This Article uses the issue of presidential qualification as a vehicle to examine the meaning of citizenship today, arguing that the Natural-Born Citizen Clause perpetuates a second-class citizenship that is inappropriate and inapposite in modern American society. Upon this premise, this Article proposes that a constitutional amendment may be necessary since the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment serves as an implicit repeal of the Natural-Born Citizen Clause has proved historically insufficient. Part II of this Article examines the origins of the constitutional requirement that the President be a natural born Citizen and discusses the unsuccessful attempts to amend this requirement. This Part seeks to place the proposals to amend the...
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment begins by making clearthat All persons born or naturalized in...
Senator Ted Cruz’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination again raised the question whe...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
This Article uses the issue of presidential qualification as a vehicle to examine the meaning of cit...
The following discussion describes the historical context of the natural born citizenship clause; ex...
This article explores the controversy surrounding the natural born citizenship proviso in order to d...
Article II of the Constitution requires that the President be a “natural born Citizen.” The phrase i...
The enigmatic phrase natural born citizen poses a series of problems for contemporary originalism....
This Article analyzes the term citizenship in the United States in light of American jurisprudence...
Our Constitution has a deferred maintenance problem because we have fallen out of the habit of tendi...
It was one of the great shocks of my life, and it came early. In fifth-grade government class. Thoug...
With the rise of non-native-born American politicians, the natural born citizen requirement in the U...
In late 2015, debate among many US Republican presidential candidates focused on immigration policy,...
In the view both of the ancients and of modern liberal political theorists, the relationship between...
Intending to reverse Dred Scott and to abolish the southern “Black Codes,” Congress ratified the Fou...
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment begins by making clearthat All persons born or naturalized in...
Senator Ted Cruz’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination again raised the question whe...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
This Article uses the issue of presidential qualification as a vehicle to examine the meaning of cit...
The following discussion describes the historical context of the natural born citizenship clause; ex...
This article explores the controversy surrounding the natural born citizenship proviso in order to d...
Article II of the Constitution requires that the President be a “natural born Citizen.” The phrase i...
The enigmatic phrase natural born citizen poses a series of problems for contemporary originalism....
This Article analyzes the term citizenship in the United States in light of American jurisprudence...
Our Constitution has a deferred maintenance problem because we have fallen out of the habit of tendi...
It was one of the great shocks of my life, and it came early. In fifth-grade government class. Thoug...
With the rise of non-native-born American politicians, the natural born citizen requirement in the U...
In late 2015, debate among many US Republican presidential candidates focused on immigration policy,...
In the view both of the ancients and of modern liberal political theorists, the relationship between...
Intending to reverse Dred Scott and to abolish the southern “Black Codes,” Congress ratified the Fou...
Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment begins by making clearthat All persons born or naturalized in...
Senator Ted Cruz’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination again raised the question whe...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...