In 1947, this Review published two lectures on statutory interpretation by Jerome Frank and Felix Frankfurter. Both jurists were concerned with a basic question: How constrained are judges when they interpret legislation? The answers each gives, while similar in some respects, differ strikingly. In arguing that interpretation necessarily involves a creative element, Frank analogizes the role of a judge in interpreting legislation to that of a performer in interpreting a musical composition. Although he argues that judicial creativity is constrained, Frank views statutory interpretation as a kind of legislation. For Frankfurter, by contrast, in construing a statute, a judge is to disinterestedly carry out the purposes of the legislature. J...
Academic ferment concerning interpretatIon has clearly reached the heady brew stage. And, with p...
The principal theme of this essay is that statutory interpretation is a project that requires advoca...
The purpose of this conference is a dialogue between scholars and judges about judging. Because judg...
In 1947, this Review published two lectures on statutory interpretation by Jerome Frank and Felix Fr...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
In the past decade the study of statutory interpretation has gone from benign neglect to intense scr...
Theories of statutory interpretation abound. Scholars, judges and commentators have long puzzled ove...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
In the last decade, statutory interpretation has reemerged as an important topic of academic theory ...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Statutory interpretation is at the cutting edge of legal scholarship and, now, legislative activity....
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
How should we interpret legal instruments? How do we identify the law they create? Current approache...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
Academic ferment concerning interpretatIon has clearly reached the heady brew stage. And, with p...
The principal theme of this essay is that statutory interpretation is a project that requires advoca...
The purpose of this conference is a dialogue between scholars and judges about judging. Because judg...
In 1947, this Review published two lectures on statutory interpretation by Jerome Frank and Felix Fr...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
In the past decade the study of statutory interpretation has gone from benign neglect to intense scr...
Theories of statutory interpretation abound. Scholars, judges and commentators have long puzzled ove...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
In the last decade, statutory interpretation has reemerged as an important topic of academic theory ...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Statutory interpretation is at the cutting edge of legal scholarship and, now, legislative activity....
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
How should we interpret legal instruments? How do we identify the law they create? Current approache...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
Academic ferment concerning interpretatIon has clearly reached the heady brew stage. And, with p...
The principal theme of this essay is that statutory interpretation is a project that requires advoca...
The purpose of this conference is a dialogue between scholars and judges about judging. Because judg...