In a recent Harvard Law Review commentary, two well-known constitutional scholars called into question not only what Supreme Court cases are “canonized” in casebooks, but whether the “Court-centeredness” of our scholarship and teaching about constitutional law has led to an impoverishment of the discourse on justice. The authors document how “[c]ases become important to teach and remember because they serve as the icons (and demons) of an invented constitutional tradition” --a tradition that “comes into being at a particular point in history, and then regards itself as always having been there.” There is no better example of such an icon illustrating the canonization of “invented tradition” than the Slaughter-House Cases. More important, th...
Originalist jurisprudence, which enjoins a faithful adherence to the values enshrined in the late ei...
The Slaughter-House Cases are simultaneously unremarkable and extraordinary. They are unremarkable b...
The Rehnquist and Roberts Courts have inaugurated a golden age for tradition-based arguments in cons...
In a recent Harvard Law Review commentary, two well-known constitutional scholars called into questi...
In The Slaugherhouse Cases, the Supreme Court gutted the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Four...
The Slaughterhouse Cases, Bradwell v. Illinois, and Cruikshank v. United States, which were all d...
This Essay offers a revisionist account of the Slaughter-House Cases. It argues that the opinion’s p...
Legal academics and the public are fascinated by both constitutional text and the processes by which...
Three weeks before he died in May 1873, the frail and ailing Salmon P. Chase joined three of his bre...
The conclusions that the Court drew about the meaning of the 14th Amendment shortly after its adopti...
This is an invited essay that will appear in a book titled Law\u27s Infamy, edited by Austin Sarat...
A Review of The Burger Court: The Counter-Revolution That Wasn\u27t by Vincent Blas
Constitutional law has been an active battlefield as competing groups within the academy seek to dec...
References to the “lessons of history” are ubiquitous in law. Nowhere has this been more apparent th...
The challenge in teaching Constitutional Law is to teach the doctrine while puncturing the myths. It...
Originalist jurisprudence, which enjoins a faithful adherence to the values enshrined in the late ei...
The Slaughter-House Cases are simultaneously unremarkable and extraordinary. They are unremarkable b...
The Rehnquist and Roberts Courts have inaugurated a golden age for tradition-based arguments in cons...
In a recent Harvard Law Review commentary, two well-known constitutional scholars called into questi...
In The Slaugherhouse Cases, the Supreme Court gutted the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Four...
The Slaughterhouse Cases, Bradwell v. Illinois, and Cruikshank v. United States, which were all d...
This Essay offers a revisionist account of the Slaughter-House Cases. It argues that the opinion’s p...
Legal academics and the public are fascinated by both constitutional text and the processes by which...
Three weeks before he died in May 1873, the frail and ailing Salmon P. Chase joined three of his bre...
The conclusions that the Court drew about the meaning of the 14th Amendment shortly after its adopti...
This is an invited essay that will appear in a book titled Law\u27s Infamy, edited by Austin Sarat...
A Review of The Burger Court: The Counter-Revolution That Wasn\u27t by Vincent Blas
Constitutional law has been an active battlefield as competing groups within the academy seek to dec...
References to the “lessons of history” are ubiquitous in law. Nowhere has this been more apparent th...
The challenge in teaching Constitutional Law is to teach the doctrine while puncturing the myths. It...
Originalist jurisprudence, which enjoins a faithful adherence to the values enshrined in the late ei...
The Slaughter-House Cases are simultaneously unremarkable and extraordinary. They are unremarkable b...
The Rehnquist and Roberts Courts have inaugurated a golden age for tradition-based arguments in cons...