In this article, we consider the impact of positive political theory on legislative interpretation and, in particular, the debate over interpretive canons. Our vehicle for this consideration is the appropriations canon. By virtue of this canon, courts construe narrowly legislative changes to statutes made through the appropriations process. We consider the underlying logic and rationale of this canon -- essentially, that the appropriations process is unrepresentative and insufficiently deliberative -- and use this analysis to investigate, more broadly, the processes of canonical construction in the modern statutory interpretation jurisprudence. Canonical construction, we argue, must be attentive to the equilibrium effects of judicial approa...
This installment of Interpretation Matters examines a canon of statutory construction that has been ...
Federal courts have long employed substantive canons of construction in the interpretation of statut...
Previous installments of this column have examined numerous canons or conventions of statutory inter...
The much-maligned canons of statutory construction stubbornly have survived, largely on the strength...
This Symposium has its genesis in the Vanderbilt Law Review\u27s inaugural symposium, A Symposium on...
Canons are taking their turn down the academic runway in ways that no one would have foretold just a...
A regrettable side-effect of Karl Llewellyn\u27s interesting critique of the canons of statutory con...
What role should the realities of the legislative drafting process play in the theories and doctrine...
This Article argues that the principle relied upon in King v. Burwell that courts cannot interpret ...
Daniel Farber\u27 and Stephen Ross, in separate contributions to this Symposium, raise the most cruc...
In resolving questions of statutory meaning, the lion’s share of Roberts Court opinions considers an...
This Essay christens a new canon into the doctrines of statutory interpretation, one that can counte...
What motivates substantive presumptions about how to interpret statutes? Are they like statistical h...
This paper provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court’s use of substantive canons in it...
What role should the realities of the legislative drafting process play in the theories and doctrine...
This installment of Interpretation Matters examines a canon of statutory construction that has been ...
Federal courts have long employed substantive canons of construction in the interpretation of statut...
Previous installments of this column have examined numerous canons or conventions of statutory inter...
The much-maligned canons of statutory construction stubbornly have survived, largely on the strength...
This Symposium has its genesis in the Vanderbilt Law Review\u27s inaugural symposium, A Symposium on...
Canons are taking their turn down the academic runway in ways that no one would have foretold just a...
A regrettable side-effect of Karl Llewellyn\u27s interesting critique of the canons of statutory con...
What role should the realities of the legislative drafting process play in the theories and doctrine...
This Article argues that the principle relied upon in King v. Burwell that courts cannot interpret ...
Daniel Farber\u27 and Stephen Ross, in separate contributions to this Symposium, raise the most cruc...
In resolving questions of statutory meaning, the lion’s share of Roberts Court opinions considers an...
This Essay christens a new canon into the doctrines of statutory interpretation, one that can counte...
What motivates substantive presumptions about how to interpret statutes? Are they like statistical h...
This paper provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court’s use of substantive canons in it...
What role should the realities of the legislative drafting process play in the theories and doctrine...
This installment of Interpretation Matters examines a canon of statutory construction that has been ...
Federal courts have long employed substantive canons of construction in the interpretation of statut...
Previous installments of this column have examined numerous canons or conventions of statutory inter...