the factors tha...
This Essay challenges the view that although the actual and everyday Constitution may be riddled wit...
This essay reviews Constitutional Redemption: Political Faith in an Unjust World by Jack Balkin (201...
This essay explores the paradoxical circumstances of emancipation and constitutional reform during t...
In the deepest sense, this Article seeks to bridge the gap between philosophy, political theory, and...
As hard as it is today to amend the United States Constitution — and empirical studies confirm that ...
The notion of a “living Constitution” often rests on an implicit assumption that important constitut...
This is the second time I have had the pleasure of honoring Mark Tushnet\u27s life and work. In this...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
In this paper, I concentrate on the narrower, more typical topic of judicial interpretation. At leas...
Did the framers and ratifiers of the U. S. Constitution think that change in American society would ...
The relationship between democracy and constitutionalism is a complicated and multi-dimensional que...
The article\u27s central thesis is that the understandings of the constitutional tradition most cent...
This essay is part of a symposium issue dedicated to Constitutional Rights: Intersections, Synergie...
Modern constitutional law can best be understood as the product of conflicting populist and progress...
This essay is an attempt to analyze, for the non-American reader especially, some of the factors tha...
This Essay challenges the view that although the actual and everyday Constitution may be riddled wit...
This essay reviews Constitutional Redemption: Political Faith in an Unjust World by Jack Balkin (201...
This essay explores the paradoxical circumstances of emancipation and constitutional reform during t...
In the deepest sense, this Article seeks to bridge the gap between philosophy, political theory, and...
As hard as it is today to amend the United States Constitution — and empirical studies confirm that ...
The notion of a “living Constitution” often rests on an implicit assumption that important constitut...
This is the second time I have had the pleasure of honoring Mark Tushnet\u27s life and work. In this...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
In this paper, I concentrate on the narrower, more typical topic of judicial interpretation. At leas...
Did the framers and ratifiers of the U. S. Constitution think that change in American society would ...
The relationship between democracy and constitutionalism is a complicated and multi-dimensional que...
The article\u27s central thesis is that the understandings of the constitutional tradition most cent...
This essay is part of a symposium issue dedicated to Constitutional Rights: Intersections, Synergie...
Modern constitutional law can best be understood as the product of conflicting populist and progress...
This essay is an attempt to analyze, for the non-American reader especially, some of the factors tha...