This Article argues that procedural due process can be understood as a choice-of-law doctrine. Many procedural due process cases require courts to choose between a procedural regime characteristic of the common law - personal notice, oral hearing, neutral judge, and jury trial - and summary procedures employed in administrative agencies. This way of thinking about procedural due process is at odds with the current balancing test associated with the Supreme Court’s opinion in Mathews v. Eldridge. This Article aims to show, however, that it is consistent with case law over a much longer period, indeed, most of American history. It begins with a reading of due process cases in state courts before the Civil War, and argues that, in many of thes...
This paper sets out a public choice (rent-seeking) theory of the Due Process Clause, which implies t...
Since the adoption of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment, the Supreme Court has vaci...
In our system of government, the Constitution has conferred a guarantees of certain rights to its ci...
This Article argues that procedural due process can be understood as a choice of-law doctrine. Many ...
In the textbooks, procedural due process is a strictly judicial enterprise; although substantive ent...
There are two classes of cases which may arise under the due process provisions of the 5th and 14t...
From its conceptual origin in Magna Charta, due process of law has required that government can depr...
Due process jurisprudence has long been dominated by discussion of its procedural requirements and s...
Substantive due process has been of great importance to the decision of many Supreme Court cases sin...
This thesis surveys the comparative performance of the Federal and State Supreme Courts in the area ...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
This Article proposes a general theory describing the nature and sources of law in American courts. ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Under the Supreme Court's current due process j...
Substantive due process is in serious disarray, with the Supreme Court simultaneously embracing tw...
The term due process appears in the U.S. Constitution in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, but ...
This paper sets out a public choice (rent-seeking) theory of the Due Process Clause, which implies t...
Since the adoption of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment, the Supreme Court has vaci...
In our system of government, the Constitution has conferred a guarantees of certain rights to its ci...
This Article argues that procedural due process can be understood as a choice of-law doctrine. Many ...
In the textbooks, procedural due process is a strictly judicial enterprise; although substantive ent...
There are two classes of cases which may arise under the due process provisions of the 5th and 14t...
From its conceptual origin in Magna Charta, due process of law has required that government can depr...
Due process jurisprudence has long been dominated by discussion of its procedural requirements and s...
Substantive due process has been of great importance to the decision of many Supreme Court cases sin...
This thesis surveys the comparative performance of the Federal and State Supreme Courts in the area ...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
This Article proposes a general theory describing the nature and sources of law in American courts. ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Under the Supreme Court's current due process j...
Substantive due process is in serious disarray, with the Supreme Court simultaneously embracing tw...
The term due process appears in the U.S. Constitution in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, but ...
This paper sets out a public choice (rent-seeking) theory of the Due Process Clause, which implies t...
Since the adoption of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment, the Supreme Court has vaci...
In our system of government, the Constitution has conferred a guarantees of certain rights to its ci...