Most courts now endorse lexical ordering for statutory cases. That is, a limited set of top-tier sources, if adequately clear, are supposed to establish statutory meaning. Lower-tier sources are held in reserve for close calls. Examples include legislative history and deference to agency positions, which often are demoted into tiebreaking roles. In fact, some such hierarchy of sources is approved by working majorities at the U.S. Supreme Court and more than forty state supreme courts. Although popular today, lexically ordered interpretation has risen and fallen before. Indeed, we should pause to reconsider whether these instructions are justified and whether judges can follow them. This Article explores the core trade-offs and implementatio...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This article responds to Professor Adrian Vermeule\u27s new book, Judging Under Uncertainty. Profess...
This article claims that statutory drafting errors undermine the basic tenet of the textualist theor...
Most courts now endorse lexical ordering for statutory cases. That is, a limited set of top-tier sou...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Courts look at text differently in high-stakes cases. Statutory language that would otherwise be “un...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
Judicial review of agency statutory interpretations depends heavily on the linguistic concept of amb...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Is statutory interpretation an activity that all courts should perform the same way? Courts and comm...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
This symposium asks, “How much work does language do?” The answer these days is “too much.” Courts a...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This article responds to Professor Adrian Vermeule\u27s new book, Judging Under Uncertainty. Profess...
This article claims that statutory drafting errors undermine the basic tenet of the textualist theor...
Most courts now endorse lexical ordering for statutory cases. That is, a limited set of top-tier sou...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Courts look at text differently in high-stakes cases. Statutory language that would otherwise be “un...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
Judicial review of agency statutory interpretations depends heavily on the linguistic concept of amb...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Is statutory interpretation an activity that all courts should perform the same way? Courts and comm...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
This symposium asks, “How much work does language do?” The answer these days is “too much.” Courts a...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This article responds to Professor Adrian Vermeule\u27s new book, Judging Under Uncertainty. Profess...
This article claims that statutory drafting errors undermine the basic tenet of the textualist theor...