This Article considers the constitutional validity of executive privilege claims made by the President against statutorily authorized information requests. The Article concludes that such claims are constitutionally illegitimate and that courts, when turned to, should order compliance with statutorily authorized demands for information in the face of executive privilege claims. This conclusion is reached in two steps. First, perusal of Article I\u27s list of legislative powers and Article II\u27s list of presidential powers does not clearly resolve the issue. Rather, such perusal alone offers fair ground to deem control of executive branch information both within Congress\u27 sweeping clause power and within the President\u27s execution p...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...
(Excerpt) Ultimately, this Article concludes that, while Vice Presidents have become embroiled in ev...
The concept of the public domain is the focus of a firestorm of debate, precipitated by some of the ...
This Article offers a new way of thinking and talking about government secrecy. In the vast literatu...
The National Security Agency’s bulk collection of telephony metadata runs contrary to Congress’s int...
What does the American public have the right to know about the federal government? The answer to thi...
What does the American public have the right to know about the federal government? The answer to thi...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
This essay investigates the issues raised by Eldred v. Ashcroft, in which the Supreme Court may de...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
This essay investigates the issues raised by Eldred v. Ashcroft, in which the Supreme Court may de...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...
(Excerpt) Ultimately, this Article concludes that, while Vice Presidents have become embroiled in ev...
The concept of the public domain is the focus of a firestorm of debate, precipitated by some of the ...
This Article offers a new way of thinking and talking about government secrecy. In the vast literatu...
The National Security Agency’s bulk collection of telephony metadata runs contrary to Congress’s int...
What does the American public have the right to know about the federal government? The answer to thi...
What does the American public have the right to know about the federal government? The answer to thi...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
A law office search threatens the attorney-client relationship by jeopardizing values protected by t...
This essay investigates the issues raised by Eldred v. Ashcroft, in which the Supreme Court may de...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
This essay investigates the issues raised by Eldred v. Ashcroft, in which the Supreme Court may de...
American law has yet to reach a satisfying conclusion about public access to information on governme...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...
To improve the current process and eliminate the bitter nature of confirmation hearings, Senators sh...