If there is anything as strongly associated in the public mind with Chief Justice John Roberts as his black robe and judicial temperament, it is surely his claim to judicial modesty. And indeed, some commentators have suggested that there are signs of newfound judicial restraint in the Roberts Court. One example of this purported restraint is the Roberts Court’s expressed preference for narrower, as-applied decisionmaking in constitutional cases, as opposed to striking down statutes on their face. The Roberts Court has turned away facial challenges or otherwise expressed a preference for making decisions on an as-applied basis in a number of cases. Examples range across a wide spectrum of subject matter, including voting rights cases, an Am...
Since the appointment of Chief Justice G. Roberts to the U.S. Supreme Court, political scientists an...
Chief Justice John Roberts upheld the individual mandate of the Affordable Care Act because he rejec...
After eleven years, the longest period in Supreme Court history with no change in membership, the Ro...
If there is anything as strongly associated in the public mind with Chief Justice John Roberts as hi...
This Article explores how the Roberts Court has negotiated the choice between as-applied and facial ...
In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, Justice Samuel Alito offers two main reasons why th...
One recurring theme of the early Roberts Court\u27s jurisprudence to date is its resistance to facia...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
Not too many years ago, scholars could reasonably speak of the U.S. Supreme Court as being among the...
Is the Roberts Court especially activist or, depending on your preference, especially lacking in jud...
Over twenty years ago, my Foreword on the Supreme Court’s October 1988 Term titled The Vanishing Con...
With President Donald Trump’s third Supreme Court nomination, the reexamination of Roe v. Wade has b...
Since the Supreme Court declared in 1973 that the Constitution grants women a limited right to an ab...
At the sprightly age of 57 and less than seven years into his term as chief justice, John Roberts lo...
In May 2021, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in a case designed to overrule Roe v. Wade. The as...
Since the appointment of Chief Justice G. Roberts to the U.S. Supreme Court, political scientists an...
Chief Justice John Roberts upheld the individual mandate of the Affordable Care Act because he rejec...
After eleven years, the longest period in Supreme Court history with no change in membership, the Ro...
If there is anything as strongly associated in the public mind with Chief Justice John Roberts as hi...
This Article explores how the Roberts Court has negotiated the choice between as-applied and facial ...
In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, Justice Samuel Alito offers two main reasons why th...
One recurring theme of the early Roberts Court\u27s jurisprudence to date is its resistance to facia...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
Not too many years ago, scholars could reasonably speak of the U.S. Supreme Court as being among the...
Is the Roberts Court especially activist or, depending on your preference, especially lacking in jud...
Over twenty years ago, my Foreword on the Supreme Court’s October 1988 Term titled The Vanishing Con...
With President Donald Trump’s third Supreme Court nomination, the reexamination of Roe v. Wade has b...
Since the Supreme Court declared in 1973 that the Constitution grants women a limited right to an ab...
At the sprightly age of 57 and less than seven years into his term as chief justice, John Roberts lo...
In May 2021, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in a case designed to overrule Roe v. Wade. The as...
Since the appointment of Chief Justice G. Roberts to the U.S. Supreme Court, political scientists an...
Chief Justice John Roberts upheld the individual mandate of the Affordable Care Act because he rejec...
After eleven years, the longest period in Supreme Court history with no change in membership, the Ro...