This article, using a recent Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling on partisan gerrymandering, explores how state constitutions can be significantly more protective of rights than the federal constitution
In Baker v. State, the Supreme Court of Vermont ruled that the state constitution’s Common Benefits ...
The Supreme Court recently limited Congress’s ability to pass civil rights statutes for the protecti...
The United States Supreme Court ruled in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,...
The level of protection of individual rights afforded by state constitutions has been the subject of...
In contemporary rights jurisprudence and theory, the Fourteenth Amendment and the Federal Bill of Ri...
The article begins by examining the sources of equal protection law in both federal and the state co...
In the American legal order, constitutional rights are conventionally understood to apply to and res...
This Article is actually the third and final article in a series that began with (A) Steven G. Calab...
This Article focuses on the debate concerning state constitutional expansion of criminal-procedure p...
This Article provides the first comprehensive look at state constitutional provisions explicitly gra...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This article identifies and explains three fund...
Deriding the state action doctrine is one of the great pastimes of American constitutional law. It h...
We are about to observe the fortieth anniversary of the publication of a seminal law review article:...
[Excerpt] “For the most part, the Constitution speaks in generalities. The 14th Amendment, for examp...
Faced with the dead-end nature of attempting to use the United States Constitution to develop enforc...
In Baker v. State, the Supreme Court of Vermont ruled that the state constitution’s Common Benefits ...
The Supreme Court recently limited Congress’s ability to pass civil rights statutes for the protecti...
The United States Supreme Court ruled in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,...
The level of protection of individual rights afforded by state constitutions has been the subject of...
In contemporary rights jurisprudence and theory, the Fourteenth Amendment and the Federal Bill of Ri...
The article begins by examining the sources of equal protection law in both federal and the state co...
In the American legal order, constitutional rights are conventionally understood to apply to and res...
This Article is actually the third and final article in a series that began with (A) Steven G. Calab...
This Article focuses on the debate concerning state constitutional expansion of criminal-procedure p...
This Article provides the first comprehensive look at state constitutional provisions explicitly gra...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This article identifies and explains three fund...
Deriding the state action doctrine is one of the great pastimes of American constitutional law. It h...
We are about to observe the fortieth anniversary of the publication of a seminal law review article:...
[Excerpt] “For the most part, the Constitution speaks in generalities. The 14th Amendment, for examp...
Faced with the dead-end nature of attempting to use the United States Constitution to develop enforc...
In Baker v. State, the Supreme Court of Vermont ruled that the state constitution’s Common Benefits ...
The Supreme Court recently limited Congress’s ability to pass civil rights statutes for the protecti...
The United States Supreme Court ruled in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,...