The Eleventh Amendment was ratified in response to Chisholm v. Georgia, which held that the language of Article III, § 2 makes a state amenable to suit in federal court by citizens of another state.\u27 By its express terms, Eleventh Amendment immunity is only available to states being sued by citizens of other states.\u27 Since its enactment some two centuries ago, the Amendment has been interpreted to extend to a state being sued by its own citizens and to agencies which constitute an arm-of-the- state. This note examines the Supreme Court\u27s restatement of the test for immunity and its impact in future Eleventh Amendment cases
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education E...
This article argues that conflicting analytical strains run through the Supreme Court\u27s recent ma...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
(Excerpt) The sovereign immunity of the states, or the freedom of a state from suit by its citizens,...
This cloak of immunity in which state officials can wrap themselves to protect against damage suits ...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
In 1999, the Supreme Court held that the common law principle that the sovereign cannot be sued in i...
The Supreme Court's state sovereign immunity jurisprudence has undergone a fundamental change. Altho...
(Excerpt) The sovereign immunity of the states, or the freedom of a state from suit by its citizens,...
The eleventh amendment1 recently has emerged from the obscurity which surrounded its first 170 years...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education E...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education E...
This article argues that conflicting analytical strains run through the Supreme Court\u27s recent ma...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
(Excerpt) The sovereign immunity of the states, or the freedom of a state from suit by its citizens,...
This cloak of immunity in which state officials can wrap themselves to protect against damage suits ...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
The Supreme Court\u27s Eleventh Amendment decisions give conflicting signals about what the Amendmen...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
In 1999, the Supreme Court held that the common law principle that the sovereign cannot be sued in i...
The Supreme Court's state sovereign immunity jurisprudence has undergone a fundamental change. Altho...
(Excerpt) The sovereign immunity of the states, or the freedom of a state from suit by its citizens,...
The eleventh amendment1 recently has emerged from the obscurity which surrounded its first 170 years...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education E...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Education E...
This article argues that conflicting analytical strains run through the Supreme Court\u27s recent ma...
The Parker v. Brown (or “state action”) doctrine and the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution impo...