Historically, the rational basis test has been a constitutional rubber stamp. In Eldred v. Ashcroft and Golan v. Holder, the Supreme Court applied the rational basis test and respectively held that Congress could extend the copyright term of existing works and restore copyright protection of public domain works, despite evidence that Congress intended to benefit copyright owners at the expense of the public. But in Lawrence v. Texas and United States v. Windsor, the Supreme Court seems to have applied the rational basis test and held that state and federal laws were unconstitutional because they were motivated by animosity, and in Obergefell v. Hodges, it held that states must license marriages between two people of the same sex, because th...
The modern constitutional law canon fundamentally misdescribes rational basis review. Through a seri...
In this amicus brief filed in United States v. Windsor, pending before the Supreme Court, amici cons...
We stand at a crossroads in equal protection doctrine. Over the last 20 years, the Supreme Court has...
Historically, the rational basis test has been a constitutional rubber stamp. In Eldred v. Ashcroft ...
The rational basis test is not only constitutional but also desirable. Nothing in the Constitution r...
In many different cases, the Supreme Court and lower courts have used a rigorous form of rational ba...
The Rational Basis test is one of the most common and yet perhaps the most insignificant United Stat...
This article explores a line of Supreme Court cases that have struck down state laws using a rigorou...
As a government attorney defending economic legislation from a constitutional challenge under the Fo...
This article argues for the adoption of a strengthened rational basis test that would allow courts t...
This article ... will begin by relaying the facts and background of the Lawrence case. Next, it will...
On May 31, 2012, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Massachusetts v. U.S. Department...
In their lead essay for this volume, Wesley Horton and Levesque persuasively demonstrate that the Un...
For centuries, scholars, judges, and lawmakers have argued over the role of the judiciary in strikin...
This Essay, written for a symposium asking “Is the Rational Basis Test Unconstitutional?,†defend...
The modern constitutional law canon fundamentally misdescribes rational basis review. Through a seri...
In this amicus brief filed in United States v. Windsor, pending before the Supreme Court, amici cons...
We stand at a crossroads in equal protection doctrine. Over the last 20 years, the Supreme Court has...
Historically, the rational basis test has been a constitutional rubber stamp. In Eldred v. Ashcroft ...
The rational basis test is not only constitutional but also desirable. Nothing in the Constitution r...
In many different cases, the Supreme Court and lower courts have used a rigorous form of rational ba...
The Rational Basis test is one of the most common and yet perhaps the most insignificant United Stat...
This article explores a line of Supreme Court cases that have struck down state laws using a rigorou...
As a government attorney defending economic legislation from a constitutional challenge under the Fo...
This article argues for the adoption of a strengthened rational basis test that would allow courts t...
This article ... will begin by relaying the facts and background of the Lawrence case. Next, it will...
On May 31, 2012, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Massachusetts v. U.S. Department...
In their lead essay for this volume, Wesley Horton and Levesque persuasively demonstrate that the Un...
For centuries, scholars, judges, and lawmakers have argued over the role of the judiciary in strikin...
This Essay, written for a symposium asking “Is the Rational Basis Test Unconstitutional?,†defend...
The modern constitutional law canon fundamentally misdescribes rational basis review. Through a seri...
In this amicus brief filed in United States v. Windsor, pending before the Supreme Court, amici cons...
We stand at a crossroads in equal protection doctrine. Over the last 20 years, the Supreme Court has...