In How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution, Richard Epstein bemoans the growth of a dominant big government. How Progressives should receive a warm reception from the audience, lawyers and laypeople alike, who view the New Deal as a mistake of epic proportions. For the rest of us, significant gaps will still remain between, on the one hand, our understanding of the nation’s past and of the complex nature of constitutional lawmaking and, on the other, Epstein’s version of the nature of twentieth-century reform and Progressive jurisprudence
This book examines both the constitutional jurisprudence of Supreme Court justice Louis D. Brandeis ...
A widely accepted model of American legal history is that classical legal thought, which dominated...
Richard Epstein is a rare and forceful voice against the conventional academic wisdom of our time. L...
In the 1888 novel Looking Backward, Edward Bellamy dreamed up a twentieth century America that was a...
In How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution, Richard Epstein bemoans the growth of a dominant big...
Since his classic book Takings appeared in 1985, Richard Epstein\u27s ideas have profoundly shaped d...
Richard A. Epstein’s The Classical Liberal Constitution is an imposing addition to the burgeoning bo...
Paul Moreno, the Grewcock Chair in Constitutional History at Hillsdale College, sets out to explain ...
A Review of Robin West, Progressive Constitutionalism: Reconstructing the Fourteenth Amendmen
Richard Epstein’s new book, The Classical Liberal Constitution, is the latest entry in what might ...
Reviewing Joseph W. Postell and Jonathan O’Neill, Editors, Toward an American Conservatism: Constitu...
Richard Epstein started his distinguished law-teaching career at the USC Law School. The year was 19...
This paper evaluates arguments made in Ran Hirschl\u27s powerful and sobering book, Towards Juristoc...
The opening pages of Rousseau’s Social Contract have two striking phrases. The more celebrated is, “...
This essays examines Barry Friedman’s book, The Will of the People, and its thesis that, with lags a...
This book examines both the constitutional jurisprudence of Supreme Court justice Louis D. Brandeis ...
A widely accepted model of American legal history is that classical legal thought, which dominated...
Richard Epstein is a rare and forceful voice against the conventional academic wisdom of our time. L...
In the 1888 novel Looking Backward, Edward Bellamy dreamed up a twentieth century America that was a...
In How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution, Richard Epstein bemoans the growth of a dominant big...
Since his classic book Takings appeared in 1985, Richard Epstein\u27s ideas have profoundly shaped d...
Richard A. Epstein’s The Classical Liberal Constitution is an imposing addition to the burgeoning bo...
Paul Moreno, the Grewcock Chair in Constitutional History at Hillsdale College, sets out to explain ...
A Review of Robin West, Progressive Constitutionalism: Reconstructing the Fourteenth Amendmen
Richard Epstein’s new book, The Classical Liberal Constitution, is the latest entry in what might ...
Reviewing Joseph W. Postell and Jonathan O’Neill, Editors, Toward an American Conservatism: Constitu...
Richard Epstein started his distinguished law-teaching career at the USC Law School. The year was 19...
This paper evaluates arguments made in Ran Hirschl\u27s powerful and sobering book, Towards Juristoc...
The opening pages of Rousseau’s Social Contract have two striking phrases. The more celebrated is, “...
This essays examines Barry Friedman’s book, The Will of the People, and its thesis that, with lags a...
This book examines both the constitutional jurisprudence of Supreme Court justice Louis D. Brandeis ...
A widely accepted model of American legal history is that classical legal thought, which dominated...
Richard Epstein is a rare and forceful voice against the conventional academic wisdom of our time. L...