The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not general common law courts. Nevertheless, a perennial point of contention among federal law scholars is whether and how a court’s common law powers affect its treatment of statutes. Textualists point to federal courts’ lack of common law powers to reject purposivist statutory interpretation. Critics of textualism challenge this characterization of federal courts’ powers, leveraging a more robust notion of the judicial power to support purposivist or dynamic interpretation. This disagreement has become more important in recent years with the emergence of a refreshing movement in the theory of statutory interpretation. While debate about federal sta...
Debates about the common lawmaking power of the federal courts focus exclusively on substantive comm...
Lawmaking by federal courts has been a matter of controversy since the early days of the Republic. I...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
Controversies about statutory interpretation and the proper roles for judges in interpretation are p...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
The authority of federal courts to make federal common law has been a controversial question for cou...
We do not have an Erie for the Age of Statutes. The Erie that we have addresses a world in which t...
Scholars have long debated the separation of powers question of what judicial power federal courts h...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
This Article addresses a problem that potentially arises whenever a federal court encounters a state...
Every Justice, save perhaps Justice Breyer, has recently subscribed to an opinion raising questions ...
This Article argues that modern courts read individual federal statutes to encompass more issues tha...
Debates about the common lawmaking power of the federal courts focus exclusively on substantive comm...
Lawmaking by federal courts has been a matter of controversy since the early days of the Republic. I...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
Controversies about statutory interpretation and the proper roles for judges in interpretation are p...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
The authority of federal courts to make federal common law has been a controversial question for cou...
We do not have an Erie for the Age of Statutes. The Erie that we have addresses a world in which t...
Scholars have long debated the separation of powers question of what judicial power federal courts h...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
This Article addresses a problem that potentially arises whenever a federal court encounters a state...
Every Justice, save perhaps Justice Breyer, has recently subscribed to an opinion raising questions ...
This Article argues that modern courts read individual federal statutes to encompass more issues tha...
Debates about the common lawmaking power of the federal courts focus exclusively on substantive comm...
Lawmaking by federal courts has been a matter of controversy since the early days of the Republic. I...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...