The conventional narrative that courts and legal scholars tell about the repudiation of Lochnerism in the late 1930s is incomplete. The standard view is that the Lochner line of cases-those overturning state wage and hour laws under substantive due process doctrine-collapsed as their premises about economic liberty were undermined. The doctrine then remained dormant until it was revived in Griswold v. Connecticut. The account continues that the aim of substantive due process jurisprudence in the post-Griswold era, as the Supreme Court turned to vindicating personal and intimate rights under the doctrine, has been to distinguish the modem doctrine from Lochnerism. Yet this view ignores how the architects of the New Deal era repudiated Lochne...
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
Have we come to bury Lochner, or to praise it? Lochner v. New York,\u27 decided 100 years ago, gave ...
The Article examines the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s protection of liberty of contract as a fundamental ...
Post-New Deal constitutionalism is in search of a theory that justifies judicial intervention on beh...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
I. Introduction A. The Flights from Substance in Constitutional Theory A specter is haunting constit...
This Article argues that the conventional narrative about the decline of Lochnerism and the rise of ...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
According to Justice David Souter, it is most familiar history that back when the Supreme Court to...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
Almost fifty years after the Supreme Court revived the doctrine, substantive due process remains a p...
To say that the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Lochner v. New York is infamous is an understatement....
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
Have we come to bury Lochner, or to praise it? Lochner v. New York,\u27 decided 100 years ago, gave ...
The Article examines the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s protection of liberty of contract as a fundamental ...
Post-New Deal constitutionalism is in search of a theory that justifies judicial intervention on beh...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
I. Introduction A. The Flights from Substance in Constitutional Theory A specter is haunting constit...
This Article argues that the conventional narrative about the decline of Lochnerism and the rise of ...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
According to Justice David Souter, it is most familiar history that back when the Supreme Court to...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
Almost fifty years after the Supreme Court revived the doctrine, substantive due process remains a p...
To say that the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Lochner v. New York is infamous is an understatement....
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
Have we come to bury Lochner, or to praise it? Lochner v. New York,\u27 decided 100 years ago, gave ...
The Article examines the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s protection of liberty of contract as a fundamental ...