This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory interpretation cases: The Court’s textualist Justices—or at least some subset of them—have proved remarkably willing to abandon stare decisis and to argue in favor of overruling established statutory interpretation precedents. This is especially curious given that statutory precedents are supposed to be sacrosanct; Congress, rather than the Court, is the preferred vehicle for correcting any errors in the judicial construction of a statute and courts are to overrule such constructions only in rare, compelling circumstances. What, then, accounts for the textualist Justices’ brazen willingness to overrule statutory precedents in recent years? And ...
How do I construct an argument, consistent with textual primacy, that achieves my desired result? T...
This Article demonstrates that textualist Judges, most notably Justices Scalia, Thomas, and, to a le...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
The Supreme Court has long given its cases interpreting statutes special protection from overruling....
This Article examines three facets of the relationship between statutory interpretation and the law ...
This Article provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court\u27s use of substantive canons ...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
The sporadic way that various members of the Supreme Court and the legal community treat the princip...
Should federal courts give stare decisis effect to statutory interpretation methodology? Although a ...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth to examine the textualist...
The last decade has been a remarkable one for statutory interpretation. For most of our history, Ame...
How do I construct an argument, consistent with textual primacy, that achieves my desired result? T...
This Article demonstrates that textualist Judges, most notably Justices Scalia, Thomas, and, to a le...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
The Supreme Court has long given its cases interpreting statutes special protection from overruling....
This Article examines three facets of the relationship between statutory interpretation and the law ...
This Article provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court\u27s use of substantive canons ...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
The sporadic way that various members of the Supreme Court and the legal community treat the princip...
Should federal courts give stare decisis effect to statutory interpretation methodology? Although a ...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth to examine the textualist...
The last decade has been a remarkable one for statutory interpretation. For most of our history, Ame...
How do I construct an argument, consistent with textual primacy, that achieves my desired result? T...
This Article demonstrates that textualist Judges, most notably Justices Scalia, Thomas, and, to a le...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...