A great deal of scholarly attention is devoted to constitutional rights and comparatively little to remedies for their violation. Yet rights without remedies are not worth much, and remedial law does not always facilitate the enforcement of rights, even of constitutional rights. This Article discusses an especially challenging remedial context: suits seeking damages for constitutional wrongs that occurred in the past, that are unlikely to recur, and hence that cannot be remedied by forward-looking injunctive or declaratory relief. Typical fact patterns include charges that the police, prison guards, school administrators, or other officials have engaged in illegal searches and seizures, or fired people on account of protected speech, or dep...
Part I of this Article provides a retrospective which shows the development of section 1983 qualifie...
The second generation of state constitutionalism is now emerging. With the methodology of autonomo...
The Supreme Court’s elimination of the subjective element of the qualified immunity defense in const...
A great deal of scholarly attention is devoted to constitutional rights and comparatively little to ...
The Supreme Court has repeatedly said that 42 U.S.C. section 1983 creates no substantive rights, but...
Scholars have criticized the Court\u27s qualified immunity decision in Pearson v. Callahan on the gr...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
Constitutional tort law marries the substantive rights granted by the Constitution to the remedial m...
The cause of action for damages to redress violations of constitutional rights is now firmly establi...
Some constitutional rights of criminal defendants lend themselves to systematic violations at the tr...
Tort liability in the private realm may be understood as an instrument aimed...at deterrence...[and...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
Qualified immunity protects officials from damages for constitutional violations unless they have vi...
Government officers may harm persons in many ways. When an official inflicts a physical injury, caus...
Courts have repeatedly declined to allow causes of actions under the Constitution when Plaintiffs’ c...
Part I of this Article provides a retrospective which shows the development of section 1983 qualifie...
The second generation of state constitutionalism is now emerging. With the methodology of autonomo...
The Supreme Court’s elimination of the subjective element of the qualified immunity defense in const...
A great deal of scholarly attention is devoted to constitutional rights and comparatively little to ...
The Supreme Court has repeatedly said that 42 U.S.C. section 1983 creates no substantive rights, but...
Scholars have criticized the Court\u27s qualified immunity decision in Pearson v. Callahan on the gr...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
Constitutional tort law marries the substantive rights granted by the Constitution to the remedial m...
The cause of action for damages to redress violations of constitutional rights is now firmly establi...
Some constitutional rights of criminal defendants lend themselves to systematic violations at the tr...
Tort liability in the private realm may be understood as an instrument aimed...at deterrence...[and...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
Qualified immunity protects officials from damages for constitutional violations unless they have vi...
Government officers may harm persons in many ways. When an official inflicts a physical injury, caus...
Courts have repeatedly declined to allow causes of actions under the Constitution when Plaintiffs’ c...
Part I of this Article provides a retrospective which shows the development of section 1983 qualifie...
The second generation of state constitutionalism is now emerging. With the methodology of autonomo...
The Supreme Court’s elimination of the subjective element of the qualified immunity defense in const...