The Supreme Court often has failed at its most important tasks and at the most important times. I set out this thesis at the beginning the book: To be clear, I am not saying that the Supreme Court has failed at these crucial tasks every time. Making a case against the Supreme Court does not require taking such an extreme position. I also will talk about areas where the Court has succeeded in protecting minorities and in enforcing the limits of the Constitution. My claim is that the Court has often failed where and when it has been most needed. That is the case against the Supreme Court that this book presents. I believe that recognizing this is important in order to focus on how to improve the institution and make it much more likely to suc...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
This updated and expanded piece welcomes the US Supreme Court to an unrelenting new world of dispara...
After six years in mothballs, the Supreme Court appointments process likely will be returning to act...
In my book, The Case Against the Supreme Court, I argue that the Supreme Court often has failed, fre...
It is a pleasure and a privilege to write an introduction to this Symposium celebrating Dean Erwi...
There has been much debate about the United States Supreme Court and the importance of selecting the...
The recent growth in the importance and apparent power of the Supreme Court has been one result of o...
Review of: The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is. By William H. Rehnquist. William Morrow & Co., ...
For more than two centuries, the U.S. Supreme Court has provided a battleground for nearly every con...
The United States Supreme Court is a counter-majoritarian force in our democracy. Nine unelected and...
In How to Save the Supreme Court, we identified the legitimacy challenge facing the Court, traced it...
The author explains his conclusion that the Supreme Court, as a matter of conscience, considers raci...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
The judiciary, said Hamilton in the 78th Federalist, has no influence over either the sword or the...
This essay examines the benefits and drawbacks of writing about the U.S. Supreme Court using the pap...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
This updated and expanded piece welcomes the US Supreme Court to an unrelenting new world of dispara...
After six years in mothballs, the Supreme Court appointments process likely will be returning to act...
In my book, The Case Against the Supreme Court, I argue that the Supreme Court often has failed, fre...
It is a pleasure and a privilege to write an introduction to this Symposium celebrating Dean Erwi...
There has been much debate about the United States Supreme Court and the importance of selecting the...
The recent growth in the importance and apparent power of the Supreme Court has been one result of o...
Review of: The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is. By William H. Rehnquist. William Morrow & Co., ...
For more than two centuries, the U.S. Supreme Court has provided a battleground for nearly every con...
The United States Supreme Court is a counter-majoritarian force in our democracy. Nine unelected and...
In How to Save the Supreme Court, we identified the legitimacy challenge facing the Court, traced it...
The author explains his conclusion that the Supreme Court, as a matter of conscience, considers raci...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
The judiciary, said Hamilton in the 78th Federalist, has no influence over either the sword or the...
This essay examines the benefits and drawbacks of writing about the U.S. Supreme Court using the pap...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
This updated and expanded piece welcomes the US Supreme Court to an unrelenting new world of dispara...
After six years in mothballs, the Supreme Court appointments process likely will be returning to act...