Some contemporary Congresses have lost sight of the original scope of their predecessors\u27 assertions of privilege and now claim an absolute privilege to withhold both the originals and copies of subpoenaed papers. A few judicial opinions suggest as much or more. It is possible that even cursorily documented, ill-considered dicta can take root and flourish, and to prevent that, this article This article charts the constitutional boundaries of Congress\u27 privilege to withhold its internal papers from judicial subpoena. It surveys the privileges expressly given Congress in the text of the Constitution as well as the privileges that might be implied from our constitutional structure and history. This examination reveals that while the Cons...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
This essay develops an institutional perspective to consider limitations on judicial authority. Rath...
Some contemporary Congresses have lost sight of the original scope of their predecessors\u27 asserti...
Scholars and jurists have long assumed that, when the executive branch declines to defend a federal ...
Both the executive branch and Congress claim the final word in oversight disputes. Congress asserts ...
In 2020, the Supreme Court rendered a landmark decision in Trump v. Mazars establishing four factors...
This article adopts a novel separation of powers framework to analyze the Rehnquist Court\u27s recen...
Both the executive branch and Congress claim the final word in oversight disputes. Congress asserts ...
This symposium article, the first of two on regulation of government\u27s efforts to obtain paper an...
In recent years, the fate of federal statutes has increasingly turned on the contents of their forma...
This article will analyze possible limitations on Congress’ Article I power, concluding that separat...
In this article, the author provides an extended analysis of the constitutional claims against legis...
In their recent article, Congress’s (Limited) Power to Represent Itself in Court, 99 Cornell L. Rev....
In 1924, Plank Five of the Platform of the Independent candidate for President proposed a constituti...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
This essay develops an institutional perspective to consider limitations on judicial authority. Rath...
Some contemporary Congresses have lost sight of the original scope of their predecessors\u27 asserti...
Scholars and jurists have long assumed that, when the executive branch declines to defend a federal ...
Both the executive branch and Congress claim the final word in oversight disputes. Congress asserts ...
In 2020, the Supreme Court rendered a landmark decision in Trump v. Mazars establishing four factors...
This article adopts a novel separation of powers framework to analyze the Rehnquist Court\u27s recen...
Both the executive branch and Congress claim the final word in oversight disputes. Congress asserts ...
This symposium article, the first of two on regulation of government\u27s efforts to obtain paper an...
In recent years, the fate of federal statutes has increasingly turned on the contents of their forma...
This article will analyze possible limitations on Congress’ Article I power, concluding that separat...
In this article, the author provides an extended analysis of the constitutional claims against legis...
In their recent article, Congress’s (Limited) Power to Represent Itself in Court, 99 Cornell L. Rev....
In 1924, Plank Five of the Platform of the Independent candidate for President proposed a constituti...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
This essay develops an institutional perspective to consider limitations on judicial authority. Rath...