Professor Lobel premises his review on a flattering, but ultimately ill-chosen, comparison between my book and John Hart Ely\u27s Democracy and Distrust: A Theory of Judicial Review. Both books, in his view, erroneously develop a process-based theory of the Constitution, and must therefore answer the same, familiar objection: that it is theoretically impossible to divide process from substance. Perhaps both books could be called process-based in the broad sense that each offers proposals to protect and improve the decision making processes of American governmental institutions. But there fruitful comparison largely ends. As its subtitle makes clear, Professor Ely\u27s book sought to address Alexander Bickel\u27s counter-majoritarian ...
Constitutional review, the power of courts to strike down incompatible legislation and administrativ...
This article revisits my argument that structural judicial review – judicial review of those provisi...
In the peculiar rhetoric that is rapidly growing ubiquitous, constitutional theorists and anti-theor...
Professor Lobel premises his review on a flattering, but ultimately ill-chosen, comparison between m...
Professor Lobel premises his review on a flattering, but ultimately illchosen, comparison between my...
John Hart Ely\u27s Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial...
Scholarship in philosophy proceeds at a slower pace than in the law. As Tom Lehrer, the poet laureat...
The Intelligible Constitution by Joseph Goldstein. Oxford University Press. 1992. The subtitle of Pr...
The problem of judicial review turns out to be a number of different problems that should be disag...
In this essay Professor Deutsch examines the legitimacy of judicial review, in part as a response to...
I recently reviewed God vs. the Gavel by Professor Marci Hamilton, and she published a brief respons...
Part I: General Observations is mainly devoted to a discussion of several features of a constitution...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
Several of my critics argue as though the central purpose of Constitutional Self-Government were to ...
The author examines two theories of judicial review under the Charter, one proposed by D.M. Beatty i...
Constitutional review, the power of courts to strike down incompatible legislation and administrativ...
This article revisits my argument that structural judicial review – judicial review of those provisi...
In the peculiar rhetoric that is rapidly growing ubiquitous, constitutional theorists and anti-theor...
Professor Lobel premises his review on a flattering, but ultimately ill-chosen, comparison between m...
Professor Lobel premises his review on a flattering, but ultimately illchosen, comparison between my...
John Hart Ely\u27s Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial...
Scholarship in philosophy proceeds at a slower pace than in the law. As Tom Lehrer, the poet laureat...
The Intelligible Constitution by Joseph Goldstein. Oxford University Press. 1992. The subtitle of Pr...
The problem of judicial review turns out to be a number of different problems that should be disag...
In this essay Professor Deutsch examines the legitimacy of judicial review, in part as a response to...
I recently reviewed God vs. the Gavel by Professor Marci Hamilton, and she published a brief respons...
Part I: General Observations is mainly devoted to a discussion of several features of a constitution...
According to traditional arguments, judicial review is a legitimate element of representative govern...
Several of my critics argue as though the central purpose of Constitutional Self-Government were to ...
The author examines two theories of judicial review under the Charter, one proposed by D.M. Beatty i...
Constitutional review, the power of courts to strike down incompatible legislation and administrativ...
This article revisits my argument that structural judicial review – judicial review of those provisi...
In the peculiar rhetoric that is rapidly growing ubiquitous, constitutional theorists and anti-theor...