Since the emergence of the Apprendi majority and its newly minted (and evolving) constitutional limits on criminal punishment, many commentators have begun to address its implications for the horizontal relations between the branches of government — between legislators and courts, between judges and juries, and between judges and prosecutors. Less widely addressed, though equally (if not more) important, has been the Apprendi doctrine’s implications for vertical relations, particularly federalism. This essay seeks to begin to fill that lacuna in the literature. Part I explains how Apprendi undermines principles of federalism, a curious tension because several of Apprendi’s strongest defenders, particularly Justices Scalia and Thomas, are al...
The present article aims to analyze the judicial federalism in the United States. To do so, it compa...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Commentators generally regard federalism and separation of powers as distinct features of the consti...
Since the emergence of the Apprendi majority and its newly minted (and evolving) constitutional limi...
In June 2000, the United States Supreme Court decided Apprendi v. New Jersey,\u27 a case that likely...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
The United States has had a dual court system since its founding. One might expect such a pronouncem...
This Article provides a new interpretation of the origins of three central obsessions of federal-cou...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
For several decades the Court has invoked “state dignity” to animate federalism reasoning in isolate...
The distinctive feature of federalism is to locate the central and constituent governments\u27 respe...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
Like the Supreme Court\u27s separation of powers jurisprudence, its federalism jurisprudence might, ...
This paper examines the growing movement away from the functional nature of federalism contained wit...
The Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey, ___ U.S. ___ (2000), held as a matter of due process that any f...
The present article aims to analyze the judicial federalism in the United States. To do so, it compa...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Commentators generally regard federalism and separation of powers as distinct features of the consti...
Since the emergence of the Apprendi majority and its newly minted (and evolving) constitutional limi...
In June 2000, the United States Supreme Court decided Apprendi v. New Jersey,\u27 a case that likely...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
The United States has had a dual court system since its founding. One might expect such a pronouncem...
This Article provides a new interpretation of the origins of three central obsessions of federal-cou...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
For several decades the Court has invoked “state dignity” to animate federalism reasoning in isolate...
The distinctive feature of federalism is to locate the central and constituent governments\u27 respe...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
Like the Supreme Court\u27s separation of powers jurisprudence, its federalism jurisprudence might, ...
This paper examines the growing movement away from the functional nature of federalism contained wit...
The Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey, ___ U.S. ___ (2000), held as a matter of due process that any f...
The present article aims to analyze the judicial federalism in the United States. To do so, it compa...
Part I of this Note offers a brief account of the two main theories of federalism protection: the po...
Commentators generally regard federalism and separation of powers as distinct features of the consti...