For almost two hundred years, a basic tenet of American law has been that federal courts must generally exercise jurisdiction when they possess it. And yet, self-imposed prudential limits on judicial power have, at least until recently, roared on despite these pronouncements. The judicial branch\u27s avowedly self-invented doctrines include some (though not all) aspects of standing, ripeness, abstention, and the political question doctrine. The Supreme Court recently, and unanimously, concluded that prudential limits are in severe tension with our system of representative democracy because they invite policy determinations from unelected judges. Even with these pronouncements, however, the Court has not eliminated any of these limits. Inste...
I was asked to comment on the topic of the conference as it relates to the United States. It is not ...
This article argues that most normative legal scholarship regarding the role of judicial review rest...
Few questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars like the question of whether C...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
In Vieth v. Jubelirer, the U.S. Supreme Court seemed poised to offer the Court\u27s definitive pos...
This article argues that the Supreme Court should reconsider its prudential justiciability doctrines...
Constitutional law governing personal jurisdiction in state courts inspires fascination and constern...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
The Supreme Court exercises far less constitutional authority in American law and practice than one ...
What limits (if any) does the Constitution impose on congressional efforts to strip federal courts o...
1 online resource (PDF, pages 45-69)Book review: Judicial independence and the American Constitution...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
The federal judiciary today takes certain things for granted. Political actors will not attempt to r...
I was asked to comment on the topic of the conference as it relates to the United States. It is not ...
This article argues that most normative legal scholarship regarding the role of judicial review rest...
Few questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars like the question of whether C...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
In Vieth v. Jubelirer, the U.S. Supreme Court seemed poised to offer the Court\u27s definitive pos...
This article argues that the Supreme Court should reconsider its prudential justiciability doctrines...
Constitutional law governing personal jurisdiction in state courts inspires fascination and constern...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
The Supreme Court exercises far less constitutional authority in American law and practice than one ...
What limits (if any) does the Constitution impose on congressional efforts to strip federal courts o...
1 online resource (PDF, pages 45-69)Book review: Judicial independence and the American Constitution...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
The federal judiciary today takes certain things for granted. Political actors will not attempt to r...
I was asked to comment on the topic of the conference as it relates to the United States. It is not ...
This article argues that most normative legal scholarship regarding the role of judicial review rest...
Few questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars like the question of whether C...