This Article compares the realist critique of Marbury with several revisionist defenses of that decision. Realists claim to see Marbury as essentially political and thus as the fountainhead of modern judicial review. Revisionists claim to see the decision as legalistically justified and thus inconsistent with current practices. Close examination, however, indicates that, despite sharp rhetorical differences, these two accounts are largely complementary rather than inconsistent. Each envisions Marbury as embodying elements of both political realism and legal formalism. Once the false argument about whether Marbury was either political or legal is put aside, it is possible to trace the influence of the decision on contemporary judicial behavi...
This article challenges the notion that Marbury v. Madison was a critical case immediately after the...
On the first day of virtually every course in American Constitutional Law the case of Marbury v. Mad...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
This Article compares the realist critique of Marbury with several revisionist defenses of that deci...
The concept of judicial review of the constitutionality of state and federal statutes by the Supreme...
Chief Justice Marshall\u27s legendary opinion in Marbury v. Madison has always been the centerpiece ...
Marbury v. Madison is today indisputably one of the great cases of American constitutional law bec...
This article builds on recent scholarship about the origins and creation of “our Marbury”—the contem...
Though normally not friends of original intent or legal tradition, today\u27s judicial activists ...
Marbury v. Madison is our foremost symbol of judicial power. Not only is the decision regarded as th...
Marbury plays an important role in the debate over the legitimacy of judicial review in the American...
Two hundred years after its most famous invocation in Marbury v. Madison, judicial review has appare...
To put the point somewhat strongly for emphasis, the U.S. system of judicial review is now something...
Book review: Marbury v. Madison and Judicial Review. By Robert Lowry Clinton. Lawrence, Kan.: Univer...
Part I summarizes Marbury’s statutory analysis. Part II picks up that summary and analyzes each of t...
This article challenges the notion that Marbury v. Madison was a critical case immediately after the...
On the first day of virtually every course in American Constitutional Law the case of Marbury v. Mad...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
This Article compares the realist critique of Marbury with several revisionist defenses of that deci...
The concept of judicial review of the constitutionality of state and federal statutes by the Supreme...
Chief Justice Marshall\u27s legendary opinion in Marbury v. Madison has always been the centerpiece ...
Marbury v. Madison is today indisputably one of the great cases of American constitutional law bec...
This article builds on recent scholarship about the origins and creation of “our Marbury”—the contem...
Though normally not friends of original intent or legal tradition, today\u27s judicial activists ...
Marbury v. Madison is our foremost symbol of judicial power. Not only is the decision regarded as th...
Marbury plays an important role in the debate over the legitimacy of judicial review in the American...
Two hundred years after its most famous invocation in Marbury v. Madison, judicial review has appare...
To put the point somewhat strongly for emphasis, the U.S. system of judicial review is now something...
Book review: Marbury v. Madison and Judicial Review. By Robert Lowry Clinton. Lawrence, Kan.: Univer...
Part I summarizes Marbury’s statutory analysis. Part II picks up that summary and analyzes each of t...
This article challenges the notion that Marbury v. Madison was a critical case immediately after the...
On the first day of virtually every course in American Constitutional Law the case of Marbury v. Mad...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...