Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than ever. In February, the Supreme Court heard oral argument about whether the Constitution applies when a U.S. officer shoots a Mexican teenager across the border. At the same time, federal courts across the country scrambled to evaluate the constitutionality of an Executive Order that, among other things, deprived immigrants of their right to reenter the United States. Yet the extraterritorial reach of the Due Process Clause—the broadest constitutional limit on the government’s authority to deprive persons of “life, liberty, or property”—remains obscure. Up to now, scholars have uniformly concluded that the founding generation did not understand...
Litigation between parties in different states has been common since the success of the railroads an...
This paper explores the Article I limits faced by Congress in exercising universal jurisdiction (UJ)...
The Supreme Court’s 1950 Feres v. United States decision held that when it enacted the Federal Tort ...
Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than e...
Jus cogens are a species of supernorm in international law. They are universally binding and trump a...
Perhaps no Article I power of Congress is less understood than the power to define and punish . . . ...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
The meaning of the rights enshrined in the Constitution provides a critical baseline for understandi...
Constitutional law assumes that rights should always be protected by property rules – that is, the g...
This Article examines whether the Define and Punish clause of the Constitution empowers Congress t...
Academic discussions of universal jurisdiction (“UJ”) have been almost entirely normative, focusing ...
In the immediate aftermath of the Supreme Court\u27s landmark 2008 ruling in Medellin v. Texas, crit...
Scholars of human rights and constitutional law have described in great detail the abuses perpetrate...
The National Security Agency’s bulk collection of telephony metadata runs contrary to Congress’s int...
This Article argues that we should take a deeper look at the applicability of federal common law def...
Litigation between parties in different states has been common since the success of the railroads an...
This paper explores the Article I limits faced by Congress in exercising universal jurisdiction (UJ)...
The Supreme Court’s 1950 Feres v. United States decision held that when it enacted the Federal Tort ...
Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than e...
Jus cogens are a species of supernorm in international law. They are universally binding and trump a...
Perhaps no Article I power of Congress is less understood than the power to define and punish . . . ...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
The meaning of the rights enshrined in the Constitution provides a critical baseline for understandi...
Constitutional law assumes that rights should always be protected by property rules – that is, the g...
This Article examines whether the Define and Punish clause of the Constitution empowers Congress t...
Academic discussions of universal jurisdiction (“UJ”) have been almost entirely normative, focusing ...
In the immediate aftermath of the Supreme Court\u27s landmark 2008 ruling in Medellin v. Texas, crit...
Scholars of human rights and constitutional law have described in great detail the abuses perpetrate...
The National Security Agency’s bulk collection of telephony metadata runs contrary to Congress’s int...
This Article argues that we should take a deeper look at the applicability of federal common law def...
Litigation between parties in different states has been common since the success of the railroads an...
This paper explores the Article I limits faced by Congress in exercising universal jurisdiction (UJ)...
The Supreme Court’s 1950 Feres v. United States decision held that when it enacted the Federal Tort ...