Among other meanings, judicial activism can be defined as judicial decisionmaking that frustrates majoritarian self-government and that is unconstrained by law. So understood, judicial activism is presumptively problematic, because it frustrates customary democratic and judicial norms.In this essay, I address originalist and nonoriginalist responses to the presumptive problem of judicial activism in the context of Fourteenth Amendment privacy claims, including claims relating to abortion, sexual conduct, and same-sex marriage. I argue that originalism is an overrated solution, largely because current understandings of originalism, despite claims to the contrary, do not provide standards of decision that are sufficiently clear...
Part of Symposium: The Rehnquist Court in Empirical and Statistical Retrospectiv
The academic and political debate over judicial activism has been based on the overriding but patent...
“Judicial Rhetoric and Radical Politics: Sexuality, Race, and the Fourteenth Amendment” takes up U.S...
Among other meanings, judicial activism can be defined as judicial decisionmaking that frustrate...
The Author examines the Supreme Court’s use of “preferential judicial activism”—whereby justices dec...
No problem generates more debate among constitutional scholars than how to approach constitutional i...
Amid the fierce battles that take place during the confirmation process of a Supreme Court justice, ...
How has originalism become so politically successful? In answering this question, leading scholarshi...
This article critically analyses the recent US Supreme Court decision in Obergefell v Hodges, the sa...
The term ―judicial activism has become a common part of modern American political speech, though it ...
Contemporary debates over recent Court decisions provide a rich context to weigh claims of judicial ...
Too much of a good thing can be bad, and democracy is no exception. In the United States, the antido...
In this Article, I advance a limited defense of judicial activism by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts...
Part I briefly summarizes Berger’s originalist approach. Part II describes how the new Judicial Enga...
The equal protection clause, ambiguous in its language and its history,\u27 has over the last three ...
Part of Symposium: The Rehnquist Court in Empirical and Statistical Retrospectiv
The academic and political debate over judicial activism has been based on the overriding but patent...
“Judicial Rhetoric and Radical Politics: Sexuality, Race, and the Fourteenth Amendment” takes up U.S...
Among other meanings, judicial activism can be defined as judicial decisionmaking that frustrate...
The Author examines the Supreme Court’s use of “preferential judicial activism”—whereby justices dec...
No problem generates more debate among constitutional scholars than how to approach constitutional i...
Amid the fierce battles that take place during the confirmation process of a Supreme Court justice, ...
How has originalism become so politically successful? In answering this question, leading scholarshi...
This article critically analyses the recent US Supreme Court decision in Obergefell v Hodges, the sa...
The term ―judicial activism has become a common part of modern American political speech, though it ...
Contemporary debates over recent Court decisions provide a rich context to weigh claims of judicial ...
Too much of a good thing can be bad, and democracy is no exception. In the United States, the antido...
In this Article, I advance a limited defense of judicial activism by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts...
Part I briefly summarizes Berger’s originalist approach. Part II describes how the new Judicial Enga...
The equal protection clause, ambiguous in its language and its history,\u27 has over the last three ...
Part of Symposium: The Rehnquist Court in Empirical and Statistical Retrospectiv
The academic and political debate over judicial activism has been based on the overriding but patent...
“Judicial Rhetoric and Radical Politics: Sexuality, Race, and the Fourteenth Amendment” takes up U.S...